Sates SUNY Move

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Station Studies
Benexet
Boyer Sates SUNY Move
A L B A N Y (AP) - A railroad
building of Flemish-Gothic architecture will be the new headquarters of the State University
of N e w York administration,
which is buying the well-known
upstate structure for $1.7 million.
Most S U N Y offices n o w are
concentrated in leased space in
the modern T w i n Towers building just northwest of the Capitol
grounds.
The building, and Albany landmark, stands on the spot where
H e n r i c k Hudson was believed
t o have landed in his exploration
of the river that bears his name.
The structure was built in the
early part of this century as a
c o p y of the famous Cloth Guild
Hall in Ypres, Belgium. It is
constructed of reinforced con-
crete and steel with Gothic exterior detailing. The four-story
building, at the f o o t of the State
Capitol, has a 13-story central
tower capped by a gilded weathervane depicting Hudson's ship,
the "Half M o o n . "
In announcing the plan Friday,
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer of
the S t a t e University said the
Delaware & Hudson Railroad,
the present occupants, have
agreed t o sell the building for
$1.7 million.
from the state for $ 1 0 million
that could be used for the rehabilitation.
The university board of trustees was thinking about building
a new headquarters before they
l o o k e d into the possibility of
purchasing the D & H building,
he said. As for the cost of
acquisition and rehabilitation, he
said, "We're not talking about
much less m o n e y than building
and not much more either."
The interior will be rehabilitated, he said. Asked about the
p r e s e n t condition of the interior,
t h e chancellor said: "I wish
there was a good s y n o n y m for
'mess.' "
He n o t e d t h a t t h e university
long has h a d an a p p r o p r i a t i o n
However, the university administration expects t o move into
the D & H building in about t w o
years where a wait of four or
five years would have been required for a new structure.
A small park in front of the
building will be e x p a n d e d a n d a
dissecting s t r e e t will be aband o n e d , a s p o k e s m a n said.
continued from page one
members of the c o m m u n i t y .
However, Italian majors and
minors will be requested t o read
the materials in their original
texts. Moreover, Part A of Italian Civilization (Ha. 3 1 5 ) will be
a prerequisite for the majors and
minors w h o wish to enroll.
There is no prerequisite for all
other students.
continued from page one
" w e never want t o have a situat i o n " in which force would have
t o be used by students. He then
went on the point o u t h o w
S U N Y Albany has a greater
amount of student participation
in campus governance than other
universities.
Another student questioned
President Benezet on the plans
to build a west podium extension, and wanted t o k n o w if the
project were dead. According to
Benezet, the project is indeed,
dead. "At least in our life time
n ' will not see the podium
e x t e n d e d , " he c o m m e n t e d .
He did point out that there is a
serious space problem o n the
Academic Podium, and that "we
will be pressing our case for
more facilities." He sees s t u d e n t s
as p o t e n t i a l l y "effective sales
m e n " for t h e University. Comm e n t s B e n e z e t : " A lot of outside people c a n n o t imagine that
this massive p o d i u m is actually
c r o w d e d . " He sees t h e s t u d e n t s
as an effective tooi in c o n v i n c i n g
the c o m m u n i t y otherwise,
OLr#"\ I
No. 46
from
page
one
several i n c h e s " t o m a k e everthing plausible. " N o b o d y challenged t h e m . T h e y said they
h a d n ' t drawn Lhe first sketches
t o scale b u t now they could
r e m e m b e r where the w o u n d was.
Every other hole scar, incision
and mark was drawn in exactly.
Only this hole was several inches
off."
Wecht said t h a t in D e c e m b e r ,
1966, he was allowed t o view
the Z a p r u d e r film of t h e assassination, which he did over 100
times in a d d i t i o n t o e x a m i n i n g
blow-ups of each frame. He said
t h a t using this film, the FBI was
able to gauge the length of time
between the first a n d last times
the President was sLruck, which
t u r n e d o u t t o be a b o u t six seco n d s . They also test-fired Lee
Harvey Oswald's rifle (a singles h o t , bolL-action Manlicher Carc a n o ) and found t h a t t h e quickest it could be l o a d e d a n d firednever mind a i m e d - w a s 2.3 seco n d s . This presented a bit of ;i
p r o b l e m in t h a t four bullets
a p p a r e n t l y were fired, and the
length of t i m e b e t w e e n t h e m
p u r p o r t e d l y was six s e c o n d s . Yel
it would take nearly seven seco n d s just to get off t h a t m a n y
shots.
T h e results indicated it
"an impossibility t h a t one
son could have d o n e all
s h o o t i n g . " Wecht said it was
c o n t r a d i c t i o n that led to
was
perthe
this
the
C o m m i s s i o n ' s " s i n g l e " or "magi c " bullet theory--which affirmed t h a t o n e bullet " e n t e r e d
J o h n K e n n e d y ' s back a n d exiLed
t h r o u g h his neck, w e n t i n t o Governor
Connally's
right
back
(breaking a rib), e x i t e d from his
right chest into his right wrist
where it s h a t t e r e d a large b o n e ,
then w e n t into his right thigh,
only t o be found later on t h e
s t r e t c h e r at. Parkland H o s p i t a l . "
by John OToole
"Whatever n e e d e d to be d o n e
to c o r r e c t their inconsistencies
was d o n e , " Wecht charged, " b e cause no o n e else k n e w w h a t was
going on a n d it was not until
years later t h a t private investigators had a c h a n c e to see the
evidence."
Warren
Commission
exhibit
n u m b e r 399 is t h e bullet t h a t
A c c o r d i n g to Wecht, '15 m i n u t e s
after t h e assassination T i p p e t ,
" w h o was in a place h e h a d no
business b e i n g " (since all" police
had been o r d e r e d to Dealey
Plaza), s p o t t e d Oswald walking
d o w n a s t r e e t , " d e c i d e d t h a t he
was Lhe assassin," a n d w e n t
a f t e r - o n l y t o be himself killed.
" J . D . T i p p e t was t h e r e t o d o a
j o b t h a t because of his failure,
Jack R u b y had to c o m p l e t e t w o
days l a t e r , " Wecht said.
was found o n the s t r e t c h e r at
Parkland Host it;il. Wecht says
his examinati n of t h e Archive
x-rays shows particles of metal
in K e n n e d y ' s chest a n d also in
Connally \ chest--traces of the
bullet t h a t passed t h r o u g h t h e m .
This same bullet, a c c o r d i n g to
Lhe Warren C o m m i s s i o n , was also s u p p o s e d to have b r o k e n o n e
of Connally's ribs a n d s h a t t e r e d
it b o n e in his wrist. T h e bullet is
a 6 . 5 m m . shell with an original
weight of 161 grams. T w o m o r e
inconsistencies p r e s e n t e d themselves, said Wecht, b e c a u s e the
bullet found at P a r k l a n d has a
weight of 1 5 9 g r a m s :
" B y legal definition w e ' r e dealing w i t h a c o n s p i r a c y , " h e said.
And w h o is b e h i n d it all? WechL
p o i n t s t o m e m b e r s of the CIA.
He said it is a well-known fact in
Washington t h a t Oswald had
been o n Lhe payroll of t h e CIA
u p t o the time of Lhe assassination.
" T h e CIA has
pulled
b l o o d y , cuL-Lhroat operaLions all
a r o u n d t h e w o r l d , " he said, " y e t
n o o n e wants t o believe t h a t it
could happen here."
(1 ) A c c o r d i n g t o Lhe Commission's r e p o r t , t h e bullet lost
only two grams of weight in
passing Lhrough b o t h K e n n e d y
and Connally a n d leaving traces
b e h i n d in b o t h ;
( 2 ) and after doing all this
d a m a g e to b o t h m e n , t h e bullet
has " n o deformities in its u p p e r
two-thirds ut alt a n d Lhe boLLom
one-third s h o w s only very minimal flattening with no loss of
substance."
In a d d i t i o n , o n e small section
of the base of the bullet was
removed by Lhe FBI for examina t i o n , which brings up t h e question of h o w Lhe bullet could
have losL any s u b s t a n c e in pass
ing t h r o u g h the t w o men and
still weigh 159 grams after the
FBI sample was r e m o v e d .
Au
<*° rf
S»* *!>
A
6»
**'
Still a n o t h e r impossible cons e q u e n c e of Lhe C o m m i s s i o n ' s
findings was t h a t t h e bullet was
moving from right t o left as it
passed through K e n n e d y , then
had to turn a b r u p t l y in m i d a i r
and go into C o n n a l l y ' s
right
back (Connally was s e a t e d diret'tly in front of K e n n e d y at the
time)- " B u l l e t s only do that in
c o m i c b o o k s , " said Wecht
" T h e r e is not o n e forensic
pathologist I have talked Lo who
believes the Warren C o m m i s s i o n
f i n d i n g s , "Wecht
said
"And
without. Lhe single bullet t h e o r y ,
the Warren Commission conclusion of a lone assassin is destroyed
T h e evidence clearly
indicates thai ut /ens/ m o r e than
o n e person was involved in the
shooting."
CIA C o n s p i r a c y ?
Wecht claimed no special information about who the other
iissassin(s) might be, but implicated Dallas P a t r o l m a n J O . Tip
pet as pail of the c o n s p i r a c y .
WEtLS & COVERLY'S NEW SHOP
AT STUYVESANT PLAZA
PAGE TWELVE
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Wecht's conclusions, as limited
as t h e y are, parallel former New
Orleans District A t t o r n e y Jim
G a r r i s o n ' s conclusions. Garrison
(with w h o m Wecht has conferred on t h e assassination invest i g a t i o n ) claims t h a t a g r o u p of
right-wing CIA m e m b e r s along
with m e m b e r s of Lhe C u b a n exile c o m m u n i t y a n d o t h e r s plotLed a n d carried o u t the assassina t i o n , believing t h a t President
K e n n e d y was beginning a leftward dirft t h a t t h r e a t e n e d national security, and was also
c o n s i d e r i n g an easing of relations
with Fidel Castro
Lee Harvey Oswald lived for
3-6 h o u r s after Lhe assassination.
All t h a t t i m e h e was being inter
rogaled by federal, s t a t e , and
local
authorities.
Yet,
said
Wecht, we are told t h a t not one
n o t e , tape recording, or transcript was made in all thaL 36
h o u r s of i n t e r r o g a t i o n
Yel lhe Dallas police force was
r e p u t e d at Lhe t i m e Lo be o n e of
the most experienced in handling h o m o c i d c cases.
" Y e t w h o listens lo all t h i s ? "
c o m p l a i n e d Cyril Wecht. His
visit t o the National Archives
and his i m p o r t a n t findings re
suited in a brief flurry of head
lines a r o u n d t h e c o u n t r y a n d
Utile else. No o n e bus c o m e
forth Lo challenge a n y t h i n g he
has said, even his m o s t d a m n i n g
i n d i c t m e n t s of the Warren Commission
findings.
Government
policy seems t o be to ignore t h e
critics and h o p e they eventually
go awuy
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1972
November 14. 1972
Security: Keystone Cops or Real Police?
"Elementary Italian" will be
offered on Monday and Wednesday evenings from 6 : 0 0 to
8 : 0 0 p.m. It is listed as It. 101 A,
call n o . 2 3 1 4 , four credits and it
will be taught by Professor
Fossa. The basic aim of this
course will be provide both
members of the c o m m u n i t y and
those students w h o can't participate in the morning sessions of
this course, amply opportunity
to study the Italian language.
Any interested person can register for t h e s e c o u r s e s beginning
Nov. 1, 1 9 7 2 in the Colonial
U-Lounge of the Albany Campus. For more information you
can call the Department of Hispanic and Italic Studies. Telej phone N o . 5 1 8 - 4 5 7 - 8 3 5 6 .
Pathologist Criticizes Warren Report
continued
State University of New York at Albany
Campus Security: Police protection
without it can be a d o w n .
is no sure thing, hut being
FRIDAY 2 0 : 1 0 hours Guiding the black F o r d o u t of
the s q u a r e p a t c h of gravel- and
o n t o P e r i m e t e r R o a d , s e a t e d on
torn gray u p h o l s t e r y b e h i n d a
p a d d e d dash with a two-way
radio and a yellow s t i c k e r —
" G e t Gas at S t a t e F a c i l i t i e s , "
gripping the wheel with red
worn hands, Gary
O'Connor,
Lieutenant,
Security
Officer,
c o p , l o o k s b o t h w a y s a n d explains:
"We have t h e c a m p u s splil up
i n t o t h r e e zones for t h e patrol
f u n c t i o n . We cut the c a m p u s
right d o w n the m i d d l e , East to
West, o n e car for each half. T h e
third car, my car, c o m p l e t e l y
roves the c a m p u s and t h e d o w n
town dorms."
" R i g h t now w e ' r e o p e r a t i n g
with six m e n , in a d d i t i o n t o the
s t u d e n t patrol t h a t ' s w o r k i n g on
the q u a d s . T h e r e ' s t h e dispatcher, t h r e e patrol cars, a n d t w o
men o p e r a t i n g on e i t h e r end of
Lhe a c a d e m i c p o d i u m , securing
the b u i l d i n g s . "
A car passes; t h e L i e u t e n a n t ' s
eyes follow. An inch of curly
b r o w n hair breaks o n lhe blue
u n i f o r m collar.
" A n d m e , " I say.
His r o u n d e d closeshaven face
grimaces. " Y e a h . A n d y o u . "
My n a m e s ' s O ' T o o l e . I carry a
grudge.
WEDNESDAY PAST - 1 0 : 3 0 The waiting room was an architect's Freudian dream. There
were eight doors, four floor-toceiling plate glass w i n d o w s , one
long bare white corridor. The
secretary, brown-hair plump distracted, n o d d e d Lowards o n e of
the d o o r s . Behind it Len o r a n g e
padded chairs circled a coffee
table papered with Grassroots,
the ASP, T h e S c h e n e c t a d y Gazette, and a three-inch blackb o u n d Student
Protest and the
I.uie
A c a r t o o n on a bulletin
board read: " T h e S t u d e n t Security Patrol is Watching Out for
y o u . " Next to il was a chart of
names and dales and h o u r s , evidently for the S t u d e n t Patrol.
T h e traffic on Perimeter Road
rumbled past t h e w i n d o w .
J a m e s Williams, director of
C a m p u s Security, walked in He
was y o u n g and well groomed,
wearing green vest brown tie and
smoke-gray slacks. In one hand
he e a r n e d an orange si earning
coffee mug, in the o t h e r his pipe
AIH\ t o b a c c o . He gave the impression
thai
if a I railer-truck
crashed through the picture wind o w , he'd nod at tiie driver,
pause l o . fill his pipe, and ask
the driver for his registration. We
sat d o w n in o p p o s i n g orange
chairs t o talk a b o u t s t u d e n t security relations. T i m e passed
slowly.
10:45
"What a b o u t the drug
bust o n Dutch? Did y o u know
t h a t was coming?"
"Yes. The S t a t e Police told us
the search warrant w o u l d be
e x e c u t e d and requested w h a t ever assistance we w o u l d give
them. The administration and
t h e R e s i d e n c e Director knew in
advance."
" T h a t ' s t h e usual p r o c e d u r e ? "
"Yes."
" W h a t image do you think
s t u d e n t s have of S e c u r i t y ? "
" I d o n ' t think w e ' r e viewed as
S t o r m t r o o p e r s , b u t n e i t h e r are
we seen as K e y s t o n e C o p s . "
"I
think
t h e image leans
i n w a r d s the l a t t e r . "
"Most s t u d e n t s have a b s o l u t e l y
no c o n t a c t with law enforce*
m e n l , o t h e r than w h a t they see
on T V . A d a m 12 and Dragnet
cram thirty years of e x c i t e m e n t
into thirty m i n u t e s . It is a very
very d i s t o r t e d image. We d o n ' t
act like Reed and Moliov d o . "
] 1 :05
"We have a lot of older
officers. Yel t h e only cops you
see on T V . are twenty-five t o
I hirl y - five. That doesn 'l mean
Ihiil an older man with gray hair
is inefficient or ineffective. But I
think y o u can develop a stereot y p e that he i s . "
1 1 :ir»
'Did the parking
strike c r e a t e any pressure on
y o u r role or i m a g e ? "
" T h e great majority of the
s t u d e n t s now participating in the
continued
on page 8
Murder In The Kingdom of Heaven
by Deanne Stillman
Alternative
Features
Service
V
August
8, 1970, Las Vegas, New Mexico
(AP) Mora
County
sheriff's
officers
and District Attorney
Bona Id o Martinez
of Las
Vegas investigated
Friday the shooting death of Michael Press, about
25, of New York,
NY.
Press was identified
by friends
who lived at the Kingdom
of
Heaven commune
at Gudalupita
in Mora County.
Sheriff
Frank
Romero
said Press apparently
was running
from some type of
confrontation
at Guadalupita and was shot in the back. Press' body
was found
Friday after his friends reported
the shooting
and he
didn't re'u't-n
Mora, New Mexico—I arrived
early for o n e of the final hearings and s t o o d outside Lhe old
a d o b e courLhouse at Mora, near
G u a d a l u p i t a . I'd c o m e t o find
out why a freak from New York
was m u r d e r e d in Lhe Land of
E n c h a n t m e n t . 1 looked across
Lhe slreet to the Sangre de Crislos, Lhe m o u n l a i n s which h a r b o r
all the answers, and lure t h e
naive back Lo lhe land.
It all s e e m e d so easy, move to
New M e x i c o , get back t o Lhe
land...
•**
It's early 1970, c o m m u n a l life
is in vogue. If y o u ' r e a hippie,
you by pass the streets t o go
back L<> t h e land, because the
cities are making that final slide
toward d e a t h You d o n ' t really
have a d e s t i n a t i o n , but " t h a t ' s
cool " N o r t h e r n New Mexico bec o m e s h o m e - t h a t ' s where a lot
of people are going and t h a t ' s
w h e n ' y o u r ride takes you.
Once t h e r e , you realize that in
rural New Mexico the land is
untouched,
unrestrained
by
fences and billboards and trees
grow u n c o n f i n e d by telephone
poles or electrical wires. T h e
horizon is u n c l u t t e r e d with neon
signs or r o a d instructions you
aren't invited to eat at Joe's or
w a r n e d to keep out or turn right
on red or slow d o w n . T h e green
m o u n t a i n hills seem limitless and
so do y o u .
This is the answer, you think.
It's u n c o r r u p t e d , Lhey haven't
found it yeL; it's clean, it's pure,
it's e v e r y t h i n g Lhe city isn't, so
y o u decide Lo sLay here and live
on/off the land. T h e old Spanish
villages lie h i d d e n like u n m i n e d
d i a m o n d s , waiting for you lo
discover and refine Lhem. You've
heard stories a b o u t local reaction t o strangers, but y o u ' r e
different, and New Mexico's allure is irresistible.
Natives
of
northern
New
Mexico m a k e litlle c o n t a c t witli
Lhe o u t s i d e . S o m e villages still
speak 17th c e n t u r y Spanish, and
m a n y people think the Black
Panthers are wild animals you
see in p i c t u r e b o o k s . But you
d o n ' t k n o w this, and you d o n ' t
k n o w that the people have already met y o u r hippie stereot y p e via the t u b e , their periodic
c o n n e c t i o n with America, and
you d o n ' t k n o w thai y o u n g Chi*
can OS hear a b o u t free love from
Lheir teachers and talk ubouL il
like it's us p o p u l a r as eating
dinner. You d o n ' t k n o w that
these people have s p e n t lifetimes
trying Lo acquire middle class
parupheiialia,
while overnight
you discard it, A life of simplici-
m^^^^Mk^k^
ty awaits, and all you have t o do
is live it.
On August 5 and 6, 1 9 7 0 , the
K i n g d o m of Heaven dies: o n e
m e m b e r s h o t a n d killed, three
k i d n a p p e d and p i s t o l - w h i p p e d ,
and a fourth k i d n a p p e d and
raped three times T h e d e a t h
blows are quick and u n e x p e c t e d ,
although signals of the King
d o m ' s fall c o m e often. T h e comm u n e d o e s not w a n t Lo see.
Pretend you have g r o w n u p in
G u a d a l u p i t a , a small t o w n nurtured and overdosed on machism o , and you are o n e of the six
local m e n w h o will crush the
K i n g d o m of Heaven. T h e presence of t h e K i n g d o m is an
affront Lo c o m m u n i t y values,
bul y o u suffer several o t h e r insults w i t h o u t r e a c t i o n :
On h o t days, c o m m u n e resid e n t s garden in the n u d e . A
resident speculates on y o u r reaction
" Y o u see this girl a n d
t h i n k , 'Here's a girl a n d she's
n a k e d on this piece of p r o p e r t y
with all these guys a r o u n d . She
m u s t b e ballin', why isn't she
ballin' me? I'm just as good as
them."
—A t r a n s i e n t begins an argum e n t at the local bar. H e talks
continued
on page 5
V-' r
^
Campus Chest:
Views from the Other Side
b y Barbara F i s c h k i n
T h e w o m a n in t h e Q u a d cafeteria w h o m y o u w o u l d m o s t like
t o avoid while r u n n i n g o u t with
t h r e e deli s a n d w i c h e s for y o u r
friends a n d t w o sets of silverware t o replace t h e d i r t y o n e s in
y o u r suite is n o t really a wicked
ogre, waiting t o p o u n c e on her
victimes. I n s t e a d , she is just a
nice, normal person trying t o do
a job.
And, even t h o u g h it m a y seem
t h a t she is t h e r e only t o underm i n e y o u r finest a t t e m p t s at
sneakiness, h e r j o b is actually
t h a t of a dining r o o m supervisor.
She
is responsible
for
the
s m o o t h m a n a g e m e n t of the entire dining r o o m d u r i n g mealtimes.
S t a t e Q u a d supervisor B u r n e t t a
" B e a " Wilson, w h e n asked a b o u t
her j o b , b l u r t e d o u t "Don't get
m e s t a r t e d . " She was very quick
t o explain, however, t h a t she
feels s t u d e n t s on the whole are
very nice a n d t h a t she likes working a r o u n d t h e m . " I t ' s just that
some are spoiled brats a n d maybe they had no discipline at
h o m e , " she a d d e d . As an example of a purely destructive act,
she cited t a k i n g off t h e t o p s of
salt and p e p p e r shakers and putting foil on t h e m . Bea, w h o has
w o r k e d for food service for four
years believes the s t u d e n t s do
these things because, " e i t h e r
t h e y have n o t h i n g else t o do, or
d o it as a j o k e . " She doesn't
think that this is their way of
c o m p l a i n i n g a b o u t the food because, " E v e n t h e ones who say
the food is good still do i t . "
Even t h o u g h b y this t i m e she is
aware of the typical dining room
tricks of c o m i n g in the side door
a n d h a n d i n g food through the
back burs, Bea was very s h o c k e d
t o find girls j u m p i n g over the
c o n v e y o r belts. " F e l l o w s , you
can u n d e r s t a n d , hut to see the
girls do i t ! " Bea did m e n t i o n ,
however, that she is e x t r e m e l y
fond of her co-workers and believes they are all very h o n e s t .
Motherly Figures
Mrs. Gladys Cutler on Alumni
Q u a d , and H e l e n M. Welch, on
I n d i a n , are t h e t w o supervisors
w h o best e x e m p l i f y m o t h e r l y
figures. Gladys, w h o s e w a r m and
c h a r m i n g British ways are familiar t o a n y o n e w h o lives or has
ever lived d o w n t o w n , has been
w o r k i n g for F o o d Service for
t e n years, a n d p l a n s t o go h o m e
t o England at t h e e n d of the
s c h o o l year t o retire. She seems
t o feel very c l o s e t o t h e s t u d e n t s
living in W a t e r b u r y a n d Alden
Halls. Even while being interviewed she s t o p p e d to ask o n e
y o u n g man h o w things were
going. When h e told h e r he was
just a b o u t m a k i n g it she quickly
scolded him a n d said, " O h you
b e t t e r be d o i n g m o r e than just
t h a t , " It is obvious t h a t the
s t u d e n t s feel m u c h t h e s a m e way
a b o u t Gladys: she even s p o k e
a b o u t a " l o v e l y , little l e t t e r "
t h a t an a n o n y m o u s s t u d e n t left
on her desk in which he said,
"...it was just nice when we
came clown in the m o r n i n g to
get a cheery hello and the
motherly touch made the day."
Since Gladys has been working
for F o o d Service for ten years
she has seen m a n y changes in the
student body and spoke about
t h e m . " D u r i n g the first years
t h e r e was a role call and everyo n e h a d t o check in and out.
You had just s o m a n y late nights
per week a n d if you w e n t away
for a w e e k e n d you h a d to leave
the n a m e of t h e people you were
staying w i t h . " She a d d e d that,
" K i d s were m o r e afraid to do
a n y t h i n g o u t of t h e o r d i n a r y , "
a n d felt that m a y b e n o w there
is, " a little bit t o o much permissiveness." Even so, Gladys,
nevertheless, m e n t i o n e d that, "I
try to be as u n d e r s t a n d i n g as 1
can with their a t t i t u d e s . T h r e e
generations ago we were so diff e r e n t , " What m o r e could you
ask from y o u r o w n m o t h e r ? With
t h a t a t t i t u d e she will certainly
be missed.
Helen Welch seems t o supervise
Indian Quad with m u c h the
s a m e spirit as Gladys has on
A l u m n i She is very p r o u d of the
fact that s o m e of the s t u d e n t s
c o m e to her with special proh-
lems. She is obviously very true
t o t h e i r confidences because
w h e n asked to describe some of
t h e problems she answered, " I
c a n ' t tell y o u because t h e y ' r e
p e r s o n a l . " Helen, w h o has been
w o r k i n g for F o o d Service for six
years, ("I c a n ' t say I h a t e it 'cos
I d o n ' t " ) , claims that her biggest
p r o b l e m is people trying t o
sneak in o n weekends. Nevertheless, she did admit, with u glimm e r in her eye t h a t at times she
feels a little guilty reprimanding
s t u d e n t s , b u t soon a d d e d , " t h e y
k n o w they're not s u p p o s e d to do
t h i s . " Helen's favorite s t o r y involving infractions of the rules
concerns o n e suspicious looking
y o u n g man w h o claimed to
definitely have a meal card.
However, upon checking it, she
discovered that it was indeed a
meal card, but from Syracuse
University. " T h a t was real cute.
Of course he didn't eat. But il
was real c u t e . " Helen ended by
-saying that s o m e t i m e s she gels
the reeling the kids d o n ' t like
her, b u t she d o e s n ' t think it goes
very deep. And from the sentim e n t s on Indian Quad, it doesn't
seem t o .
G o o d Money
For Valerie Hurlbert. being a
dining r o o m supervisor on Dutch
Q u a d was a frightening proposition since she is the only s t u d e n t
e m p l o y e d in the position. Val,
w h o is a J u n i o r and a History
major, worked in the dining
r o o m last year. She was made
supervisor this year when the
w o m a n w h o was originally supposed to have the job did not
r e t u r n . Val a d m i t t e d , "At first I
was kind of leery. 1 know that
last year's supervisor had a lot of
hassles." But t h e n , the fact that
she would be working mure
hours and getting m o r e money
convinced her to take the job.
When asked a b o u t her friends'
reactions to her new position of
a u t h o r i t y Val replied, "Well, I
m a d e most of my friends while
w o r k i n g here last year. They
d e c i d e d it was kind of f u n n y . "
She said that most of the kids
accept her, but that there are
still t h o s e that resent her because she is a student There are
also those w h o do things right
u n d e r her nose, because, since
she looks like everyone else,
they don't realize that she is the
supervisor Although Val seems
In III- doing very well and even
left tin- interview I,, "ill. her
loll" as --lie s l o p p e d some people
from coining in th<• side door,
sin- still maintains that an older
woman would be I n n e r suited
lor the mil. "SI,,, h.is in,,,-,.
a u t h o r i t y , mi.re experience ,iml
knows m i n e than m e . "
Linda lie S o t t o , on Colonial
Q u a d , is nls.i. like Val, .ml very
removed from tile student popu
S t a l e only .1 lew s , W s a,,,,. She
was ,1 Mull, mi,,,,,, with,ml ,, ji.l,
111 her held 11.1 decide.I I,, lake
Ihis one I,,.,-.,use 11 payed more
than any nlhei she could find 111
Albany. Since he, husband shll
goes I,, sill,,,,I that wis .1 t e n
important
consider;
,
She
ciillliK. he, ,,,1, has both .idt,,,,
lages m i l ihs,id\,inl,ii;cs l.ul lilies
working
here
her,,„se
she
doesn't have l„ deal with adults
ami
Why Is This Man President?
READ
The Washington Park Spirit
ON SALE-WEDNESDAY NOV. 15
AT THE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
PAGE TWO
their
-'dial,
anil
,1,11
nl
lives." She does feel, however,
thai her position involves 11 lol
of role playing anil that, " t h e
lull does entail being il hitch."
Anil even though she feels l o i n
passion for the kids because the
food 11. so had, I.inila does mil
feel guilty about catching them
in t h e act. "People forget Food
Service is a business.
H ih
stealing and if you did it in „
store y o u ' d probably be „r
rested,"
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Parking Hassles Subject of Discourse
Headstart Benefits
The Saga of the Cafeteria Supervisor
by Ann E. Bunker
The w e e k ' s voting for " C a m p u s C h e s t " came t o 0 rousing
finale Friday a f t e r n o o n
with
Indian's R A Mendy M e n d e l s o h n
winning o u t over Ron Simm o n s . It was close race a n d
right up t o the gong it was
a n y b o d y ' s game. T h e final tally
was 1 7 2 7 for M e n d y , 1 0 7 6 for
R o n and $ 4 5 0 for Y e a r - R o u n d
Headstart, t h e recipient of proceeds from this year's C a m p u s
Chest drive.
The
nickel-a-vote
elections
generated as m u c h or m o r e enthusiasm on c a m p u s as t h e rec e n t national elections. P e o p l e
rushed in and o u t , s t o p p i n g long
enough to check the up-to-date
tallies then racing o u t t o d r u m
up more s u p p o r t for the candidates of their choice. S o m e of
the b r o t h e r s or S T B - M e n d y supp o r t e r s - w e r e on h a n d t o liven
things u p , as were folks of all
persuasions.
Other notables in the running
were: Ebbie Ee|), Mike Blaymore, Meg Riffel, Michael " E . "
Lampert,
Amy
Condo,
Sir
Robert Lawrence T h o m p s o n Hill
III, Danny Breitherg, Ralph H.
Greenberg, Bob " F i z z " Ziff
Laurie Allen, Jeff Berzan, Dennis Ciitler, D o n n a Cash, J u d y
Avner,
Paul
"Ace"
Amer,
Robert Villanova, J o h n Fraser,
Beth
Muller, a n d
Alexander
Pope. II was interesting to n o t e
that George McGovern n e t t e d 23
votes. Mr. Milhouse wasn't even
in the running.
A l o n g with the distinction of
becoming
SUNYA's
,«„],,„,
c h e s t , M e n d y won t u .„ i|i<.alri.
tickets, c o m p l i m e n t s ..I the Hell.
m a n . When asked to eomnwm
o n his victory, Mend) said
s i m p l y , " I w a n t a bra " H,. a | s 0
a d d e d , " I ' d like to thank ]ri,j,
for s t a r t i n g it. and STII 1,,,
ending it."
Truly 11 Slice
T h e C a m p u s Chest ,
the co-chairmanship
Pallas a n d Lorraine
an a t t e m p t to raise
t h e Y e a r - R o u n d II,.,
gram at P S . r, here
T h e Program ,s s a d h
funds, as it receives
mal s u p p o r t
from
g o v e r n m e n t and ,-,
has run nut of mun
t i n u e its p r o g r a m hu
children.
under
Susan
Aside from the "chesl ,1,,,
lest, t h e drive n n l u d . ,U1.|,
fund-raising activities us , land
ly wives' bake sale. , poster sale
and the sale of pain-rweiukts
m a d e by the Headstiul i-lnl.l,,.,,
The
Class
of
', 1 ilunaied
$1 1 8 . 0 0 to the t',,i,s, .,- .1 ,n, IU
persons just kicked ,11 •,\li.,i,.v,.|
Ihey could
T h e drive was I,
in generating enllu
the student bod) .
m o n e y for a prue
serves all possibl,
peace r e s e a r c h ; s e n , - h
student
Us m e m b e r s have, in the pasl
few weeks, reflected on the goals
and w o r t h of t h e program, anil
have decided on a new organizational s t r u c t u r e . For the Spring
semester,
the
Peace Si udies
course offered under Pus 1 U 8,
and instructed by a visit ing
"paeifisf in residence," will be
moved to (he Peace Project
making it a non-eredil c o u r s e It
has been found in l he pasl three
semesters that the cohesive force
means of sluth
a n d c o n i n i u i n t V pari 11
p a t i o n in Peace P r u j e . l , , l miles
and o b t a i n e r e d i h i l i l v i •1,, eve.
of
the
that
Universil)
Peace
program
A
third
parlment
new
will
in
IPaf
, ll.e illi.
1 «
!V;n ,
< Iraki-
\I<
. «.„ 1
.I'HI call
.
gani/.alion
as
nl
.111
Ibe
• , v. '1 !„
,-ellle llellh. I n . .
and th.it. m oidei t o o b t a i n
cicdlhihlv with the facult\ and
a d m i n i s t r a t o r s of the I'mveiMly,
il was m (MII mirn-,1 ,, n ,| ,,, ( |,e
mleresl til SI \ Y A .,, well h i
meet ,il least the hi.su a c a d e m i c
.equirenieiils
ot
.,
nedllcd
H i d i n g nl t h e I I I ,
ilise Will he b e l ,
III
I
iiussihh
llillliei
I'-
ll
adill
i l l . . .1
,1
Iv
11 i i i r s c
Replacing (he [.anfi.st in , CM
delice c n u i s e will he ,,M ,,,,],•
pendent sludv p r o g r a m using
the Po- I'.IH course n u m b e . I lie.
program will use (he skills o h
Imilt'd ' " " ( h e . disciplines lo,
i 121
in' ..,!•„ 1..11
I k , ,,
I n n i l , prulii ,11
serve
course
1
in Public
Peace"
is a l.il.li
I,,-, Ti.l.ve
innovation
course
"Forum
an
i.s t h e
hull,,i[
In
Studies
and
News
Analysis
b y Ellyn S t e r n b e r g e r
A very wonderful a n d une x p e c t e d t h i n g h a p p e n e d last
T h u r s d a y night. T h e S t u d e n t
Association c a m e t o g e t h e r . In a
long, infomal meeting, t h a t SA
President
Mike L a m p e r t
described as part of t h e Central
Council's annual growing pains,
the Council m e m b e r s discussed
t h e c o n c e p t and role of s t u d e n t
g o v e r n m e n t at A l b a n y .
At first, t h e Council's o u t l o o k
was very pessimistic. O n e member felt t h a t SA was u p against a
brick wall (regarding the parking
rules situation in particular and
the University decision-making
process in general).
Another
m e m b e r suggested t h e Council
disband because he, himself, was
ready to resign.
As the feeling of
futility
seemed to m o u n t , L a m p e r t be'
gan to speak. E x c e p t for t h e
questions that i n t e r r u p t e d his
lalk, he s p o k e for about an hour.
The
Council's
lull
attention
turned to the President and a
feeling of u n i t y c o u l d b e felt
a m o n g t h e p e o p l e p r e s e n t . So
far, t h e t r e n d this year s e e m e d
to be a greater e x e r t i o n b y Central Council of its full p o w e r t o
the p o i n t t h a t s o m e felt the
Council would o p p o s e L a m p e r t
simply t o o p p o s e him. With this
great cleft growing b e t w e e n the
b r a n c h e s ( d e s p i t e L a m p e r t ' s efforts t o s t o p it) it was a w e l c o m e
relief t o see t h e t w o b r a n c h e s of
SA in h a r m o n y . It seems t h a t
t h e present " c r i s i s " of s t u d e n t
participation (or lack of it) in
University m a t t e r s has n o t only
b r o u g h t the s t u d e n t s i n t o o p p o sition with t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
but has finally u n i t e d Lhe Student Association.
This is n o t t o say t h a t every
Central Council m e m b e r was
100% behind t h e final decision
the Council m a d e t h a t evening.
But, for the first time this year,
this reporter c o u l d feel the unity
in p u r p o s e and i n t e n t b e t w e e n
Lam perl and t h e Council. T h e
Council m e m b e r s were listening
to L a m p e r t in a way they probably haven't in a long time. His
a l m o s t paternal speech t o t h e m
c o o l e d s o m e heads and lifted
s o m e spirits t o h e l p t h e Council
m a k e a rational decision.
During t h e regular business session of t h e meeting, t h e Central
Council gave the C a m p Board
permission to p u r c h a s e a parcel
of land adjacent t o t h e Dippikill
p r o p e r t y . T h e purchase of the
a p p r o x i m a t e l y 8 0 acres was justified by a projection of its
future use, the esthetic value of
t h e view from t h e lake, and the
ecological effect t o the watershed if it was b o u g h t by s o m e o n e else a n d developed. T h e
Central Council also approved a
supplemental
appropriation
for
t h e ASP. T h e extra m o n e y is
needed by the ASP t o c o n t i n u e
t o publish the n u m b e r of pages
per issue thai it has this semester.
One of the o t h e r bills that was
i n t r o d u c e d called for t h e loan
from the SA—Athletic Advisory
Board Surplus t o t h e F a c u l t y
S t u d e n t Association t o be rel u m e d . T h e original rationale
was thai Lhe F S A , mainly controlled by t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
should n o t be helped by student
funds when t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n
is " t o t a l l y unresponsive t o stud e n t o p i n i o n a n d d o e s n ' t even
s t a n d by a g r e e m e n t s t h a t t h e y
d o m a k e with t h e s t u d e n t s . "
T h e bill was t a b l e d a n d a subs t i t u t e bill was p r o p o s e d . T h e
new bill called for t h e abolishm e n t of the $ 1 0 towing fee a n d
a refund of all t o w i n g fees already collected this year. It also
d i r e c t e d t h e S A President t o get
legal counsel t o see if the t o w i n g
fee as established, i m p l e m e n t e d ,
and e n a c t e d w i t h o u t an appeals
p r o c e d u r e is legal. It was the
feeling of t h e Council as Lhey
passed this bill t h a i t h e fee
violates due process.
-John Hartley, Vice-President
for M a n a g e m e n t •& Planning, was
al t h e Central Council meeting
to a n s w e r questions about (he
Lowing that was d o n e last week
(from behind t h e Humanities
building). Hartley was not cm
c a m p u s for part of last week, so
il seems that the decision a b o u t
towing was m a d e by Director of
Security, J a m e s Williams. Hart-
ley refused t o answer m a n y of
the q u e s t i o n s until h e c o u l d
speak t o Williams w h o w a s at
h o m e , ill w i t h t h e flu. T h e o n l y
p o i n t t h a t c o u l d be established
was t h a t cars were t o w e d from
near t h e p o d i u m because p e o p l e
with medical permits could n o t
park in reserved spots. H a r t l e y
saw n o t h i n g w r o n g with t h i s ; t h e
Council c l a i m e d breach of agreem e n t a n d s t u d e n t discrimination.
The
question
session
yielded basically n o t h i n g .
During t h e r e p o r t of t h e Comm i t t e e t o C o o r d i n a t e t h e Enf o r c e m e n t of the New Parking
Regulations, t h e Council ret u r n e d t o t h e discussion of t h e
present
Student-Administration
strife. It was n o w t h a t L a m p e r t
changed despair and futility t o
c o n s t r u c t i v e , hopeful t h i n k i n g .
T h e final resolution was to try
Lo establish a meeting b e t w e e n
the Council and Lhe t o p University A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . It was decided t h a t the fate of t h e parking strike would be d e t e r m i n e d
after this m e e t i n g .
Student Leaders Confer
with University Officials
by Glenn von Noslilz
Peace Studies Remodeled
T h e Peace Studies program has
decided o n a new a p p r o a c h t o
t h e s t u d y of war and peace,
violence and non-violence in
social change and conflict resolution.
Council Discusses Parking With Hartley; Camp Board Gets OK
slllll)
s s nil
The money we spend
on Vietnam could
rebuild East Harlem.
Help Hmerica.
Write your Congressman today
Halp Untell Tho War, Box 903, F.D.H. Station, New York NV u « " '
TUESDAY, NOVEMKHK 1-1
S t u d e n t Association leaders,
Cenl i-.il Council m e m hers, and
several
high University officials nu't lor i w n h o u r s Salurday a f t e r n o o n to discuss the
role of Central Council in the
university decision mak inn pro
cess anil lo "star! closing Lhe
rift" thai has developed be
I ween s t u d e n t governtnenl and
1 In- universil y a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
here lliis semester
I' 11 1 versify
President
Louis
Ueuezel said the m e e t i n g was
" l o n g o v e r d u e " and claimed
ih.il he accepts his "full share of
r e s p o n s i b i l i t y " for t h e delay, lbs p o k e of certain
"unfinished
b u s i n e s s " thai h a d been neglect
ed for the past few years, namely a d e t e r m i n a t i o n of the relation of Central Council l o the
rest of the University governance si rue lure.
Most of lhe discussion was
general in n a t u r e , although spec
ifics did e n t e r into l h e p i c t u r e at
a lew points, in particular the
s u d d e n r e s u m p t i o n of towing
I as I week after what s t u d e n t s
u n d e r s t o o d was an agreement
thai all Lowing would be stopped until new regulations went
into effect yesterday. Central
Council Ch.inuiaii Ken S l o k e m
called lhe lowing an art of " h a d
faith," as Miulenl leaders were
not informed about it. After
s o m e discussion with s t u d e n t s ,
Vice
President .John Harlh-\
agM'i'rl hi reduce the towing lees
101 1 ln.se who were lowed from
behind the HumaiMlics and Kd
111 al
Buildings la.sl week
Appan nil\ lhe e a r . had origin
,,|U |,een lowed in mile, Lo
piuvide in.... MHim i.»i cars with
me.hca! pet 11111
M.i K>
•> Si.nop
I,,
.,11KM
IIIM-U .ton,
t e n u r e anil p r o m o t i o n , and lhe
grading s y s t e m
Hartley fell thai in m a n y cases
s t u d e n t s lend l o "overrent"! " to
administrative decisions which
were allegedly m a d e with little
or no student input And several
o t h e r a d m i n s t r a t o r s pointed oiH
thai all decisions can lie m a d e
will) full c o n s u l t a t i o n ol every
sector of the university comm u n i t y , and that in m a n y cases
" t e c h n i c i a n s " must make I he
decision unilaterally. According
lo President Benezel, "We have
technical chores lit be carried
out a n d we have p e o p l e w h o arc
trained to carry t h e m o u t . " lie
a d d e d that c o n s u l t a t i o n with
everyone is not always possible.
Apparently t h e adminsifratioti
believes thai t h e parking decision, as well as Mohawk T o w e r
and tenure, are in fact such
instances when no I every sector
of the university can he fully
consulted, bene/.et gave as an
e x a m p l e of this Lhe decision to
use Mohawk T o w e r for purely
a c a d e m i c p u r p o s e s . T h e decision
was m a d e d u r r i n g the s u m m e r
because of a r e q u i r e m e n t from
SUNY Central Offices t h a t the
decision be m a d e then. Stud
ents have been c o m p l a i n i n g that
they were not properly con
sidled on d i e case, since mosL of
t h e m wen- h o m e for the sum
According l o Heneaet, it is
Central SUNY that " m a k e s the
rules" by which this c a m p u s is
o p e r a t e d . T h e Universil y Pres
ulenl is actually an e m p l o y e e , or
arm, of Central A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,
and must o p e r a t e this c a m p u s
within prescribed parameters.
Ilene/.el also cited " c o n s t a n t
p r e s s u r e " from the public to cut
costs as a n o t h e r factor rest riling
complete consultation.
What came out ol the cordial
m e e t i n g was not entirely clear.
S t u d e n t s voiced the usual complaints about not having " m e a n ingful
input."
The admin is
t ration offered m a n y of the
usual c o u n t e r a r g u m e n t s . Bene
y.ct r e m i n d e d t h e m thai s t u d e n t s
enjoy greater participation al
this University than al most, lie
r e m i n d e d t h e m that I here are,
indeed, s t u d e n t s in Lhe University S e n a t e and that the p r o p o r
Lion of s t u d e n t s there may soon
increase
According to Council ('hair
man Ken S l o k e m , ahoul I luonly "really c o n c r e t e t h i n g "
a c c o m p l i s h e d was the agreement
what in charge the full towing
lee to s t u d e n t s w h o were t o w e d
last week. It was also fell that
lhe simple Etc I of meeting with
the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n was b e n e
ficial, since it " i m p r o v e d Lhe
lines of c o m m u n i c a t i o n " which
had previously been some whal
strained.
Central
CM m . .1 I111 e
Committee
1 1, 1 in,,,1 Sieve C.ei-bei [imposed
il,.,1 ) oitucil ael a.' .1 "clearing
buns.
bin
"not
bbe.
s l u m p " ' " i <'11 university de
, usion.s directly relating lo si n
drill . l i e . h e , claillLs that lllaliy
students believe that ill .1 mini
I MM ul cases Ihen voices are
heard hut not listened l o . "
Vice ['resident Hartley asked
|<n specific e x a m p l e s of ill
stances in whichM u dents were
not listened tu. Several s t u d e n t s
offered whal they thought w e e
examples, including the Mohawk T o w e r decision, parking,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Emergency Meeting
Yields Little
by Iillyn Sternberger
Central Council held an emergency meeting last S u n d a y evening to discuss lhe w e e k e n d
meeting with I be Adminsitral ion
and t o decide w h a t action would
he t a k e n o n M o n d a y m o r n i n g
regarding t h e parking situation.
T h e parking regulations that
were passed by t h e University
Council were s c h e d u l e d t o go into
effect yesterday morning. T h e
Central Council's effort for t h e
strike reduced the parking fee l o
$.'i and got people t o w e d from
near the H u m a n i t i e s building la.sl
week e x e m p t e d from t h e t o w i n g
fee. A joint c o m m i t t e e was established to s t u d y parking reg
ualt ions and so far their only
decision and r e c o m m e n d a t i o n is
that
the main parking
lots
should not he segregated
Tin' Council's decision about
whal tu do on Mundli} Was to
ask security t o b a u d a notice t o
every driver enleruig t h e innei
r u m p u s r o a d w a y s . T h e notice,
from C e n t r a l Council, informed
Ibe dnvei
thai
no
Student
Assocallon act 1011 was being
t a k e n t o prevent bis car from
being lowed a n d that all tickets
given out as of N o v e m b e r 1 'd are
binding o n transcripts or pay
cheeks. Also included in t h e
message was t h e fact that Central Council bus nut given up in
its search for a just solution.
S e c u r i t y officials have said that
t h e priority enforcement will be
parking infractions a r o u n d t h e
p o d i u m , then those a r o u n d t h e
quads, and lastly those in t h e
main lots.
S t u d e n t Association President
Mike L a m p e r t b r o u g h t u p s o m e
new p o i n t s of the legality of t h e
parking regulations t h a t weren' 1
m e n t i o n e d at last T h u r s d a y ' ;
Central Council meeting. T h e r e
is n o appeals process for towing
but
Lampert pointed out a
possible p r o b l e m with t h e exist
ing a p p e a l s p r o c e d u r e for park
ing tickets. He also p o i n t e d out
thai t h e S t a t e w o r k e r s w e r t
successful in fighting I heir $ 5
parking fee.
S o m e of t h e Council member*
fell that S a t u r d a y ' s meetjng with
lhe A d m i n i s t r a t i o n accomplish
ed s o m e t h i n g and o t h e r s felt
that all it did was Irv l o sweep
lhe past undei the rug T h
Council again hashed out Ih
p r o b l e m of c o m m u n i c a t i o n and
process on this campus. Before
lhe end of the meeting, a bill
was p r o p o s e d
in e m e r g e n c y
session that established s o m e
concrete
plans (he
Central
C o n n e d would like (o see enacted. T h e hill was p o s t p o n e d
and is scheduled tu be c o n
tiidered this T h u r s d a y evening.
PAGE THREE
i
The Youth Vote
ArYTH OF «6HTE)USWE5S
t c r THE « * > * ^ f
by Teny Ryan
Associated
It was t h e r e a n d it d i d have an
impact.
Y o u n g e r a n d m o r e liberal candidates
won s t a t e legislative
races and local c o n t e s t s in m a n y
parts of t h e c o u n t r y w i t h a
s t r o n g b o o s t from
first-time
voters.
A University of N e b r a s k a stud e n t u n s e a t e d t h e c h a i r m a n of
t h e s t a t e legislature's e x e c u t i v e
b o a r d . A 26-year-old V i e t n a m
veteran will replace t h e o l d e s t
m e m b e r of Hawaii's h o u s e of
representatives. A n d an anti-war
farmer was elected c o u n t y commissioner in A t h e n s , Ohio, h o m e
of Ohio University.
Welfare People is Bad People
wages, p o o r schools a n d prej u d i c e , or on factors such as
illness or " b a d l u c k . "
People w h o hold a person responsible for his or her o w n
p o v e r t y also t e n d to have negative views on welfare p r o g r a m s ,
a n d o p p o s e anti-poverty p r o p o sals.
Feagin says t h a t he found t h a t
in a l m o s t every c a s e , " a plurality
t o o k an anti-welfare p o s i t i o n . "
Feagin also discovered t h a t the
higher t h e i n c o m e , t h e m o r e
likely it was t h a t o n e w o u l d take
an unfavorable view of welfare.
Respondents
with
a
high
s c h o o l or a college e d u c a t i o n
w e r e found t o be m o r e antiwelfare than t h o s e with a sixthgrade e d u c a t i o n or less.
"This
finding."
says Feagin,
" d e a l s s o m e t h i n g of a blow to
the idea that e d u c a t i o n elevates
one's critical capacities, since it
is clear t h a t a large n u m b e r of
educated
A mericans
accept
many myths and misconceptions
a b o u t welfare."
Writer
What h a p p e n e d t o t h e y o u t h
vote?
tAAJO , e o r MOT TO©
(YJUCH , l*& TH6Y
l»scD«Poer i s , AMP
lo'TwoS'SrtAU we
Be reeeD OP THE
AUSTIN,
TEXAS
(CPS)-A
University of Texas sociologist
hag found t h a t t h e majority of
Americans are reluctant t o supp o r t welfare p r o g r a m s because
they believe t h a t p o o r people are
themselves
responsible
for
poverty.
In an article in the N o v e m b e r
issue of Psychology
Today, entitled " P o v e r t y : We Still Believe
that G o d Helps Those Who Help
T h e m s e l v e s , " Dr. J o e R. Feagin
reports results of a n a t i o n w i d e
survey he began in 1969, which
examined
beliefs
about
the
causes of poverty in America.
Of the 1,017 people sampled
in t h e s t u d y , m o r e than half
located responsibility for poverty in the characters of p o o r
people themselves. Such factors
as lack of thrift and p r o p e r
money
management,
laziness,
and loose morals and drunkenness, w e r e cited.
Fewer of the people questioned blamed poverty on social
and external issues, such as low
Press
A high percentage of those
surveyed gave affirmative responses to such s t a t e m e n t s as:
m a n y people getting welfare are
n o t h o n e s t a b o u t their need;
t h e r e are t o o many people receiving welfare
money
who
should
be
w orking;
many
w o m e n getting welfare m o n e y
are having illegitimate children
to increase the money they get.
C o n t r a r y t o the beliefs concerning illegitimate children, Feagin
points o u t t h a t m o s t children
born o u t of wedlock d o not
receive welfare. According to a
1969 Aid T o Families with Dep e n d e n t Children survey, three
o u t of 10 children o n welfare are
illegimate. A recent s t u d y in
Utah found t h a t 9 0 percent of
the illegimate children on welfare had been born before their
families w e n t on relief.
Feagin states that the survey
d a t a confirm that " A m e r i c a n s
are dragging their feet on the
road toward welfare statism, and
t h a t their reluctance is closely
related t o strong beliefs about
the meaning of e c o n o m i c failure."
He c o n c l u d e s t h a t "as long as
large n u m b e r s of Americans att r i b u t e social problems t o the
character defects of individuals,
massive e c o n o m i c reform will be
extraordinarily difficult.
Individual interpretations of poverty
mesh well with conservative att e m p t s to maintain the status
quo."
—A few c a n d i d a t e s for Congress a n d s t a t e w i d e offices clearly won on their appeal t o y o u n g
voters. In m a n y cases, h o w e v e r ,
older or m o r e conservative candidates won despite i m m e n s e
losses in areas d o m i n a t e d by
y o u n g voters.
T h e Rev. A n d r e w Y o u n g Jr.,
-10, the first black c o n g r e s s m a n
from Georgia since R e c o n s t r u c tion, said y o u n g people were
essential to his victory. " I d o n ' t
think we could have d o n e it
w i t h o u t the help of the y o u n g e r ,
m o r e m o d e r a t e v o t e r s in Atl a n t a , " h e said.
~ l n this year of President
Nixon's landslide, t h e y o u t h
vote m a d e little difference in t h e
o u t c o m e of t h e presidential race.
Campus precincts a l m o s t universally w e n t for D e m o c r a t i c
presidential
nominee
Sen.
George
McGovern,
but
this
strength was seldom sufficient to
carry c o u n t i e s or congressional
districts for McGovern.
More Liberal?
T h e r e were 25 million 1 8 - t o - 2 5
year olds eligible to cast their
first presidential election ballots
o n Tuesday. A b o u t 1 1 million of
t h e m were 1H-Lo-20 year olds
enfranchised
when t h e 26 th
a m e n d m e n t lowered t h e voting
age in federal elections.
Some political analysts, including ranking McGovern staffers,
had c o n t e n d e d t h a t y o u n g people would be d e c i d e d l y m o r e
liberal than o t h e r voters a n d
could carry McGovern to vietory. McGovern c a m p a i g n offi-
The money me spend
Ion Vietnam could
{clean up the Hudson.
lUntcllThfWar. Bo» 903, FDR. Station, Now York, N. Y 10022
TOWNEITZ
—The t w o youmji'si ;,>•(,[,,,•
ever t o serve in Vermmii -ten...
of representatives were .-hi tni
T h e y were Michael Oh . l;.,wvki
18, a V e r m o n t i,-,nl- ••.' -tow
a t t e n d i n g Harvard i '. .> iMiv
a n d Gregory Keed, , '< V,IU»Mc a m p a i g n staff inch,,]. .1 m,,nv
p e o p l e t o o voting to ...
- A r c h i e Hapri 111
:•- v 11
old V i e t n a m veteran • i(>()M
the oldest m e m b e r ol llaw„u\
h o u s e of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e
"i
year-old M i n d r o Inaha.
—Students from the I'liiM-rsil)
of Kansas tloode i h .
Douglas C o u n t y . win
p r e s e n t m o r e tb.
the
population
Michael C Glove
university gradu.i
h o u s e of represell
I.J. S t o n e b n c k . a I
t h e local peace
t h e c o u n t y coinni
In
congresMoii
y o u t h vote was es
ing at lea.sl
hi,Hut in son
in c a m p u
I"
SLI l l ' i c i e n t
incumbent
In low.1
District. K
.1 n 11 wa r l)e
I M.
l i e In
1'lllV
It V 1
.lino
Where
IIMI
handful ol ••
Me/vmsky
that
n, luil.
nearly 7.(Kin
1,, w i n
1 MILS NO. OF LATHAM CIRCU RI. 9 ; 8 J 5530
%\lSb
Local Impact
T h e i m p a c t of young voter. ,n
local elections was visible in ••!,.,
t i o n s a r o u n d the countrv
- W i t h all but absent,,- ballot*
c o u n t e d , Steve Kowler 12 a
University of Nebraska vtudem
has a p p r e n l l y
unseai.-d ,tate
Sen. William Swanson. . hainnati
of t h e legislative council execti
tive b o a r d . Kowler will liau- u,
d r o p o u t of school next term u,
a s s u m e his legislative poM
H11
Write your Congressman today.
«\>'ia
T>.e poll indicated that Nixon
did h o l d his own amunt; young
voters. T h o s e y o u t h voters, how
ever, gave McGovern about | |
per c e n t m o r e support than ,ni.
total e l e c t o r a t e , which WITH to
N i x o n by a 61-38 mart/in. While
t h e y o u t h vote had Intl.. effect
o n t h e o u t c o m e , it would have
been e x t r e m e l y important n a
close race.
Schv •ngel
by 7
Help America.
WE PROUDLY
ANNOUNCE
cials last spring talked of winning 7 0 per cent of the youth
vote.
R e p u b l i c a n strategist, K m i
t h a t y o u n g voters would be „„
m o r e liberal than anvone i.|se
a n d insisted that the Preside,
w o u l d h o l d his own with th,,m
An extensive poll taken elect i o n day for CBS News by
G e o r g e F i n e Research lnc ,,'f
N e w York indicated that !>,.„,
24
year
olds
supported
M c G o v e r n by a 52-46 marem.
In
h,
HELQ_Q»ER
Indian.,
,,
III.
I'm,III.•
, MI,I
"OME OF THE BEST FILMS ABOUT
YOUTH EVER MADE. I HAVE SEEM
IT THREE TIMES, AMD I DARE SAY
I HAVE A FEW VISITS LEFT Iff ME '
i..ry
I M U M . i n . v.
l,„
l''l l l l l . l l i
H,(,
Hovil
piole,,,,1
I
.,1 11,
W.1.1
HIM
Is.Ml l . . i n . l g i . •'
live K l ' p u b
»l"
Ml
repieseiitaliv,
against U.werm,
Kllhlan
WELLS & COVERLY'S NEW SHOP
AT STUYVESANT PLAZA
PAGE FOUR
ASffARATEPEA3E
^ 1
MONTHURS.WITH
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
^fe.
ran
slioln'
pus precinct*
I '
Tippecanoe
Coin
Lili.Hfili to I'.I Ih I
grebe carried ll
the district with r i m
to w i n , 1 ID, 170 HI
TUESDAY. NOVEMBKK H
Is The Struggle Settled? | H a r d Times
by Peggy Simpson
Treaties caravan participants? Or
Associated
was it a spontaneous reaction, as
Press
Writer
—Who really were these 3 0 0 t o
6 0 0 caravan demonstrators?
WASHINGTON
t o Indians claim, t o u n e x p e c t e d
—Who 1 led the ransacking of
problems such as finding housing
BIA files, pillaging o f valuable
education
White House uneasily raising the
art and rampant
of
Nixon's s e c o n d
eau of I n d i a n Affairs Building is
ante in recognition t h e y would
property? T o
will
ministration's
back in federal h a n d s after being
use o n l y w o r d s , not weapons, t o
they b e held accountable?
held
evict t h e m .
WASHINGTON A P - T h e
for
Indians
a
and
week
Bur
by
militant
suffering
damage
" W e d i d n ' t w a n t a n o t h e r Kent
S t a t e in t h e BIA and w e k n e w
ernment
damn
$2
million.
what e x t e n t
well
we'd
have
one
if
ans
be
received
back
during
on
I'm
top
education
pretty sure t h e y will
be
difficult."
President
term, the ad*
spokesman has told newsmen.
—Will t h e demonstrating Indi-
a n d loss e s t i m a t e d b y t h e govat nearly
damaging
(AP)-Hard
times are ahead for U.S. public
Marl and said the federal share
of
public
education
running
a b o u t $ 6 billion annually or 7 t o
8 per c e n t of total costs may n o t
"I think this administration is
decrease in the near future. But,
the
going t o take a position of being
he
reservations and in their urban
very spartan in virtually all de-
rearranging o f spending priori-
indicated
there may
be
a
settings as martyred heroes, as
partments of federal government
ties, with more m o n e y g o i n g for
B u t n o o n e c a n say with cer-
police a t t e m p t e d a forcible ous-
s o m e o f t h e Indians claim? Or
and I am sure education will not
research
tainty
strange
ter of t h e well-armed I n d i a n s , "
will they be outcasts w h o don't
be spared," said Sidney P. Mar-
Institute o f Education.
struggle o r w h a t it p o r t e n d s for
said a White H o u s e s p o k e s m a n .
represent a n y b o d y and damaged
land, assistant secretary for edu-
t h e c o m m o n cause, as the White
Marland said the President has
cation in Health, Education and
H o u s e envisions?
made it clear that h e wants t o
Welfare.
reduce inequities in t h e property
who
won
the
t h e future.
One
Many officials are u n c o m f o r t a -
of
t h e significant
con-
essions m a d e b y t h e W h i t e H o u s e
ble with t h e p r e c e d e n t s set, and
n e g o t i a t o r s headed b y
are u n c e r t a i n w h e t h e r t h e epi-
Garment,
s o d e will worsen or i m p r o v e the
viser on m i n o r i t y affairs, was t o
l o n g - t r o u b l e d relations b e t w e e n
agree
Indians and t h e g o v e r n m e n t .
federal
The
White
House
and
most
p r o t e s t e r s were u n m i s t a k a b l y relieved
to
be
freed
from
to
Leonard
N i x o n ' s principal
appoint
a
ad-
20-person
task force t o s t u d y t h e
demonstrator's
20-point
pro-
posal for reform.
the
These questions remain to be
Lightening circle in which t h e y ' d
answered in t h e m o n t h s a h e a d :
t r a p p e d t h e m s e l v e s : t h e Indians
- W a s t h e takeover of t h e BIA
-What
is the future of BIA
C o m m i s s i o n e r L o u i s R.
Bruce,
w h o s t a y e d with the Indians in
t h e b a r r i c a d e d BIA t h e initial 24
h o u r s of the t a k e o v e r ?
-Why
did
the
White
House
prosecution
for o c c u p y i n g
buil ding b u t n o t
from
With w h a t a u t h o r i t y did it m a k e
available
$66,650
in
cash
for
nor d o I k n o w at this m o m e n t
financing
how
dary education."
difficult
(hey will be but
implies
t h e federal
that
this
some
role
government
Murder On The Commune...
P R I N C E T O N , N.J. AP -
The
Gallup
said
the
poll
pre-election survey showed t h a t
s t r o n g e r t h a n McGovern in sever-
Sen. E d w a r d M. Kennedy would
al c a t e g o r i e s : a m o n g blue collar
have
made
against
a
showed
mid-October
Gallup Poll says its next-to-last
Kennedy
was
stronger
race
w o r k e r s , K e n n e d y lead Nixon b y
Nixon
than
53
President
to
41,
while
McGovern
trailed t h e President, 44 t o 4 9 .
Sen. George McGovern.
A m o n g Catholics, K e n n e d y
continued
from pane I
about
Lhe u n i m p o r t a n c e
of
m o n e y with a man w h o c a n ' t
u n d e r s t a n d w h y hippies c h o o s e
t o be p o o r when they can be
rich. T h e m a n raises s h e e p for a
living, a n d lives in a t w o - r o o m
a d o b e h o u s e . T h e hippie can't
u n d e r s t a n d why Chicanos strive
for
wealth
because Lo him
m o n e y is meaningless. He is emp h a t i c , and fishes in his p o c k e t
for m o n a y . He pulls o u t a fivedollar bill, t h e n b u r n s iL.
—A transient with a hole in the
c r o t c h of his pants walks into
t o w n , dick hanging o u t of his
pants. He a p p r o a c h e s the wife of
a local s t o r e k e e p e r and she is t o o
s t u n n e d Lo move. T w o c o m m u n e
residents drive t h r o u g h t o w n , .see
him talking, s c o o p him up, and
drive off. T h e w o m a n associates
him with the Kingdom, although
he is not a p e r m a n e n t resident.
K i n g d o m m e m b e r s are mildly
upset a b o u t these incidenLs, especially l h e last. Hut Lhey are
not upset enough to expel Iransi
e n t s from tin 1 land, because lhey
" d o n ' t wiint to pui a n y o n e on
biiminers. " Although they cits
like offending neighbors, they
wanl to maintain an open door
policy since many other com
muili's are beginning to screen or
reject strangers.
Hippies
are
u n w e l c o m e in
( i u a d a l u p i l a , and local residents
try several Mines In comniuni
cale their hate ami tear to com
m u n e m e m b e r s Incidents lore
tell a grim future, but early
signals might liol di ive you out
„f a t o w n you decide to call
h o m e , because tjUltilllg IS not
the American way, mid utter all,
il s o u n d s like s o m e t h i n g out ol
Kasy Uuler
The scenario is this
Anglos
arrive in < hiadalu pi I a looking loi
the Kingdom, and local people
give intentional wrong
dmc
I ions, s o m e ! ones guiding I h e m
(o more hostile territory. Often
lhey (ell longhaiis lo get out, til
simply ignore them. Hitchhikers
frequently wait lot a couple ol
days to gel out of t o w n . Young
Chicanos flash peace signs lo
strangers coming t h r o u g h t o w n
or lo c o m m u n e residents, but
the gesture is a mock, not a sign
of solidarity.
Several tunes Kingdom resi
in
e l e m e n t a r y and secon-
EMK Outpolled McG
to
speed t h e I n d i a n s ' back h o m e ?
and food?
adding
c o n f e r e n c e . *'I am n o t prepared
m e n t for d a m a g i n g it o r for t h e f t ?
building on Nov. 2 p l a n n e d in
ing p o i n t , the building, and the
tion,
"necessarily
the
a d v a n c e by t h e Trail of B r o k e n
concessions
t a x s y s t e m for financing educa-
sioner of e d u c a t i o n told a news
punish-
in
minor
t i m e s , " the f o r m e r U.S. commis-
National
p r o m i s e t h e Indians amnesty from
e x c h a n g e for their only bargain
refusing
"We are in for some difficult
in the n e w
led
Nixon 5 3 t o 4 3, and McGovern
d e n t s are harrassed by local
s t u d s w h o h o p e t o push the
hippies into a fight. S o m e t i m e s
their taunLs are verbal, and o t h e r
t i m e s they pull knives, b u t fights
never materialize. T h e victims
are stigmatized as " c h i c k e n s . "
Men with long hair are called
girls. Braless w o m e n are great
curiousiiies, and t h e reality of
seeing
them
coincides
with
media-created images of " h i p p i e
c h i c k s . " T h e s e signals a r o u s e no
fear, t h o u g h .
O n e a f t e r n o o n , a caravan of
y o u n g and old Chicanos m a s q u e rading as hippies m a r c h e s u p t h e
hill to the Kingdom. S o m e wear
head
bands and beads, and
others have their faces d e c o r a t e d
with war paint. A bizarre funeral
parade, they climb t h e hill, saying n o t h i n g . C o m m u n e residents
w a t c h , trying to d e c i p h e r the
message.
** *
August 5, 1970, evening. Six
men get drunk and d e c i d e to
rough u p the hippies. T h e y drive
through t o w n , and see t h r e e men
and a w o m a n , all K i n g d o m resid e n t s , walking h o m e . At gunp o i n t , they force t h e m into the
t r u n k s of their t w o cars. They
drive from bar lo bar, s t o p p i n g
at each o n e , e x h i b i t i n g their
terrified cargo, then c o m e to a
rest at a hike t w e n t y miles s o u t h
of G u a d a l u p i t a . While she is Lill
in the t r u n k , they rape the woman Lhree Limes. T h e y pistolwhip the men and leave t h e m lo
die, liul n o b o d y dies, and miraculously lhey get hack t o the
Kingdom
They decide not Lo
conlacl the authorities.
August ii, 1970, evening. Six
gun l o t i n g d r u n k s surprise t h r e e
c o m m u n e residents as they sil
a r o u n d a fire, discussing last
nighl's
kidnappings. T h e in
truders tell Ui-em not to m o v e or
lhey will (he, hut t w o of lhe
three run lor the safely of the
dark, alien night. A bullet luLs
o n e in the hack and he dies
instantly, the o t h e r escapes. T h e
m e n m a r c h the third i n t o Lown,
a pistol at his back. On Lhe way,
Lhey force hint t o climb b a r b e d
wire barefooted, but s o m e h o w
be escapes, lie runs back to the
K i n g d o m , t " ]<><» ( , l l l , ' r rt!Bl
d e n U , now refugees, w h o are
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
hiding o n t h e side of a m o u n tain. At d a w n , a search p a r t y
finds t h e d e a d m a n .
** *
T w o years later, t h e insanity of
t h a t 4 8 h o u r s has m e t justice.
Not t h e kind of justice t h e dead
man's
parents
would
have
w a n t e d , and n o t the kind of
justice t h e v i c t i m s of t h e a t t a c k
might have w a n t e d .
In J u l y charges against all b u t
o n e were r e d u c e d to charges of
aggravated b a t t e r y . T h e five m e n
pleaded guilty and received susp e n d e d s e n t e n c e s and m i n i m a l
fines. T h e sixth was charged
with v o l u n t a r y m a n s l a u g h t e r because the D.A. said h e was the
ringleader. He pleaded guilty a n d
was s e n t e n c e d to a $ 5 0 0 fine
and t w o - t e n years in prison.
ll was t h e justice of poorly
lubricated judicial m a c h i n e r y , of
complex,
time-stalling
legal
maneuvers, and of a r e p o r t e d
eyewitness disappearance.
Defense m o t i o n s for consolid a t i o n and for change of v e n u e
delayed t h e trial for over a year,
and then Martinez, t h e D.A.,
said key witnesses could not be
found, A c o u n t e r - r e p o r t said
lhey were in t o w n t o testify,
housed in a shack near Lhe c o u r t
h o u s e , and w e n ' told if they
talked, they w o u l d die. T h e y left
town.
T h e w o m a n d i d n ' t s h o w for
the rape trial, because at t h e
preliminary hearing, she was
painfully
intimidated,
asked
typical rape questions (Did you
like it?)
* * ,
It's now fall, 197 2, and alt h o u g h c o m m u n a l life is n o t in
vogue, l a t e c o m e r s go west, looking for a life of p e a c e a n d
t r a n q u i l i t y . A voting m a n , long
h a i r , b a c k p a c k , s t a n d s on R o u t e
(Mi, t h u m b o u t . " T a o s " is magic
m a r k e t e d o n t o a piece of cardh o a r d b e h o l d s in his o t h e r h a n d .
I s t o p t o ask why he is going to
Taos.
"I heard it's really far-out and
they got a tot of d o p e growing
o u t t h e r e . Hey man, T a o s is
where it all s t a r t e d . "
1 think of the freak w h o b u r n t
m o n e y in t h e face of a t o w n
which lias n o n e and w a n l either
Lo vomit or cry. I pull back on
the road and drive a w a y .
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Nixon led McGovern by 09 to
36 p e r c e n t in t h e
trailed him 37 t o 59.
mid-October
survey. Asked h o w they would
A g r o u p calling itself "Citizens
vote if t h e c h o i c e were between
for
Nixon a n d K e n n e d y instead, the
begun a drive for Sen. E d w a r d
same persons gave the President
M. K e n n e d y ' s election for presi-
only
a
52-4 3
edge,
pollster
K e n n e d y ' s s t r e n g t h s h o w e d up
early
as
December
dent
in
Committee"
1976--but
without
has
his
s a n c t i o n and e n c o u r a g e m e n t .
George Gallup said Sunday,
as
Kennedy
1971,
Jeffrey M. S t e r n b e r g , 2 5 , director
of
the
National
Student
w h e n a poll s h o w e d him t o be
U n i o n , said t o d a y t h e c o m m i t t e e
the s t r o n g e s t p o t e n t i a l candidate
will o p e n an office in Washing-
among
D e m o c r a t i c voters. T h e
Massachusetts
Nixon
by
only
3
t o n in J a n u a r y . A b o u t 30 p e o p l e
trailed
c u r r e n t l y are involved, he said,
percentage
b u t declined t o give their n a m e s .
Democrat
points at t h e Lime, Gallup said.
Kennedy
candidate,
declined
Lo
however,
campaigned for McGovern
the S o u t h
be
and
a
he
after
D a k o t a senator won
the n o m i n a t i o n .
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PAGE FIVE
Hood against student-run birth clinic
To the
Pampering the Powerful
In a n
exclusive interview
\ •ws
l a s t w e e k . P r e s i d e n t N i x o n c a l l e d f o r a n e n d t o t i n ' v r , of
permissiveness."
He
spoke
- r e l i a n c e " in t h e A m e r i c a n
and compared
in t h e W a s h i n g t o n
of
instilling
The
the average A m e r i c a n
"pampering"
last
to a child
At
Nixon
best,
mentioned
those
c tight
u p in " t h e p o v e r t y
were
dismal
failures
lopes.
that
liut
to
say
tailed
the
to u
,
At wot i •
new
that
.1,
progi.un , . i
cycle."
caused
p.m'|v
w a s an
programs
mam
shattccd
••
programs.
.o t h e social d o m e s t i c poverty
dciitd.'.
new
p e o p l e d u r i n g his scion,] •
and catered to by too many governmental
refercn.r
Si.u
a
truslrai
Nix .n's s t a t e m e n t s
who
felt
s u b s e c lent
r e s u t in
seem
lis
t o lay t o rest
huge
unconcern
reelection
with
future
nassivc n e w social
t h e !<
re
welfare
e .:
margin
elcitioi
measures.
I r e p e a t , if such a clinic is set u p it will be set u p
by t h e S t u d e n t Health Service just as any other part
of o u r program to serve t h e whole s t u d e n t c o m m u n i t y o r even p e r h a p s t h e university c o m m u n i t y
and it will n o t be s p o n s o r e d by any special group of
students.
Ii
Iroin . s m o s t r e c e n t s t a t e m e n t s th.it t h e o p p o s i t
M o r e g. ' V e r n m e n t " i n t e r v e n t i o n " w i l l b e r e s i s t e d
in t i e s p h e r e o l s o c i a l w e l l a n .
ON THE BRIGHTER SIDE, &EORGE. . . THE OWS A£=£
6l°fo TO 38°?° SOMEONE WILL- EVENTUALLY FIND US>!'
Resort Area Suffers $20 Million in Flood Damages
Intern tinglv.
evident
by Eric Mankin
Alternative
Features
Service
T h e weather of an entire
S o u t h e r n California c o u n t y is
being used as a guinea pig t o test
Navy rainmaking devices, despite
an a t t e m p t e d U.S. Senate ban on
meteorological warfare.
Working u n d e r a c o n t r a c t with
the U.S. Naval Weapons C e n t e r
at China Lake, Calif., a c o m p a n y
called North American Weather
C o n s u l t a n t s has been carrying
o u t tests of " p r e c i p i t a t i o n modi
fication d e v i c e s " in S a n t a Bar
bara C o u n t y for at least four
years tests which they plan to
c o n t i n u e this winter.
T h e tests involve the dispersal
of t h e chemical silver iodide
from
"fust-s"
which
burn,
sending t h e silver c o m p o u n d in
the form of finely dispersed
s m o k e particles i n t o selected
cloud formations. T h e silver pro
vides nuclei a r o u n d which rain
d r o p s c o n d e n s e . According to a
N o rth
American
spokesman,
u n d e r a p p r o p r i a t e c o n d i t i o n s use
of the fusees increases rainfall by
s o m e 50 per c e n t .
No control over t h e project is
exerciser! by t h e residents of
Santa Barbara C o u n t y , a resort
area which has suffered over $ 2 0
million of Hood damages over
the pa.sl t h r e e years T h e o n l \
civilian regulation of t h e project
c u r r e n t l y in force is t h a t im
posed by t h e California Depart
merit of Water Resources, which
issues licenses for rainmaking
a t t e m p t s in t h e s l a t e
Under California law, licensees
must publish a " n o t i c e of inten
I j o n " prior t o beginning rain
m a k i n g o p e r a t i o n s a n d file a
reporl on o p e r a t i o n s i m m e d i
iite'ly .liter r a i n m a k i n g a t t e m p t s
are c o n c l u d e d - However, state
law c o n t a i n s n o provision for
public hearings or o t h e r means
by which citizens might express
their r e a c t i o n s t o p r o p o s e d rain
m a k i n g projects. " I f s o m e o n e
PAGE SIX
object I'd," a state official said,
" t h e y would have to file a suit.
T h e s t a t e does n o t have any set
procedure."
According t o J o h n T h o m p s o n ,
w h o is directing t h e Navy project for N o r t h American, t h e
Santa Barbara tests have " n o
military a p p l i c a t i o n s , as s u c h . "
China Lake Naval Weapons Center " j u s t h a p p e n s to be where
this research is d o n e . If y o u ' r e
thinking in t e r m s of military
applications, t h e r e are n o n e as
far as I k n o w "
Senator
Claiborne
Pell of
R h o d e Island has charged, h o w
ever, that U S forces in In do
china are engaged in r a i n m a k i n g
over Vietnam, b o t h to clear tar
get areas of clouds for later
b o m b i n g and also -it is charged
lo flood areas, in c o m b i n a t i o n
with b o m b i n g and w e a k e n i n g of
I he North
Vietnamese
dike
system Asked a b o u t this b> a
reporter from the Suiitu tUirhan,
Netus mid Review,
Thompson
replied "if you e s t i m a t e the
a m o u n t of damage d o n e b \
impeding s o m e o n e ' s t r a n s p o r t
lion (by flooding) as o p p o s e d to
blowing t h e m u p or burning
t h e m u p , 1 don't think it's so
immoral "
The project director denied
that t h e r e was an> c o n n e d ion
b e t ween
Nuv> financed
rain
making activities and t h e disas
Irons Santa Barbara floods of
1U69 and 107 1 In 1988, he
acknowledged,
cloud
seeding
o p e r a t i o n s were carried on in the
months
before
the January,
1969 overflow, " b u t when it
became
apparent
thai
there
would he p r o b l e m s , we ceased
o p e r a t i o n s T h e watershed was
c o m p l e t e l y s a t u r a t e d , tl
ue
thing the area didn 'I need was
m o r e rain "
According to T h o m p s o n , iInsilver iodide r a i n m a k i n g m e t h o d
has its effects within only a few
h o u r s of dispersal of t h e chemi-
cal, a n d leaves no residue in the
environment.
Weather
control
apparently
remains a part of t h e U.S. ar
senal in Asia, despite Senate
p r o t e s t A recent news item in
the armed forces publication
Stars and Stripes m e n t i o n e d that
planes based at Kurat Air Force
Base, T h a i l a n d , were engaged in
a variety of missions, "including
cloudseeding "
S e n a t o r Gaylord Nelson of
"Wisconsin recently a t t e m p t e d to
write into this year's military
procurement
authorization
;i
provision against " t h e dissemination of e q u i p m e n t or instructions, or the procuring of agents
for starling firestorms, or using
weather
modification
as a
w e a p o n of war "
T h e Nelson provisions were
ehniiniated in conference with
the House of Representatives,
when t h e House conferees o h
|ected that " t u n e was not avail
able t o gather information to
evaluate tin- effects such an
a m e n d m e n t mignl have on De
pari m e nl
of
Defense
opera
lions
an objection some legisla
live observers took as an indica
'>""
I hat rainmaking remains
part of the American arsenal in
Asia
Hi-searchers c o n t a c t e d at Chin.,
Lake were unable either lo con
firm or deny that tile devices
being tested in S.ml.i Barbara
were t h e same as those used ove-i
I n d o c h i n a T h e \ acknowledged,
however, that devices designed
ai China Lake wen- Mi use in
mditar> o p e r a t i o n s in Okinawa,
the Philippines, and Alaska
1'' a d d i h o n lo t'luna Lake
research on rainoiaking is also
reportedly in progress at «t least
two o t h e r locations
East St.
Louis, where the Air Force
o p e r a t e s a center at S c o t l Field,
and t h e Environmental Tech
oology Applications Center, m
Suitland, Maryland.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
fails
to
militar.
programs
continue
,< , •
to rob the publu
billions ni d o l l a r s a n d p u m p
these
notice a double
Just as we a n t i c i p a t e d t h e need for gynecologists
in h i s n e w c a l l f o r . s e l f - r e l i a n c e . T h e d e l i
programs
president
Navy does Rain/War Dance in Cal.
Nixon
seems
that
lead
to
abhor:
money
to
the
ioll,"
into "overkill." I
dependence
dependence
of
I'm'
Jel.ii,
'Jesus, be my guide...'
t r a c t o r s o n t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d d e p e n d e n c e o l milii.M
Americans
Stability.
on
the defense
But
Nixon
industry
does
not
t o a c h i e v e ei
see
the
d e p e n d , in
g o v e r n m e n t a l d e f e n s e c o n t r a c t s a s " p a m p e r i n g . " t v n .1
he
dcniic
government
faced with b a n k r u p t c y
subsidation
as " p a m p e r i n g . "
pampered
by the g o v e r n m e n t
is e a s y
ol
(Lockheed
example)
It
defense
nahi "
being the mosi
is o n l y
tiie
am
pom
nin
in t h e N i x o n i a n view
I it
to see w h y w h e n o n e s t u d i e s t h e role big h . e •
p l a y e d i i u n d e r w r i t i n g t h e R e p u b l i c a n c a m p a i g n ell
The
president's
record
has been
i s s u e s . Ills a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
combat
poverty,
weakest
on
r
ihmn
has d o n e little t o rebuild . '
provide
jobs.
His
policies
Inn.
s i s t e i i t l y l a v o r e d b i g b u s i n e s s o v e r p o o r w h i t e a n d in
group members.
It a p p e a r s
the
Inst.
his s e c o n d
It
term
is a t r a g i c
will offer
indication
U n d e r n o c i r c u m s t a n c e s will any special g r o u p of
s t u d e n t s set u p a birth c o n t r o l or gynecology clinic
in t h e S t u d e n t Health Service. I did n o t agree t o
a n y o n e ' s s e t t i n g u p " a o n c e a week clinic." T h e r e
has b e e n a m i s u n d e r s t a n d i n g here t o say t h e very
least. When a clinic is s e t u p it will be by those
delegated to d o so and on t h e basis of need and in
a c c o r d a n c e with priorities. Meanwhile, it is for
Planned P a r e n t h o o d to d e t e r m i n e what w o r k l o a d
they can or will carry, not a n y s t u d e n t group. T h e r e
are m a n y o t h e r agents a n d agencies in the c o m m u n i t y in a d d i t i o n to Planned P a r e n t h o o d which
are already able to provide c o n c e p t i o n c o n t r o l .
As a m a t t e r of fact m u c h t h o u g h t and careful
planning has gone into this subject and it is possible
that if a n d when we have such a clinic it might be
set u p t o serve t h e entire university c o m m u n i t y . As
of n o w , students' needs are being m e t satisfactorily
by existing agencies.
nation
p a p m c r i d b y t h e m is a n a b s u r d i t y .
some
Editor:
In r e s p o n s e t o t h e letter of Barbara Matilsky in t h e
N o v e m b e r 3 r d , Friday Albany S t u d e n t Press concerning S U N Y - A Birth C o n t r o l Clinic - Dream or
Reality.
ol
l i t t l e i n.u e
what
"I
•
*•'
To the Editor:
I would like to s u b m i t this, that c a m e from my
essence: to all w h o wish t o reflect upon it I am new
to Jesus and I have m a n y troubles and d o u b t s , many
of which are shared by others on c a m p u s . This
prayer c a m e s p o n t a n e o u s l y after I left a prayer
group t o n i g h t , for I was very troubled about my
faith, a b o u t my loyally t o the Lord 1 was in t h e
library s t u d y i n g Restatements
on Cittitraets,
and
those a r o u n d me kept swearing " J e s u s ! " T o me, at
that m o m e n t , they weren't cursing
I hey were
stimuli to induce me to p u t d o w n my h o o k s , lake a
piece of pajjer, and write I he flow of my con
sciousness. T h e following is whal c a m e I h o p e
you 'II print it not for m e , hut for t he Christian
c o m m u n i t y on c a m p u s for their benefit
Y e a r s " will m e a n t o t h e p o o r a n d p o w e r l e s s .
Campus Chest a Success
loo
often, the bright
s p o t s of c a m p u s l i l e .m I
t h e H o o d o l i n tic i s m a m l i 'ei i n n m . i t i o n so i o i i u i n
campus
a n d on the e d i t o r i a l pages ol t h e A M '
O n e n i t h e s e b r i g h t s p o t s is (.'a in p u s ( . ' e n t e r , a ill n
this year successfully
raised d e s p c r a l c k
n e e d e d in
t h e I l e a d Nt.n t P r o g r a m .
Campus
Chest
humanism
C a m p u s ( cntei
The
Class
sponsoied
was not
suttess
,,l
only
also.
a
finutui.il
Students
sold
sin,
po.i,.
lobby. A C a m p u s Chesi C u i t e s i
IT/4
gave
a
donation.
The
a h a k e s a l e . Ill s h o r t , t h e e v e n t
t o g e t l l e l . a n 01 i Ulelli e w h i c h
\
laiull
homele
Is n o l l e l o o h o p e I i
Alllilll) S t a t e i a m p u s .
Chairwomen
S u e Pallas a n d L o r r a i n e
we think w a s a most a p p r o p r i a t e slogan
|ouiiie\
Campus
toward
Kiiliui ,
Im il»
di
ol a t h o u s a n d miles b e g i n s w i t h o n e sunn
Chest
brought
this
tanipus
a sense ol c o m m u n i t y
|usi m i ,
.iiiil t o w a r d
sti |
nuking ,
"Jesus, be my guide, my inspiration'
I am an
worthy t" be of you hut in my selfisbne is. I want to
be of ymi I tun a lowly man, one of thosi for whonl
you died nit tlir cn».s.v to save fur eternity. Keep me
at your side. Lord f'nnse you,
font1
"Sweet Jems, fin ei me with your goodness
and
life I nerd eonsolutton
in thin tired world I want to
he with yon, yet I am of this world, also I don't
,/cs/ii.se my tioih , hut I know (bat its faults
displease
\<-u leaeh me. Lord, teach me so that I may be led
to s,,ur h(e "/ am the Way, the Truth, and the
Light " I'leusc Jesus give me Use Road, teaeh me
HJiif desiies, illumine nn path
What am I hut a i>oor man, struggling within a
i,"•'/,I .... against vntti wishes Hoir may I serve you,
I ,,-,/ ' II,,a .an I serve you, l.orif I bine to v<m for
lit, wil.l
is nothing lor me but for those in it who
,„, .,/ y„u haiseyon,
Lord'
flense
Lord, hem mr and listen I fuu-e little to
,,/fei YOU, hut I want lo give what I have to you I
haw lulled yotl main tunes m the past but 1 don't
u-ant to pule myself uguitl Help me, Lord, you who
„re lb,- I llimate Comforter
I have faded and luwe
Hone ,ura\ from you many tones I am a weak
l>ersoit liut help me, Lord
VON have never faded
,i,e / vail on you constantly
for ntrenglh, and I nerd
now more than I've ever had Help me. Lord1
Vuu
I'lease' Through you, Jesus, I unit tins
c a r e , t h e n w e b e l i e v e t h e i r s t r e n u o u s e l l o i i s y i e h h ,1
more than economic
benefit.
Thank y o u , a n d t h e Lord be will) y o u , always
Charles Sullivan
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER M
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1972
and provided t h a t service years ago, we have long
considered t h e possibility of birth c o n t r o l on
c a m p u s a n d have worked closely with Planned
P a r e n t h o o d and Albany Family Planning t o keep
a b . e a s t of needs a n d t o consider various possibilities. We a r e still w o r k i n g o n it.
When a n d if we d o it, it will be d o n e right. This
takes professional staff, space, time and m o n e y .
his article regarding President Benezet's participation o n m y talk
s h o w , "Intercour8e, , , November 8 t h , o n WSUA. It was well-written
and informative for readers w h o missed the show. However, I w o u l d
like to c o m m e n t on t w o points in his story. Mr. von Nostitz wrote,
"...and Benezet appeared o n edge throughout the hour l o n g
program. 1 ' I definitely did n o t think this was the case at all. The
callers asked intelligent questions, and Dr. Benezet replied in an
honest and relaxed manner. I had n o guests in the studio e x c e p t his
wife.
Also, the article mentions a caller inquiring about S.A. President
Mike Lfimpert's recent c o l u m n in the ASP, and Benezet's response. It
should have noted that the President remarked h e hadn't seen t h e
ASP that day, thereby couldn't c o m m e n t specifically about the
column. I thought it was an informative s h o w , and our audience's
interest and p a r t i c i p a t i o n was very gratifying.
Janet Hood M.D.
Director
Student
Health
Sincerely
yours,
Phil Chansky
Producer and Host
WSUA's
"Intercourse"
Service
Can't keep a cat
To the Editor:
Last semester, I was assigned a r o o m in Mohican
Hall, o n Indian Quad. T h e girl I was assigned t o live
with was living with her boyfriend in the d o r m .
After I arrived, her boyfriend r e m a i n e d in the r o o m
with us. 1 brought this u p lo my d o r m director and
n o t h i n g was d o n e . So for t h e entire s e m e s t e r I had
t w o r o o m m a t e s , o n e of which was n o t welcomed by
me. Then t o o , there are t h e few things which t h e
university allows to go on in the d o r m s which I
consider harmful to m y welfare. T h e y are t h e
following:
1 ) drinking is allowed in t h e d o r m s , and thus gives
t h e s t u d e n t s t h e o p p o r t u n i t y of getting d r u n k . If t h e
s t u d e n t s would stay in their r o o m s , it would be all
right, but parties seem to go on all night w h i c h
hinder my studying, and t h u s m y e d u c a t i o n , as well
as my right to peace and quiet.
2) the people on t h e floor use t h e toilet, b u t
forget that there are o t h e r people a r o u n d , and so
forget h o w lo use the toilet, or else they get sick
and can't be b o t h e r e d with cleaning it u p . This t o o
is a violation of my welfare, which t h e university is
s u p p o s e d lo he c o n c e r n e d with. T o t o p this off, t h e
w o m a n w h o has the c o u r a g e t o face this garbage
everyday is told that s h e does n o t clean right, and
has to fight for her j o b . If t h e girls d o n ' t have
enough respect for themselves to k e e p the place
d e c e n t , then it is n o o n e ' s fault b u t their o w n , and
n o t the cleaning w o m a n ' s .
3) the university reserves t h e righ' t o inspect o u r
r o o m s at a n y t i m e ; this is an invasic i if m y right t o
privacy, which is guaranted t o me by the Bill of
High Us.
N o n e of these things seem to affect t h e university
s y s t e m , b u t t h e one thing t h a t does affect
it is
the possession of a small animal residing in the d o r m
who b o t h e r s n o o n e . This animal h a p p e n s to be m y
kitten, which I have received notice to remove from
my room. Since I d o n ' t have a r o o m m a t e , because
the girl w h o was with me moved o u t to live with her
friend, the kitten does n o t d i s t u r b a r o o m m a t e , as
my former r o o m m a t e ' s boyfriend w a s doing. T h e
kitten has been trained to stay in t h e r o o m , so she
does not run out lo t h e hall w h e r e she might
frighten or get in people's way, as t h e parties which
go on al night do. She knows h o w t o use a litter
box, and would rather die than go t o t h e b a t h r o o m
any place else. T h i s m e a n s t h a t her b a t h r o o m is
clean, because she appreciates a life t h a t is clean and
not offensive or t r o u b l e s o m e to the h u m a n s a r o u n d
her, whereas s o m e h u m a n s d o n ' t even have this
sense of decency. The kitten stays in her r o o m
guaranteeing o t h e r p e o p l e ' s right t o privacy. S h e
never cries out without reason, a n d usually is so
quiet thai if I d i d n ' t k n o w she was in there, I would
believe she was gone. T h e r e f o r e , she respects
other's rights lo peace and quiet, which s o m e
h u m a n s in the dorm d o not d o . Yet, this k i t t e n is
told she has to leave . I'd like lo k n o w why? If you
say thai I signed a c o n t r a c t agreeing l o this
condition, then 1 would like to k n o w if legally, a
pamphlet stating rules, which y o u are not asked if
you agree with, is considered a c o n t r a c t ? What I
signed was an application form for a room, not a
contract...
Apparently the university is c o n c e r n e d only with
certain types of welfare, s o m e of which are not
beneficial It) me, hul then perhaps only particular
people are tfiven these rights, and o t h e r s aren't If 1
am forced to give u p a creature ol G o d , I will claim
thai she is my p r o p e r t y , a l t h o u g h she is really the
property of her creator, and n o o n e e l s e .
In t h i s
world she is mine, and t o remove her from m y
possession 1 will consider a n o t h e r violation of the
privileges granted me as a citixen of t h e United
States of America, through the C o n s t i t u t i o n
Thank you.
Sincerely
yours,
GatlSislo
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Justice for 60 year-old students
To the Editor:
I feel hesitant t o c o m m e n t o n a s i t u a t i o n in which I am n o t
directly involved, b u t I feel a reply is n e e d e d t o Prof. Hauser's letter
in y o u r issue of O c t o b e r 2 0 .
Professor Hauser: T h e injustice of a h e a l t h y 60-year-old s t u d e n t
asking for a space at t h e near end of t h e parking lot is obvious w h e n
we consider t h e plight of t h e poor u n d e r 30 faculty m e m b e r w h o
then has to walk from t h e far e n d .
Yes Professor, equal rights for all! But let us n o t forget t h e
disabled and old, b o t h faculty and s t u d e n t !
Why s h o u l d all users of the parking facilities on a n y S U N Y
c a m p u s , u n d e r a c e r t a i n age (say 5 0 ) n o t b e required t o park in a n y
available parking area?
Y o u r r e s p o n s e to this p r o b l e m seems t o indicate an a t t i t u d e typical
of S U N Y faculty. An a t t i t u d e t h a t seems t o s a y : We are e m p l o y e e s
of t h e s y s t e m and we will be here after y o u are gone, therefore we
should have special privileges. What this a t t i t u d e does to further t h e
e d u c a t i o n a l process is q u e s t i o n a b l e .
Yours for justice for all.
Bob Lusk
Editor,
Tower
Ulster County Community
College
Stone Ridge, New York
Chinese Studies Offered
To (heSUNYA
Community:
G e n t l y I stir a white feather fan,
With o p e n shirt silting in a green w o o d .
I t a k e off my c a p and hang it on a jutting s t o n e ;
A wind from the pine-trees trickles on my bare heud.
- a p o e m by Li Po ( 7 0 0 - 7 6 2 )
This c o m i n g s e m e s t e r , we are r a t h e r f o r t u n a t e in t h e Chinese
D e p a r t m e n t to have with us t w o y o u n g and brilliant educators—Ling
C h u n g Odell and Helen S u n . Of the t w o l i t e r a t u r e courses being
offered in t h e spring (Survey of Classical L i t e r a t u r e and M o d e r n
Chinese L i t e r a t u r e in T r a n s l a t i o n ) , the former will be c o n d u c t e d by
Ling C h u n g Odell, w h o is knowlegeable in b o t h Classical J a p a n e s e
and Chinese, and w h o s e new b o o k , Women Pouts of China, will be
published early in 1 9 7 3 . Modern Chinese Literature in T r a n s l a t i o n
will be t a u g h t by Helen S u n , w h o after winning the Samuel G o l d w y n
Creative Writing A w a r d early in her career, has recently w o n t h e
Chia-hsin Annual A w a r d ( T a i w a n ) for T h e Best Novel of the Year.
Her course will include a survey of t h e literary scene from the 1 9 1 9
May F o u r t h R e v o l u t i o n to recent publications of Chairman Mao.
Much e m p h a s i s will be placed on the writings of Lu-shun, " t h e
father of m o d e r n C h i n e s e l i t e r a t u r e . "
T h o s e interested in tiiking either language or literature courses,
please register first; a n d then at y o u r leisure, c o n t a c t Mrs. Odell in
room 36ft of t h e H u m a n i t i e s building for m o r e info-mation. See you
in class!!
Marti .s. Bergman
'TJZ"'
-\,,
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PAGE SEVEN
fi
On Security:
continued from page 1
s t r i k e care as little a b o u t Central
Council as they d o a b o u t us.
Y o u have m a y b e fifty s t u d e n t s
w h o really feel strongly a b o u t
o p e n parking. T h e rest c o u l d n ' t
care' less. We have a b o u t t h r e e
h u n d r e d cars parked illegally in
front of t h e d o r m s . Y e t t w o
hundred and fifty o f t h e m , if w e
"There Definitely is a Problejn of Stereotypes."
d r o v e u p with o u r t w o t r u c k and
w e n t b o o , w o u l d be r u n n i n g o u t
in their u n d e r w e a r t o get their
cars o u t . "
T h e r e definitely is a p r o b l e m
w i t h s t e r e o t y p e s , I t h o u g h t , nodded, smiled, a n d left with m y
own.
***
where everyone threatened and
c u r s e d a n d s t o o d o n tables a n d
finally e m p t i e d i n t o t h e s t r e e t s
trying to "find those punks and
s h o w t h e m , " b u t o n l y found a
c o u p l e o f fourteen-year-old kids
pitching
pennies against t h e
l a u n d r a m a t a n d pushed t h e m
a r o u n d until it was t o o e m harassing, dwindling back t o t h e
d o r m s in t w o s and t h r e e s . I
remember t o o how the next
night o n e freshman reeled i n t o
Alden with his face t h e t e x t u r e
of a b u t c h e r ' s a p r o n a n d t w o
o t h e r s found themselves all t o o
alone o n t h e wrong side of a
zipgun.
F R I D A Y - 2 0 : 2 6 - In t h e car,
r o u n d i n g t h e curve by t h e lake,
passing t h e baseball field a n d the
tall bright Silo sign a n d t h e g y m ,
the headlights c a p t u r e t w o hitchhikers. T h e y stick their t h u m b s
out and laugh. W i t h o u t comment,
Lieutenant
O'Connor
swerves past t h e m .
" W e m a k e it a point t o s t o p
and see if we can help a n y o n e
t h a t seems like t h e y ' r e in any
sort of t r o u b l e . We d o m a k e an
a t t e m p t t o create a c o m m u n i t y
service i m a g e . "
"For instance?"
" F u n n y you should ask."
We swerve into D u t c h Quad
parking lot. A n o t h e r patrol car is
s t o p p e d p e r p e n d i c u l a r t o an old
model foreign car with its h o o d
up. A guy, t w o girls, a n d a
security
officer
arc looking
d o w n into the engine. It seems
the kid's trying to p u t a new fan
belt on. " G o t t o o l s ? " O ' C o n n o r
asks. " Y e a h , " T o t h e o t h e r c o p :
" O k a y , Cover my z o n e . " His
jacket sleeves got pushed u p and
we spend t w e n t y m i n u t e s juggling crescent wrenches.
T h i n k i n g , yeah - police prot e c t i o n is n o sure thing, b u t
being w i t h o u t it can be a d o w n .
** *
2 1 : 0 5 - T h e radio blares:
" U n i t o n e to unit t h r e e . "
"Unit three,"
" A r e y o u ready to take over
zone three y e t ? "
"Wh id's y o u r location? Arc
y o u in z o n e t h r e e ? "
" N o , I came over to see h o w
y o u m a d e o u t with t h a t fanbelt.
Hut y o u ' r e missing. So I w a n t e d
to k n o w if you'll take over y o u r
/one now."
" Y e a h T h a t ' s affirmative. I'll
go hack to zone t w o and y o u
can stay in z o n e three. O k a y ? "
"HepcaUplease."
" Y o u ' r e going into zone three,
right? I'll go into zone t w o . "
" I ' m in z o n e t w o n o w . 1 was
r e q u e s t i n g for y o u to lake over
/.one t h r e e so I can r e s u m e zone
t w o . What d o y o u w a n t ? "
"All right, d o il that w a y . "
Point for the had guys.
Security Director Williams:
O u r Man Friday
PROPOSED
WOT -FOR-PROFIT
DA Y-CARE CENTER
DAYCAKI: SI:RVK:I:S CONFORMING TO NIW
YOKK STATU KI:QUIIU:MI:NTS: CIIII.DKIN
UNDLK A(,I: 5, 1.IHJCATION KKCRUATION;
I Ul.l.
UNDER
DAY
WITH
QUALIFIED
Mi:Al.S;
TO
REASONABLE
TUITION.
A
(AKI
PERSONNEL.
CONVENIENT
WITHIN
INI A N T
CAPITAL
DISTRICT
EXPECTED
TO
AREA.
OPEN
YEAR.
I AIM I N T E R E S T E D !
NAME.
ADDRESS,.
CITY
20:50
Hack on l o u r .
through I he deserted
|«U, O V o n n i i r l>r;m<
rednosed flashlight, i IlW
again using il '<> cheek I he |(
on car doors. At runt- ci'r'l
half-hour radio check sla
T h e units call in " Z o
here,"
"two,"
0 (
" I h rep, "
" |)(idiu in
"Kasl," "Downtown
The radio noes blank . Minn A
|*uy in a sweatsuit (uys by and
waves. T h e l.ieulcnanl nods.
" T h e d o w n t o w n d o r m s lor the
|mst lew weeks have hi i under
seine by a group of kids w h o call
themselves " t h e Purple (Jan p.".
I've assigned o n e car down there
each evening to try to chase
these kids o u t . T h e y ' v e been
(lulling lite alarms, harrassing the
girls, making ;i general nuisance
nl themselves, T h e marked patrol car is d o w n there, the student patrol ntr is there, plus (wo
students roving inside. That gives
us five people Irving to correct
the situation
It's not a really
serious p r o b l e m al this stage of
Ihe game But it could easily
b e c o m e serious if an Albany fire
Iruck gels into an accident responding lo a false a l a r m . "
I walch the flashlight beam
b o u n c e from car lo car, remembering my freshman year d o w n
t o w n , Ihe fights a n d robberies
that h a p p e n e d on t h e way to or
from O ' H e a n y ' s a n d J a k e ' s and
W, T.'s,
ho ,v when
Security
wouldn'i or c o u l d n ' t d o anything we called a d o r m meeting
NO. OF CHILDREN UNDER AGE 5 .
Send To:
DAY-CARE PROGRAM
233 WESTERN AVENUE
ALBANY, N.Y. 12203
by
A LB AJVY STATE
SKi CLUB
presents ;|
AM EVENING IN TYROL
Wine a n d Cheese
\
Interest P a r t y
Come and find out about the
BEST EUROPEAN SKI TRIP OF THE SEASON
- NO GIMMICKSmeet the people of the club
Proposed Site: South Mall Vicinity
IN O R D E R TO MAKE T H E DAYCARE
CENTER MATERIALIZE SOONER, AN EARLY
RESPONSE IS IMPORTANT!
n nil j.imimh.ij.i.i.M.ri.ij.i.1.
funded
OR CALL 456-2547 7T0 9P.M.
November 20
at Henway's
mm
PAGE EIGHT
FRIDAY - 21:15
Lieutenant
O ' C o n n o r , turning into Colonial
Quad parking lot, red flashlight
b o u n c i n g crawly over t h e r u t s :
"We've a t t r a c t e d s o m e y o u n g e r
people with the recent changeover from t h e old institution
11.1 i.m.t.i±M.ixi j.i J.I o iiM.i.l.<.ni iiiii.i.in.m.y.i.i.iii.i.i.Lt ti
NEED MORE INFORMATION
iiiiiiiiiiitiTiTiTiTiTmrmrirrnTrmTrm-.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
" M o s t of t h e older imn :ire
still s i t t i n g o n the grade einhi.s
T h e y d o n ' t have police officer
status.
They
haven i |„.,.„
trained. T h e change to unulc
could h a v e r u n , m a n , "
" Y e a h , d o n ' t get u p tight,
man."
. I cringed. T h e o t h e r c o p d i d n ' t
say a w o r d . If this was Dragnet,
G a n n o n w o u l d have b l u r t e d :
" W a t c h it p u n k , w h e n my partner bears d o w n he bears d o w n
h a r d a n d fast a n d d e e p e n o u g h
to strike o i l . "
But O ' C o n n o r : " I ' m n o t u p tight. If y o u ' r e in a building t h a t
y o u d o n ' t b e l o n g in, y o u ' r e tresp a s s i n g . " Very collected. We get
new n a m e s . T h e y ' r e c h e c k e d , by
radio, in t h e p h o n e
book.
T h e y ' r e good. " W e d o n ' t mind
you b e i n g o n c a m p u s b u t stay
on areas o p e n t o t h e p u b l i c . "
"Right, m a n . "
21:45—If y o u ' r e a c o p t h e r e ' s a
q u e s t i o n of guns. Y o u d o n ' t see
o n e u n d e r O ' C o n n o r ' s j a c k e t . Or
u n d e r a n y o t h e r Security j a c k e t .
And he's n o t h a p p y a b o u t it. His
eyes w i d e n a n d his voice d r o p s .
" I t ' s u p t o t h e p r e s i d e n t of
8:30 pm
FREE
with
an a u t o m a t i c
weapon.
Here's t w o guys w h o ' v e j u s t arrested an a r m e d individual a n d
d i n ' t k n o w he was armed. Either
o n e or b o t h could have been
s h o t . It s e e m s t o me that t o ask
a m a n t o perform this function
and n o t give him t h e p r o p e r
e q u i p m e n t to protect his o w n
life is w r o n g . ' .
We follow a red sports car t h a t
s h o o t s in from Western Ave.
O ' C o n n o r ' s eyes j u m p mechanically from t h e road to the speedo m e t e r a n d back again. His mind
is elsewhere.
" I also feel I have a responsibility to get back h o m e t o my
wife and three kids every d a y .
Yet, at t h e same time, I still
c a n ' t c o m e o u t and say t h a t t h e
entire organization s h o u l d be
armed, because of the m a n p o w e r
make-up, the lack of trained
personnel at certain levels."
"If y o u ' r e on this u n i v e r s i t y , "
I say, " a n d you have a gun,
they'll he people u n h a p p y . "
"I think t h e s t u d e n t s realize
now that we're here to perform
a function for them, that lo
protect t h e m is part of o u r j o b
But, in (he ultimate situation,
we're not e q u i p p e d to d o i t . "
I wonder if they realize either
* * :\21 :5fi
T h e end of my tour
The car m u s t s hack into the
gravel plot n e \ i to the while
panneled security building.
"(Jet a n y t h i n g out of t h i s ' ' "
O'Connor
asks,
lulling the
motor.
"Yeah,'"
thinking
fast
"it
might have u n d e r m i n e d a c o u p l e
of
** *
WEDNESDAY
PAST
- This
year's S e c u r i t y isn't t h e s a m e as
last year's. Not every Security
officer is a security officer. Appearances are deceiving. S m o k ing his pipe in his orange chair,
-James Williams e x p l a i n e d :
" W e ' v e been peace officers for
s o m e time, for several years. In
the latter part of May a hill was
passed giving us police officer
a u t h o r i t y . New York makes a
d i s t i n c t i o n b e t w e e n peace officers and police officers. Only a
police officer can e x e c u t e a
search warrant or an arrest warr a i n . O u t uniform p a t r o l m e n are
in t wo civil service categories,
grade eight and grade twelve.
T h e grade eights a r e s u p p o s e d to
be in those areas of the c a m p u s
less susceptible to c r i m e . "
i
ZIP__
safety officer t o c a m p u s security
officer. I w o u l d sny prohahly
2 5 % of t h e officers now have at
least t w o years of college, with
a n o t h e r 1 0 % continuing iheir
education.
" W e ' r e in a transition period
from t h e old school-guard type
image t o a law enforcement
agency. Younger people |,;iVt.
c o m e in. T h e majority of |.|1esi,
y o u n g e r p e o p l e have received
the s a m e training as any law
e n f o r c e m e n t officer would on
t h e o u t s i d e . Jn addition to that
t h e y ' v e also had various two
week s e m i n a r s for sensitivity
training t o y o u n g e r people, Hie
academic
c o m m u n i t y , service
o r i e n t e d law-enforcement rallier
than t h e old idiot on the himt
routine.
stereotypes
thai
students
seem lo have of S e c u r i t y , " add
ing, " I t ' s l o o east lo forget thai
y o u ' r e dealing with individuals,
(when you talk about institutions) "
"In my j o b it's hard to forget
thai s t u d e n t s are individuals."
Gannon
would
have
said
" h o w ' s t h a i " " , I iiisi nod
" . . . I r e m e m b e r this o n e kul I
pulled
Up n e x l
to h i m d o w n
i h e l a k e , in t h a i
J i m Williams: 'Musi siuilfiihhave absolutely n o c o n t a c t with law
e n f o r c e m e n l . oilu-i ili.m * h . m « y see on T . V / '
twelve is bused o n latum
m o t i o n a l e x a m s , having tin
ifieations to d o the |ob,
oral interview
Some i
were s h o t d o w n
I 'm n
now to t h e old sehoo
t y p e , t h e kind of guy winhad a c h a n c e to go I"
school because he had to
I'm talking about men hi
years old. T h e day shift is
with that t y p e of peo,
c r o w d e d t w o a n d t hree
car."
Yes, s t e r e o t y p e s are IM<
so are l i m i t a t i o n s in |»*' •
** #
21:25
" C o m e in three
"Three
" M e e t me at the
B.A."
"Affirmative."
Pull u p by a sec u n l \
and t w o kids weai H ig g i '
mirul Byrd artie ,acke
Hie
wiseass
smiles,
c a u g h t t h e m w a n d e ring l
nels, t o o k their i
weren't students.
O ' C o n n o r asks, si p o l l
startles m e : " A r e Ih ihe \<
names, b o y s ? "
" W e d i d n ' t do
each individual university center
to m a k e t h e d e t e r m i n a t i o n as to
w h e t h e r or n o t firearms are
used. My o w n personal feeling is
that us far as this c a m p u s is
c o n c e r n e d we are thr law enforcement function. Not only d o
we have t h e s t u d e n t b o d y to
c o n t e n d with, we also have people from the outside c o m m u n i t y
to c o n t e n d with.
"I k n o w of s i t u a t i o n s w h e r e a
couple of officers see a guy duck
behind a cur. They go over. T h e
guy crawls u n d e r n e a t h t h e car
An it t u r n s o u t he's in the
process of burglarizing t h e car
They p till the guy o u t from
u n d e r n e a t h the car a n d c o m e up
!
' LARGE NATIONAL J
J COMPANY SEEKS ONE j
• AREA REPRESENTA- J
I TIVE. SALARY OPEN. t
• SENIOR OR POST- j
• GRADUATE STUDENT J
tPREFERRED.
I
J
CONTACT ROBERT J
• WENGER 489-4300.
J
mamaaaaaasai
[•UESDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1972
parking
bs
lot h y
Indian Quad lie was silling on
Ins m o t o r c y c l e staring at ihe
trees. I started talking to him It
seems he wanted to he a c o p and
wa.s s t u d y i n g criminology. We
talked for awhile and I left,
thinking what an intelligent kid,
s o m e b o i h who could d o something for law enforcement, and
turned the car down towards
Western
Avenue
Not
five
minutes pass and Ihe radio opens
up and says a girl b> ihe lake
passed a white male with a
m o t o r c y c l e who pulled out a
playboy foldoul, unzipped Ins
pants, and shook his pride at
Laughing, I s a \ , " T h e r e must
be a moral there s o m e w h e r e . "
" Y e a h , Maybe it's thai c o m
m u n i c a t i o n isn't always e a s y . "
A point for Ihe hi//.
r
1
i
Albany Collegiate Interfaith C e n t e r ,
c o m m o n l y k n o w n as C h a p e l H o u s e .
Chape/ House:
7
'Going Every Day and Evening a
by Carol Blacklcy
Sitting in t h e Chapel House, it
is easy to forget t h a t y o u ' r e right
across t h e s t r e e t from Ihe eon
crete Stale University. Located
hillside across Peri met
Road, on t h e s o u t h side of ihe
c a m p u s . Chapel House overlooks
Ihe Dutch Quad a t h l e t i c field
Many s t u d e n t s , I've found, are
not aware of Ibis House's ex is
tence and k n o w little about
what it has lo offer the Hl'NYA
community.
Built a r o u n d t h e turn of ihe
c e n t u r y by the former Kcpubli
can a d m i n i s t r a t i o n in Albany, it
was first used as a c o u n t r y house
hy i h e politicians. Later, in
HKiiy, il wa.s purchased hy t h e
i'lmncil of C h u r c h e s a n d used as
;i has is for c a m p u s ministry,
Kinally, in 1 9 7 0 , t h e house wa.s
bought by t h e Albany Interfaith
t ' o r p o r a l i o n and was given its
present n a m e of Albany Collegiate Interfaith Center. However,
ihe familiar n a m e of (.'Impel
House has e n d u r e d .
Open for use lo ihe University
s t u d e n t s and faculty, Chapel
House has four full lime chaplains, t w o of w h o m relate with
nineteen o t h e r institutions of
higher e d u c a t i o n in this geographic area. T h e chaplains include Harold Haum, Anglican
priest, Harvey Hates a n d Andy
S m i t h , s p o n s o r e d by the United
Ministry in Higher Education",
and Paul S m i t h , sponsored by
the II (" Diocese of Albany All
four men work out of the
Chapel House b u t spend the
majority of their lime on campus.
Weddings,
every d a y and e v e n i n g . " Unf o r t u n a t e l y , h e feels, t h e H o u s e
is n o t big e n o u g h to be run as a
drop-in o p e r a t i o n . There just are
n o t a d e q u a t e physical facilities.
Th ere fore, it is n ecessary to
o p e r a t e o n a s c h e d u l e d calendar.
" R u n on l o v e " (as Mr. Smith
says), Chapel House maintains a
tight budget and requires t h e
responsibilities of all participating groups to s u c c e e d .
dinners, coffee b o u s e sessions,
counseling, drall counseling and
day retreats are all held at t h e
House as well
Paul S m i t h , Catholic Chaplain,
feels t h e " s t u d e n t s m a k e good
use of Chapel House It is going
Any s t u d e n t s desiring to become
involved
with
Chapel
House a n d its functions can d o
so by c o n t a c t i n g o n e of t h e
chaplains or religious organiz a t i o n s , all of which are registered in t h e C a m p u s Center.
y.m., a n d masses a n d e u c h a n s t s
are held S a t u r d a y at. 1 1 p.m. and
S u n d a y al 9::i0 a.m., II a.m.
and f> p.m.
Chapel House also provides a
place where s t u d y groups, religious organizations a n d prayer
groups can meel. At present a
faculty m e m b e r from the Peace
Studies Program resides in t h e
House a n d holds w o r k s h o p s a n d
special sessions there
HELLMAN S t O l O N I E
Q CENTER
**&*
^ 0
T H E A T R E
GENE SHALIT, NBC-TV
" 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES' IS A MOVIE- MOVIE
THAT IS A JOY TO WALLOW IN WITH LUMP IN
THROAT AND A SONG IN YOUR HEART!"
JUDITH CRIST,
STARTS
TOM'W
NEW YORK MAGAZINE
EXCLUSIVE
AREA
PREMIER
"ENGAGEMENT
_ DY
SINGS
THE
BLUES
ATTENTION PROFESSORS & STUDENTS
There is a new bookstore in the area called
the BOOK
BAZAAR
located at 813
MADISON A V E N U E , A L B A N Y 12208 tel.
465 1301
Teacher and Student Discount
On All Books
BOOKS FOR COURSES
10 DAY SERVICE AT DISCOUNT PRICES
459-2170
" 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES'
A RED HOT SMASH!"
Services are held on c a m p u s
during t h e week and a t the
Chapel House on weekends T h e
weekend religious meetings include Jewish services h'nday al
7 :U) p.m. and S a t u r d a y al 10
FANTASTIC SELECTION
OPPOSITE
MACY S
BILLIE HOLIDAY
DIANA ROSS IS NOTHING SHORT OF DAZZLING!"
REX REED. NY DAILY NEWS
CONTACT US ANYTIME FOR THE NEXT TERM
BOOK BAZAAR
® f f l :.'.;ra:rsi
PAGE NINE
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
...... .-.:. ;.:s£3aaBa .asaei^w.-siM£faa^)>&wrftiu.j m*™^
SERVICES
i»y
ns
FOR SALE
1 9 6 4 Valiant-Good for at least
o n e year of transportation. Runs
well. $ 7 5 . Call 4 5 6 - 8 6 8 2 .
1968 Comaro, low mileage, excellent condition. 4 new tires, new
brakes, new shocks. Call—Day
457-3390.
After
6
p.m.
843-4755.
Snow tires, radial, Goodyear,
I55SR13, $45; call Earl 674-3045.
Gibon J-40 6 string acoustic
guitar. Good condition. Call Joel
7-4077. $150.
2 0 5 c m Head '360'
Call K e n - 4 8 9 - 1 6 2 6 .
skis-~$65.
Durst
M600
enlarger
plus
daikroom
equipment. Hardly
used, reasonable. 482-1556.
T.V.-21"screen-portable-black &
white-excellent
condition-$25call 4 8 9 - 0 8 2 3 .
SEIDENBERG
JEWELRY
WANTED
W A N T E D D E A D OR A L I V E :
Lionel trains. Quick cash. Call
439-5109.
earrings 2 for $1
HELP WANTED
Parking attendants wanted parttime
Mon.-Fri.
M o r n i ngs/
Afternoons.
Apply:
Twin
Towers. Mr. Gleason.
Part
Time
Sales
Positions
Available. Hours to suit your
schedule. Must be neat appearing
and have a serviceable car. Average students are currently earning over $10 per hour. 462-1960
L. FEY to arrange a personal
interview.
"The Hogazette" is requesting
contributions. Call the Hog Control Board 457-8987.
NURSES
in 4V slates
provide
vices
in African
cities,
Pacific
patches 25
labor
munity-run
io
y
S.u ID 6
264 Central A v e .
Indian
Chicano
com-
free
centers,
Volunteer
Peace
Corps
you.
cations
Albany
director
463 2455
A moc
migrant
rehabhealth
a year
or
iky
two.
VISTA
need
and
appli-
your
or
My
Home.
call
I NYC
Come Ski Solden, Austria with
the Albany State Ski Club. 12
days—January 4, 1973-January
15, 1973. Price: $312-transportation, meals, accomodations,
taxes, gratuities, sklbag, party.
Contact:
Robert Waldman—
518-465-3706. P.O. Box 178DD
SUNYA
•Professional typing*Pickup &
delivery on campus* Call Jackie
393-5385*
LEARN
TO
D R I V E Professional driving instructor
f r o m Triple A A u t o Driving
School, Inc. located at 160-02
Northern Blvd., Flushing New
York. Special rates for SUNYA
students. Call Howie 489-1626.
SUMMER
IN V E R M O N T ?
Think
M l d d l e b u r y College. Advanced study
In F r e n c h , G e r m a n , I t a l i a n , Russian,
Spanish.
Beginning
and
advanced
study In Chinese, Japanese. Begin
w o r k t o w a r d the M.A. as an undergraduate. W r i t e R o o m 124, Sunderland Language Center, M l d d l e b u r y ,
VT
05753.
HOUSING
Female Roommate wanted starting January 1. O w n room, on
busline. Call 449-8528.
Spacious 3 bedroom apartment
for rent. Available January 1st.
Near busline. $ 2 0 0 / m o n t h . Call
438-6594.
Farm; 7 bedroom, l1/? baths, 3 0
mi. south of Albany $ 2 5 0 .
1-239-4800 eves.
Roommate
Wanted—Country
House, just south of Albany.
Own room. $ 5 0 / m o n t h . Call
after 6 - 4 6 2 - 4 8 1 3 .
1 or 2 female roommates wanted
for spring semester. $50/mo. on
busline. Call 463-3841.
com-
drug
and
see
in
mobile
For information
cor. No. Lake Ave.
ser-
Islands,
Work
units.
to
Asian
Appalachia,
camps.
ilitation
MUII i n
health
villages,
reservations,
munities,
c
MEDED
and 57 countries
badly needed
In
Need a math tutor? Call Donna
457-7768.
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT &
W E D D I N G RINGS. 3,000 ring
selections in all styles at 50%
discount to students, staff, and
faculty. Buy direct from leading
manufacturer and SAVE! 1/2
carat $179, 3/4 carat only $299.
For free color folder write: Box
42, Fanwood, N.J. 07023.
Firestone snow tires, 6.85x15,
excellent condition, both $25.
472-5013.
Snow Tires-5.60x15 Goodyear
Polyglass. Used only one season$35.
Call
449-8517
after
8:00p.m.
Typing Done
869-2474.
placement
Margie
I2
121
Graduate Student seeking small
house or 4 room apartment on
outskirts of Albany from December on. Please call 472-3684.
House Huntmg?1971 Parkwood
trailer, 2 bedroom and study.
Many extras. Reasonable. Close
to
college.
Interested 7 Call
371-7451.
264-7123.
XOii^REST'cSwffiPs'l
Weekend Feature:
House For Rent. Four Students.
Convenient To Bus. Colonie.
Call 459-7352.
2 R o o m m a t e s Wanted-each to
have spacious single r o o m , bath-
room, kitchen, living room-ail
big. Right on Washington Park,
rent $54,00 a month per person
plus utilities, near bus line.
Phone-165-9660 Michael.
by Bill Brina
Last Friday and Saturday nites
the Dance Council presented a
most unusual interpretation of
"The A t o m Heart Mother Suite,"
t w e n t y - t h r e e m i n u t e s o f the
music of Pink F l o y d . The conception itself was altogether admirable; A t o m Heart Mother
fairly bets to be set to dance;
it's definitely programmatic and
expressionistic enough to be
rich material for physical drama,
yet it's t o o abstract and non-,
specific t o b e c o m e any kind of
dramatic production perse. Best
of all, it's ambiguous enough to
lend itself to almost any imaginative interpretation.
any changes in
LOST & FOUND
Holiday
Sing
Woman's College Ring. Barrel
shaped ruby stone. College of
the Holy Spirit, 1971. Inside
engraving—Mildred C. Bernido.
Call 472-3350.
songs must be
in CC 364 by
November 15
L O S T - B i o Notebook With A
Flowered Cover. Needed Desperately. 371-6839.
Found
in Paine.
Notebook
belonging to Bill Hoouie. Please
call Dana 7-8808.
R E W A R D ! to anybody who can
return two legal sized pads containing notes on linguistics lost
in Humanities 27 last Thursday
night. Call after 4: 465-4147.
FOUND:
Mutt-young
male,
golden color with long tail. Well
trained. Call 7-3020 of 7-3024.
PERSONALS
Dear T o n y ,
I heard you were fantastic during the holidays. I 'II take at least
10 Holiday Specials.
-me
Dear Crispi—
Thanx for the weekend
made us a man,
"Atom Heart "-Unsettling?
ATTENTION
SONGLEADERS:
f u n d e d by student t a x
y»#*»—»»#+» *###»»» —»#•**»%
Are you
| hungering
for o
turkey
dinner?
By Andy Palley
T h e Albany S y m p h o n y played
another of their famous "si.
what" c o n c e r t s S a t u r d a y night
Half the program was good, and
half was an utter bore, simply
because t h e o r c h e s t r a played as
if it w e r e b o r e d . S o m e t h i n g
should be d o n e a b o u t this these
people are being pain1 good
union scale to play S c h u b e r t ,
and they really ought to do a
good job w h e t h e r they like it or
not.
you
Cris,
We still love ya.
Are fou
hungering
for e ride
home to
est that
turkey
dinner???
Bo & Charleen
Sisters and Brothers of 4 + 2
and Ind:ian: Thanks tremendous
"Headm u c h ! — Lorraine and
start."
Dear Crisp,
Happy l ( Jth;. You've got one
more year. Remembei Greenland.
Little Susie & Humbert
To the guy who had a girl pull
course cards for A Atm-Oceans
and Disc.-sect.012, Mon. Nov. 6.
Please return cards to me, I
have gotten into trouble and
cannot pre-reg. until I have
cards.
Call
4 8 2-9217,
PASSPORT PHOTOS
(Grad/Med School Pictures)
place an ad
in the
PICTURES TAKEN: Tomorrow,Wed. Nov.15
7:30-9:30P.M. Bio 248
ELLIOTT GOULD
IN A DAVID L WOLPER Production
"I LOVE MY WIFE!"
!
BRENDA VACCARO • ANGEL TOMPKINS
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • ItCHNlCOlOn
'K-cS33sw->«a»
RIDE/RIDERS
WANTED
SECTION
9K9|C »|C3|C *|»3|s3|C !^C TfOJi 3|C 9fC 9JC Jj» *|» ^p *f**l* •t* ^p ^&*T* *I*^F • T T ' "1**1* *l**1**|*
m * ' i « / / our friends who gam their time
m*
money, and effort:
m*
m*
m*
THANK YOU!
m
1 NOVEMBER 17 and 18 LC7
7:30 and 9:30II
S.bO w i t h i t a t e quad card
£1.00 without
II
PIU.: KEYSTONE KOPS
m
I
PAGE TEN
WWMl:M^^M^^^^^M^MWM!0M
*
*
* &*P** Chest '72 couldn't have made it *
£ without four help.
.
.„ $
*
Urraine and Sue %
in time for
11
Thanksgiving.
•!
ALBANY STUDENI PRESS
*******************************
TUESDAY
ler c o n c e i t s
11
h u m a n struggle involved
On Io Mahferland T h e l-\,u,ih
Symphony
is certainly Mahler's
most simple work II has all I he
flolgunce a n d aristocratic ftiivoi
of his larger efforts, and yel Ihe
passionate
m n o l ions
connthrough. And, idler listening to
an early Komanticisl (Schubert)
and a MtMiMrrmt (Giiuisleni),
I've
come
to
a conclusion
(actually a c o n c l u s i o n I'd c o m e
to years before) Gustiiv Mahler
was Ihe onl) person who knew
been
to
in
the
The
o v e r all
concept
of
Ihe
piece was, I think, a correct one
Conductor
Hegyi's
interpret
at ion was ) Oil"; conservative in
every detail
I don'l think he's
experienced enough with Mahler
to I r\ a daring feat of m g e n u i l j
now and then Even Julius Uegyi
has his limitations T h e t e m p o s
followed the instruct ions to the
letter (every " b e d a c h l i g " was
b e d a c h h g i , and tin- dynamics
were satisfactory . Ihere was enough contrast for all Marjory
Fuller made hei appearance after
the t bird m o v e m e n t . and sang
the flowing lyrics to (he finale
with a p l o m b Again. I would
rather she sang H a little lighter,
bul t h a t ' s 'i point I shouldn't
haggle o w r The fact is that she
sang beautifully .md with ease
and grace
And so, the orchestra being
fascinated by (Jusla\ and his
neuroses, played l)icel_\ and with
enthusiasm Schuberl deserves a
better lair, though he's not a
IKIVI ll\ bul In- is grcal music
And One Note: All reviews are
subjective, of course, but this
one, due to the subject matter,
more so than most. Any communications dealing with this
will be most welcome; it may be
as good a place as any t o start a
dialogue with you, the "cultural
consumer" on this campus.
For Yer
Enjoyment
" R o o m al the T o p , " ii searing
c o m m e n t a r y on Ihe hollowness
of contemporary values, will be
shown ill Harmanus Blecker Library on T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r
I l i b , id S p.m. The program is
part of the current series of
Tuesday Nighi Previews, show
ing newly acquired films. Winner
of the Best Film Award from the
British Film Academy and of the
Academy
Award
for
Best
Screenplay, the film stars Laurence 1 larvey, S i m o n e Signoret,
Heather Sears, and H e r m i o n e
Baddeley.
Also on the Mill, Pete and
D o t t y S p o o r will be featured
together with Jack 1 lume and
dreg Clark al the Bight-Step.
('offcchou.se. The program will
feature traditional and contemporary folk music with a u n i q u e
c o u n t r y flavor. I n s t r u m e n t a t i o n
includes guitar, banjo, d o b r o ,
and pedal steel guitar, and performances start at 0 : 0 0 p.m.
T h e r e is no admission charge on
weekdays.
T h a t s a m e day t h e r e ' s an exhibition and sate of original graphic art at the Albany I n s t i t u t e of
History and Art, from 1 1 a.m. t o
0 p.m. C o m e a n d b r o w s e .
A n o t h e r exhibition at the Ins t i t u t e , which is located al 125
Wash. Ave. d o w n t o w n , is a rotating view of the highlights of the
Institute's own Pewter, glass, sil
ver, in id ceramics collection.
Tins runs through the 19th.
Wednesday nite, the l o t h , at
H.'M) in the Memorial Chapel,
Union College will present the
S m e l a n a String Q u a r t e t , an internationally acclaimed c h a m b e r
West, Bruce, & Laing - Fi
By Bill Brina
The first results of the summit meeting of the kings of heavy
metal, otherwise known as Leslie West, Jack Bruce, & Corky Lalng,
are o u t . Yes, kiddies, right on time for the lucrative Christmas
season, here it is, "Why D o n t c h a " (Columbia KC 3 1 9 2 9 ) , the first
installment from the mind-boggling $27 million (more or less)
contract that the b o y s nailed down. If you've been waiting for
something halfway intelligent with which to turn up the volume and
wreak revenge on all those James Taylor fans in your suite (or
apartment), this is it — it bashes, saws, and thunders in all the right
places.
If y o u r tastes are a bit more eclectic, y o u r reaction will be less
joyous. Oh, it's competent enough, all right, and s o m e of it's really
good. The opener, Leslie's "Why Dontcha," is a first rate, full-blast
pounder, and so's "The Doctor," and we just haven't had enough of
that kind of music done well of late. "Third Degree," an old Eddie
Boyd blues, gives Jack a chance to work out, and he proves that he
can sing the blues, when he wants to. "Love is Worth the Blues" is
the masterpiece of the album; a riveting vocal by Leslie, and an
exquisitely layered instrumental break based on Leslie's "whale" riff
from "Nantucket sleighride" that produces a total rush.
T o o much of the rest, though, is filler. "Out into the Fields"
sounds like an out-lake from Jack's earlier "Harmony Row" album,
Corky's debut as a singer on "Turn Me Over" is competent but
colorless, and Ihe less said of "Pleasure" and "Pollution Woman" the
better - remember "As You Said" from
Cream's "Wheels of Fire"?
This band has an enormous deal of potential. They're all fine
musicians, they seem to enjoy each other a great deal (if reports are
correct), and Jack & Leslie are quite a contrast — artifice and
artles.sness, or, as Leslie was wont to say when he was working with
Felix Pappalardi in Mountain, "the animal-trainer and the toad." On
this first album, they just didn't put it all together on the level
they're capable of. Despite that, you might find it worth your while,
for certified heavy metal freaks, "Love is Worth the Blues" alone
will easily be worth the price of the album, and if anybody at
Columbia bothers to read this, it'll make a great single.
Onanother musical continent entirely we find "Sonic Seasonings,"
(Columbia KC 31'234), a double album by Walter Carlos and
Trans-Kleet ronic Music Productions. Walter is the man who gave us
switched-on Bach a few seasons back; this time 'round he gave us
swilched-on Nature, Some reviews get written overnight, some take
months . . because sometimes it lakes that long to try to frame
some kind of coherent perspective about a recording, especially one
JIS experimental as this. Remember musique concrete'? Walterhas
resurrected that technique, which consists of taping "natural''
sounds and mixing them into a musical whole and added lo the
technique the wizardry of the modern recording studio with its
mixing hoards and the like, and completed the recipe with the
o m n i p r e s e n t Moog. Rachel Elkind, in the liner notes, explains that
the results were "designed to be a part of the decor," which is
another way of saying that this isn't music in the traditional sense
but il isn't just background, either. It's electronic Muzak for the
mind, and 1 don't mean that in a pejorative sense.
The Four Seasons are evoked by characteristic sounds of each,
layered by electronic wizardry in a way that simulates quadraphonic
sound on a stereo system uncannily. It will be especially nice to
have around when you want to evoke the spirits of (-spring or
Summer during Albany's interminable winters, I imagine. Fall is
passable, but I just can't seem to gel off on it, although personally
Fall's my favorite season. The most moving of the four is — y o u
guessed it - Winter! A dry, cold wind paints a bleak
1 idscape of
deathly still, deathly dark, deathly cold night . , . and then, faintly
al first, then closer and closer, come the howls of the wolves.
Desolation. Hunger. Primal Survival. This particular piece of
"music" just might revive the dying practice of getting together over
your favorite i n t o x i c a n t s ) , your favorite people, and your own
head, lights out . . . can you feel the sound?? . . . Good evening, Ladies
& Gentlemen, Lay back and relax . . . and watch, watch as the
Movies of your Mind slowly unfold.
UCB presents
THE BEACH BOYS
Nov. 14 9 pm
Palace Theater
$4.50 w/tax & I.D.
$6.50 w/I.D.
funded by M I H I I M I M . |: : X :
mmmmmmmmm.
,.
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14,1972
NOVEMBER 14, 1972
I've
past
The variations were fascinating
in that they were ex t reive!.\
short, no more than a minute or
Iwu in mosl cases, bul c a p t u r e d
a wide range of e m o t i o n s T h e
o p e n inn
variat ion
I'm
cello
(Which I e x p l e c t e d Doug Moure
to pla> b e l t e r ) leads directly
into the lulli lor strings In a
breath-taking high note lie uses
il like a bridge, hut how exposed
il is 1 Mozart would have had ..
heart attack on t h e spot Paitic
nlarly c o m m e n d a b l e wen
Ihe
variations lor flltle, o b o e « |.ti
met, viola, and
violin
I In
double bass solo was .. hltlc
rajiged, Inn ,( wa so h a u l to
play Uial o n e Could excuse I hr
\i so
Quick, experienced, cheap service
plus latest passport info and applications.
twenty c o m b i n a t i o n s of nislru
ineuls And Vh- didn't pul the
audience lo sleep as in 1 he inglll
mares I've had ahoui other Mali
Albert Ginastcra's Variat tones
Cancertantes
is a whale of a
piece by a n y o n e ' s s t a n d a r d s 1
confess to my i g n o r a n c e , I had
never hear it before. Il is a
well-presented s c h e m e for modern orchestral variation, exploiting the full resources of an un
usual o r c h e s t r a . Unusual in thai
it c o n t a i n s only o n e t r u m p e t ,
one t r o m b o n e , t w o h o r n s , ami
uet a full string section. To
gether, they run t hrough ten
variations and two interludes
(one for strings and one for
winds).
305fvly vassals are the greatest.
Queenie
Leaving the country?
bow to o r c h e s t r a t e lo the fullest
True, Wagner used large orches
Eras and Berlioz was a master a!
the weird effect Bul il was onl\
Mahler
who
knew
how
lo
wrench the right sound to,- ever\
S c h u b e r t ' s Fourth
Symphony
is not the most d y n a m i c work
evur w r i t t e n Neither is H a y d n ' s
100th, n o r M o z a r t ' s 2 0 t h . nor
Beethoven's 1st When the ASO
played B e e t h o v e n ' s Kill earlier in
the season, they played it well
because they liked it, and over
came both its e x t r e m e difficul
ties and Julius Hegyi's miserable
i n t e r p r e t a t io n . T h e y
just
c o u l d n ' t got t o hive the Scbu
bert, t h o u g h , and I he playing
was indifferent and sloppy in I hifi nal two movements. Nothing
like t w o weeks of rehearsal between Stravinsky and Mahler!
OR
Joe 7-7723
P.S.Say hello to Krishna.
^ ^
settling, because it o p t e d for the
easy cliche of portraying the
electronic pulse as physical pain;
insettling, because it refused t o
confront the nature of electronic technology as an extension of
the way Man knows himself. I
don't hear that in the music of
Pink Floyd, although I see it all
t o o often the way our cultural
avante-garde sees itself.
A.S.0. Strikes Again'.
Love
Weasel and Tit
Beverly,
Are yo u still ahve.
What producer Steve Aminoff
and the dancers saw in the
.Quito
tVi^iirtV.
o * v « t « U « J -even
..«.,
Suite, though,
stretched
the most liberal bounds of interpretation. Cued by shifts of
lighting that were uncomfortably reminiscent of 2001, the
dancers shrieked and moaned,
played through duets of attraction and repulsion, built miniature
social
systems
which
seemed to disintegrate on command from an external dynamic, were alternately lifted and
flattened
by the
electronic
pulses of the music, and ultimately returned to their original
stasis. It was a startling conception, and to my non-expert eye
seemed extremely well executed, yet it was ultimately unsealing. Unsettling, because it
communicated a neo-Skinnerian
tableau of external control; un-
"Why Dontdu" Is OuH
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE ELEVEN
The
There will be a meeting of History
Students Association o n W e d . N o v . 15
at
7:30 in
SS28I.
Evaluation
of
Community
Students-registration
be ex-
tended until the end of the month.
T o register, come to L C B 3 0 A or call
457-4801. There are more positions
available in medical work for those
interested
advisement
-registration.
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Students calling other students who
are patients in the Infirmary
should
use 4 5 9 - 9 7 2 5 .
T h e deadline
for students t o hand
in work to Instructors o n incomplete
grades f r o m t h e Spring 1972 semester
and
t h e Summer' 1972 session
is
Friday, November 1 7 , 1 9 7 Z
Seniors
your
senior
please
contact
diately
&
portrait
John
Spring,
Students
1973 premust
meet
proofs
Chow
imme-
t h e T o r c h office or call
457-2116
working with
their academic adviser before
can draw
you to take advantage.
will
class
cards. Pre-
follow
the alpha-
betical
sequence published by the
Office
of the University
Registrar;
the first day for drawing class cards is
are many
Anyone
Studies
will
To
insure that each student can
meet with their adviser prior to their
13, A l l members o f
are
n o m i nations,
nominations.
the University
to
submit
including
Nominations
self-
m a y be
anonymous.
Please note that faculty refers to
the academic staff of the University
with
t h e f o l l o w i n g exceptions:
structors
irv
w h o have c o m p l e t e d
less
than o n e year o l professional obligation
in
t h e University,
assistant
instructors, persons having temporary
a p p o i n t ments;
members
"f
language, contact C h a r l i e - 4 5 7 - 4 6 5 6 .
Business Students:
SUNYA;
officers,
emeriti,
including
administrative
technical
still alive. This y o u w i l l soon see.
Peace Studies is n o w a second f i e l d .
are urged to make an appointment to
meet w i t h their adviser as soon as
taining a syllabus, o r w h o just w a n t
possible. I t is recommended that the
t o ask questions about the p r o g r a m ,
appointment be scheduled o n e week
can d o so in SS375.
The
POLITICS-
Psychology
and
research
with
programs,
must
include
more
than just a name. They should also
mention the- courses w h i c h
that
Association
in
Lawyer
will
Student
be available
the S A o f f i c e , C C 3 4 6
the pro-
indicate
fessor
teaches
lence;
and they
detail,
w i t h reference l o such things
excel
should specify
in
students, w h y (he norni'tee should be
an outstanding
teacher.
These inputs w i l l help the c o m m i t t e e
develop
guidelines
artd criteria
Irjr
A l l n o m i n a t i o n s , inquiries a n d infoshould
c o m m i t tee
be
sent
chairman,
to
Y o u can pick
HIJ 354.
Nov.
Free
Facultyp.m.
up appliOuting
questions call D . E l k i n , 7-6978 or L.
this
Fish man 7-3016.
Dorothy
you're
inter-
ested? Sign up at the meeting at 7 3 0
for Soviet
Jewry
Wednesday night in C C 3 1 5 .
is
of
Games.Tournaments
f r e e d o m t o be s h o w n on a poster.
Men's
and
E v e r y o n e is I n v i t e d t o submit ideas
W o m e n ' s b o w l i n g , bridge, table ten-
by
choice
nis, chess, billiards, trap and skeet.
w i l l be made i n t o a poster and be
Winners represent A L b a n y in regional
available f o r sale as a perfect gift for
college A C U - I t o u r n e y . Must sign u p
anyone.
i n C C 3 5 6 b y N O v . 15.
November
2 0 . T h e final
For
information
your
idea,
and
please
to
call
R o b i n at 7 - 8 9 8 8 or Sue at 7-5293.
Ukrainian
Attention
all AFS-AA
Interested
activities?
There
is a
Returnee
group
forming.
Organization
w i l l h o l d a meeting on Thurs. N o v .
Returnees
in g e t t i n g back
Student
16 at 7 3 0 p m . R o o m w i l l be posted
into the
in the campus center.
new regional
Contact
Zen
Meg or A n i t a at 4 6 5 - 2 7 8 9 for details.
workshop
on
methods and
practice of 2 a n B u d d h i s m S a l . Nov.
18. Call 5 1 8 - 2 8 4 - 2 6 7 0 .
to attend.
T h e Students'
Rights
Caucus
on
Women's
is alive and w e l l ut S U N Y A .
Sponsored b y Cathexjs a n d Under-
Join
grad. Psych. Association.
6 : 3 0 p.m. in HU-18.
their
meetings Wednesdays at
A Commuter
teachers w i l l fell )i l i k e it is
Council
rep.
in C C 3 4 6 on M o n d a y f r o m 1-3 a n d
f riday
The International
Central
w i l l be in the Central Council o f f i c e
Fold
Da
e Club
I r o m 10-11. More limes w i l l
be a n n o u n c e d . File p h o n e number is
o n November 14 at 7 : 3 0 p . m . in the
Physics b u i l d i n g r o o m 129 (Physics
beginners l u our weekly dance sess-
alternatives
by
lounge).
hearing
ions—every Thursday everting, f r o m 6
handing o u t i n f o r m a t i o n leaflets at
about education, t h e nood and the
to 8 p.m. in the g y m dance studio,
problem?
the Albany
bad,
'otornational
Albany
Zero
Chapters
to help in our legislative a n d
their
rights
and
Induction
Center.
Help
those w h o otherwise w o u l d not be
All
interested
should
Student
come.
in
Sponsored
by
welcome
NYSTA
own
i n f o r m e d . Call J i m 4 6 3 - 2 5 9 3 ,
students are especially
to come
country's
a n d teach
their
Concerned
Sailing
Club
about
the
population
Y o u ' r e invited to join
Population
thr
Growth
educational efforts. I or i n f o r m a t i o n
call
INTERESTED FOLK
MAJORS & MINORS
457-8542,
dances. See us per-
f o r m o n I n t e r n a t i o n a l Night I
meeting
every Wed
Sharon Cange at
7 H 5 - 4 6 / 6 or
Sharon UiSarru at 7 6 6 - 2 / 1 2 .
nesday at / p . m . in the l i b r a r y , r o o m
The Comparative
ment
Literature
has c o m p i l e d
and p r i n t e d a
listing
of
.j 11 liter
atures artd approaches to be o f f e r e d
for Spring,
B-43. I very one is w e l c o m e !
depart-
1973. Tins guide is avail
able to any student u p o n request a n d
Dutch
Quad
accopling
Judicial
Board
applications.
lower. Any
D u t c h O t i j d resident may apply.
to bring a special gift
and practice your
Spanish
over a c u p of o i l lee at the Spanish
Conversation
table
M o n d a y s al '? <H)
mass
lor the celebration o l giving thanks.
Gyro
Club is on C a p o H a t i e r a s Doc,
1 thru Dec, o. C o m e along. M o r e
Psych.
Assoc.
only
chance
to
lind
only
what's
Association
Office,
Waterbury
and
please pick
op ,t copy o l the loud
Aldon
residents
soon as possible! it should be available
today
(I riday) o n the dinner
line. We w.iril to h e l p y o u !
Coalition
I astmari l o w e r .
lor a tree
choice
Help save our a b o r t i o n law
Newsletter
oui
Student
service q u e s t i o n n a i r e a n d r e t u r n it as
,ninr,<:,)ll 7-4740 or stop by at 11.02
, A t t e n t i o n all Psych, students) The
o l the
please contact Sieve
Campus Center 3 4 6 , 4 5 7 - 6 5 4 2 .
to the service.
song, or whatever y o u ' d like to si tare
Council
Gerber, S t u d e n t
It tain tie a poern, <i t y p e o l a r t , >i
p.m. a n d Tuesdays at 3 (X) p.m. in
near the entrance to the snack bar.
A l l people interested in serving on
the sub-committees
Attain
ni Chape! House. E v e r y o n e is i n v i t e d
Come
Bring a friend.
i r i l o r m a t i o n sheet m a y tie o b t a i n e d at
quad o l f i c e , Stuyvesant
|H4
'/'A is looking
lor
lelcllii
and MC's lor our 21 hour
talent
every Wed-
nesday evening at 7 p.m. in Ciyrn C.
I orrns a n d
I here w i l l be a Thanksgiving
L i t e r a t u r e o f l i c e , H U 2 72.
There is coed volleyball
now
may he obtained in the Comparative
is available in SS217. Ms your
academic
is going to D i p p l k i l l
Think
ol
draftees
Undergrad
Students are lernined th<jt the U n i
Club
weekend.
in
refreshments w i l l be
A l l are invited
Reglna
c a t i o n s in C C 3 5 6 . If there are any
w i l l be held o n
16, 3-b
t o , call
and enlistees
Inform
the
Harrison in H u m a n i t i e s 3 1 8 .
versity College has b e g u n
Assistant.
u p and wish
Colangelo 4 8 2 - 3 4 4 0 .
Student
invites b o t h experienced dancers and
the Campus Center cafeteria at tables
selecting winners of the fiward.
rmation
Thursday,
Student
as c l a r i t y , o r g a n i s a t i o n , rappuri w i t h
considered
ted for the position of AMI A
from 7
p.m.—9 p.m. o n Tuesday n i t e .
comprehensive
non-teaching library staff.
Nominations
Rosenhlum
Dept
Receptionn
served.
Sanford
t o go d o w n t o supper. I t y o u d i d not
sign
Applications are now being accep-
in ob-
i n advance o f the student's indicated
VEACE &
tower. Please contribute)
contribute
stuff
members, w h o are concerned
education
Delta Sigma P i is
w h o are interested
D o n ' t f o r g e t t o m o r r o w is t h e Food
Fast. If y o u signed u p . remember not
the
faculty enrolled i n a degree p r o g r a m
at
Armenian
including
People
be accepted
invited
in
day to draw class cards, students who
between November 15 and February
community
interested
noted sex re-
Hall lounge.
boxes in the lower lounges o f each
T h e Committee
course at S U N Y
Wellon*
Wednesday, N o v . 16 in t h e C l i n t o n
for
Wednesday, November I.
for t h e O u t s t a n d i n g
Awards
opportunities
David
searcher w i l l c o n d u c t a free clinic o n
Rectory, for needy families of the
l o o k i n g f o r a visual representation
Student
Nominations
the handicapped or
they
reeutration
work,
d o i n g health research. Apply soon.
with
period for d r a w i n g class cards.
Teacher
psychiatric
There
are advised by the University College
If you still have n o t re-
ceived
for
in
Dr.
Basket
goods are now being collected In
Service
will
Turkey
sponsored b y Saint John's
south end Is n o w under way. Canned
faculty members will b e discussed.
Attention
Thanksgiving
Program,
Washington
Avenue
or
call
4 6 2 !J()H:J,
Itmd
A
handicap
doesn't
have to
be a
hangup.
GALLOWS HUMOR
S t a t e University T h e a t r e of
S t a t e University o f N e w Y o r k a t
A l b a n y will p r e s e n t " G a l l o w s
H u m o r , " s e c o n d in its series of
six m a j o r s t u d e n t p r o d u c t i o n s
for t h e 1 9 7 2 - 7 3 season, beginning W e d n e s d a y , Nov. 1 5 .
T h e c o m e d y - d r a m a b y Jack
R i c h a r d s o n consists o f t w o o n e act p l a y s , related to each o t h e r
in narrative t h r e a d as well as
t h e m e . Mr. R i c h a r d s o n maintains, in his play, t h a t given t h e
small r o u t i n e s of c o n t e m p o r a r y
s o c i e t y , t h e ritual of schedules
and t h e d e m a n d for o r d e r , it is
b e c o m i n g increasingly difficult
to distinguish t h e living from t h e
dead, " t h e h a n g m a n from t h e
hanged."
In t h e first play Walter, a
former lawyer, is a b o u t t o b e
h a n g e d . Having gone beserk
w h e n t h e order and r o u t i n e of
his life was upset by a particularly intense case of hiccups in t h e
client- h e was a t t e m p t i n g t o d e fend, Walter has set a b o u t strictly ordering his daily r o u t i n e in
the celt, in an a t t e m p t to regain
his " s a n i t y . " T h e r o u t i n e is
b r o k e n by Lucy, t h e s t a t e ' s official "female c o m p a n i o n , " s e n t
to give t h e c o n d e m n e d prisoner
AFRICOBRA
An e x h i b i t i o n b y t h e m e m b e r s of A F R I C O B R A will o p e n at t h e
S t a t e University of New York at Albany Art Gallery on T u e s d a y ,
Nov. 1 4 .
A F R I C O B R A (African C o m m u n e of Bad Relevant Artists) is a
Chicago-based g r o u p c o o p e r a t i v e formed in 1 968 whose art strives t o
express t h e styles a n d r h y t h m s of black life. T h e artists say of
themselves, " O u r p e o p l e are o u r s t a n d a r d for excellence. Wo strive
for images inspired by African people/experience and images which
African people cun relate to directly w i t h o u t formal art training
a n d / o r e x p e r i e n c e . A r t for people and n o t for critics w h o s e
peopleness is q u e s t i o n a b l e . "
L o o k e d at from t h e o u t s i d e , t h e work in A F R I C O B R A c o m e s
across as a s t r o n g l y expression is tic art whose creators convey
c o n t e m p o r a r y black e x p e r i e n c e and black history through powerful
outsize images t h a t c o m e at t h e viewer with the startling frontalily
of B y z a n t i n e icons.
Color is i m p o r t a n t to A F R I C O B R A . Jeff Donaldson, one of t h e
founders of t h e g r o u p soys t h a t the color is " c o l o r that shines, color
that is free of rules a n d regulations...is expressively a w e s o m e , " In his
i n t r o d u c t i o n t o t h e e x h i b i t i o n catalogue Donaldson, w h o is a
painter, s p e a k s of " C o o l a d e c o l o r s . "
The e x h i b i t i o n s h o w s work in a n u m b e r of media. Napoleon
Henderson a n d H o w a r d Mallory makes tapestries, "every fiber a
c o n d u c t i n g vessel t o he r e c k o n e d w i t h . " T h e viewers of t h e
exhibition are invited t o " t o u c h 'em and let Vm blow y o u r m i n d . "
Barbara J o n e s w h o w o r k s in silk screening chooses the m e d i u m
because it is i m p o r t a n t Lo the artists that the work be inexpensive
and accessible to e v e r y o n e . Her stylized images have the textural
richness and color of African fabrics and carry the message of black
nationalism.
A F R I C O B R A wilt exhibit paintings of Nelson Stevens, Carolyn
Lawrence, W a d s w o r t h Jarre), anil Gerald Williams as well us clothing
designs by J a e J a r r e l .
The e x h i b i t i o n is being circulated by I hi* Studio Museum in Harlem
through a grant from t h e New York State Council on the Arts.
On view c o n c u r r e n t l y wilh A F R I C O B R A will be a one man
exhibition of recent prints by Robert Carlmell. Mr Cartmetl is
assistant professor of drawing anil printmaking ;it SUNYA Mis work
has been s h o w n this year at major national punt exhibitions such its
the " S i l v e r m i n e " and " B o s t o n P r i n t m a k e i " exhibitions as well as the
22nd National E x h i b i t i o n of Prints at the Library of Congress in
1971.
desk.
A career in law...
without law school.
When you become a Lawyer's Assistant,
you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers
— work which is challenging, responsible
and intellectually stimulating. Lawyer's
Assistants are now so critically needed that
The Institute for Paralegal Training can
oiler you a position in the city of your choice
— and a higher starting salary than you'd
expect as a recent college graduate Here
is a career as a professional with financial
rewards that increase with your developing
expertise.
II you are a student of high academic
s t a n d i n g a n d a r e i n t e r e s t e d in a l e g a l
career, come speak with our representative
I here w i l l
Beta
be •) MWutllig
Lamdba
on
Ww
November
l l > -it
liuMiu-v,
Adiiiiiii-.tr.ition
/
phi
sd.iy.
:>1
< !'•'"
I (Hini|e on the t h u d
Mooting: Women's ItitcvHatiari A;
sot i.ition Council will mem I imsdny
.il b .1(1 inl'l C A)/.
En
lu
Antonio
urdiente
oscundiid
by
H I M I I O V.illeiu w i l l lm | H H
•,.-.,i.id by Hi.' s l u d e n p , . . ! the Spanish
llnoi
•4Mhikiti w i l l lie Dr. K.ilhli'i-n
l),-,,t, MM l l n . i v l . t y . N o v . Hi .ii H 1)0
,u til.- H U H !'.).
HURRAH
Help \Jb teach a n d Rehabilitate
Arm-i n o 1 . 1 l<jn<ii<()|)|H'<l
t!m Slate I odors.I f'rournm of Rohflhilit.ition Sarvicoti U S Dupui tmont
ot Hunlih. Education, and Welfare
Ilio Advertising Council.
GALLOWS HUMOR
LIGHTS! WOW'
THtfHf
P.LHLY
ON IH£ 0*1 L
directed by
by
Jack Richardson
n i l .Jlill
James Leonard
('[In- Second ol Six M a p F h x l i i a i u i i s '11 us Yi\u .11 S U N Y A !
Nov. 15-18, 8:30pm Nov. 19, 8:00 pm
Contact the Placement Office
A representative of The Institute
[ww, rwx*c.
Smokey's friends
don't play with matches.
presented in Studio Theater
Admission $2.00 w/tax $1
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29
NOTE It Hie above dale 15 inconvenient lot you
[jl«us4j t.fjll or wnii: the Institute lor information
The Institute for
Paralegal Training
401 Walnut St . Phila
Pa 19106
E
Union College last l-iitlay gave
us Iwu very line blues performances. T h e I irsi was " S p i d e r "
John Kot'iiiei, a mellow country-blues p i ' i l o i m e i w h o s e singing anil acoustic guitar work was
veiy reminiscent of t a r r y Johnsun, arid whose lyrics have a
touch ol David Rea. Spider's
sh.iirifely funny stories a n d original c o m p o s i t i o n s held the audience's a t t e n t i o n lot some lime
h e l o i e llie evei present boors decided they would m u c h rather
speak loudly lo then neighbors.
Ivei wonde i why some musicians decide lo be very loud'.'
Speakers
<u
neduced fvUee&f
fidelity
iis» house
Coming Soon
WHITE BOX 1190, DtPI.
COIN! U I A I A N T (EACH, N.J.M741
"Alice in Wonderland"
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
ACOUSTIC RESEARCH
Schoolgirl.
Taj played slide guitar with such prowess and speed
(hat the slide was only a silver
blur as his magic Hashed u p a n d
d o w n t h e guitar neck, i-'or variety, Taj switched over t o p i a n o
'and
d i d fifteen m i n u t e s o f
boogie-woogie that would rival
Roosevelt S y k e s ( t h e king o f
boogie p i a n o ) . Taj held t h e audience in c o m p l e t e c o n t r o l , running t e m p o s that ranged from
feverish lo relaxed with his vocals, a n d playing the a u d i e n c e
like an i n s t r u m e n t .
T h e s h o w was an a m a t e u r prod u c t i o n from s t a r t t o finish,
which w a s in part u n d e r s t a n d able, considering t h a t m a n y of
the p e r f o r m e r s were busy students with n o particularly primary c o m m i t m e n t to folk dancing. G o o d effects were achieved
by t h e previously men Lioned
Burundis, a n d by t h e Uk rani an
group, w h o s e dance included a
c o u p l e of f l a m b o y a n t gymnastic
solos. A little m o r e rehearsal a n d
b e t t e r organization would have
improved t h e evening. But, uneven ;ts it was, International
night was good for Albany
s t u d e n t s , especially s u c h a b r o a d
sampling of Albany s t u d e n t s , Lo
watch, a p p l a u d , a n d a p p r e c i a t e
each o t h e r for a change.
Hoi t h e e n c o r e Taj launched
into an u n a c c o m p a n i e d vocal,
sending the Chapel into a rocking l i e n / y that only the Clara
Waid Singers could m a t c h . Taj is
a muster.
HELLMAN
WASHINGTON
AVE - A L B A N Y . 4 5 9 5 3 0 0
STARTS TOM'W
ravage
7 DAYS
/ONLY
me/zioh
f r o m the w o r l d « o u t s t a n d i n g ]
creator of powerful love
stories... tho true story of a
younii artist, and a special
woman
.^,,J
'":;/
•~/'
SEND FOR PRICE LISTI
Box Office Phone 457-8606
(215) WA 5-0905
PAGE TWELVE
The s e c o n d half o f t h e program began with a " D e m o n s t r a t i o n of International Cost u m e s " ranging from an Indian
sari t o American blue jeans, a n d
c o n t i n u e d with m o r e folk danc i n g - t h i s t i m e by t h e Chinese
S t u d e n t Association, a P u e r t o
Rican g r o u p , a S o u t h American
c o u p l e , a n d a Russian e n s e m b l e .
Technical difficulties marred the
festive a t m o s p h e r e ; Master of
C e r e m o n i e s Martezc Sajadian
was r e d u c e d t o telling gentle
e t h n i c j o k e s while t h e stage crew
h u n t e d for missing music. T h e
music for t h e Russian a n d Chinese groups mysteriously disappeared. " N i x o n m u s t have
s o m e t h i n g t o d o with t h i s , "
s o m e o n e in t h e a u d i e n c e remarked a u d i b l y .
Taj Mahal-A Gas
hy Kevin Daniels
Also Speakers, Amplifiers,
Turntables, Stereo Components by Dynaco, Pickering,
Scott, Empire, Acoustic Research all at comparable
reductionsl
will visit your campus on
The
International S t u d e n t s '
Association sponsored an "International Night," Sunday evening
in t h e Performing Arte Center.
Described in t h e program as
"not o n l y a gala affair, b u t also
on a d v e n t u r e in human understanding," International Night
proved t o be a s o m e w h a t lessthan-gala potpourri o f folk music and dance, performed by students of different nationalities
and ethnic backgrounds. While
parts o f the program could well
be called an adventure in human
understanding, others were a
trial o f human patience.
The
program o p e n e d with
speeches by Or. J. Paul Ward,
International Student Advisor,
The ghost of s u m m e r s past r e t u r n s lo t h e Palace T h e a t e r t o n i l e , as
S U N Y A ' s Concert Board presents the Beach Boys in concert at 9
p.m. Ticket prices arc $4.50 w i t h s t u d e n t t a x , $ 6 . 5 0 w i t h o u t . Lest
thai disturb y o u , C o n c e r t Hoard Chairperson M. Wuitz has ann o u n c e d , "Wlial d o y o u e x p e c l ? T h e price o f e v e r y t h i n g is going u p , "
presumably a reference to t h e price t h e g r o u p d e m a n d s . F o r that
p u c e , y o u can expect a load of California s u n s h i n e , the sweetest
haininnies in a long lime (Jerry Garcia, w h o should k n o w , o n c e
introduced Ihcm as " t h e greatest singing h a n d in t h e w o r l d " ) , a taste
of the oldies y o u k n o w and love, and a whole load o f their new
stuff. There's no o p e n i n g a c t , a n d the licach Boys will perform t w o
seis (liiruing t h e course of Ihe evening.
Altei the showing ol a Charlie
Chaplin link was m i n e d at inleiimssion hy various kinds ol
meJi.iiiH.il d i s o i d e i s . Ta| was
ready Allei M was made cleai
lli.M I ,i| wanted e v e i y n n e lo sit
down and he q u i d 01 he
wouldn't play, 1 a| came mil and
I.unit lied nilo some excellent,
spell hindiii)1. p e i l o i i n a m e s id
(hrttiu and titunl Mamm'
i.itttc
If you need rehabilitation —
or know someone
who does —write to
HURRAH, Box 1200,
Washington, D.C 20013.
Syed Agha Jafri, president o f the
International . Students' Association, and Erastus C o r n i n g II,
. mayor o f Albany. N e x t , the
S U N Y A Black Ensemble and
Burundi Dancers, colorfully costumed a n d well rehearsed, treated t h e audience t o folk dances
from Burundi, a small African
state. A violin s o l o by Helmut
Graupner, a student from Germany, followed. More folk dancing, featuring the International
Folk Dance Club, the Uk rani an
Club, a n d a Philippine group,
and a s e t o f calypso songs performed b y Jim Bishop accomp a n y i n g himself on guitar,
rounded o f f the first half o f t h e
program.
' by S u e Leboff
Da Beach Boys!
raising drive in I ebruary, A p - i l u j i i o n
happening'
.Hit .iv.nl.ihlt> ,tl tin- CC i n f o i r i u l i u n
1 DIM floor
a "breath of life" in his last
hours.
T h e second play shifts to Phillip, t h e s t a t e ' s e x e c u t i o n e r , a n d
his a t t e m p t t o break with t h e
banality of his existence b y
wearing a medieval h o o d t o
Walter's i m p e n d i n g e x e c u t i o n .
" G a l l o w s H u m o r " is being directed b y J a m e s M. L e o n a r d . In
the cast a r e F r e d T r a c h t m a n , J o e
Ritter, H o w a r d Rollins, Margaret
Dwyer, J o h n Rubin a n d Marci
Perres.
T b e p r o d u c t i o n will run from
Nov. 15 t h r o u g h Nov. 18 at 8 : 3 0
p.m. in t h e S U N Y Performing
Arts Center's S t u d i o T h e a t e r .
A Nov. 19 p e r f o r m a n c e will
begin a t 8 p.m. F u r t h e r information c o n c e r n i n g t h e p e r f o r m a n c e
may b e o b t a i n e d by calling t h e
PAC b o x office at 4 5 7 - 8 6 0 6 .
International Nite
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
TUESDAY NOVEMBER M, 197?.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
R
RESTRICTED •<£&)>
MfTROCOlOR MC.M
PLUS: "friends" IfiSa
HAGE THIRTEEN
Soccer—A Disappointing Season Revisited
Danes Fall To Pittsburgh in Season Finale
Wr^^^
by Mike Igoe
by Nathan Salant
The s o c c e r s e a s o n e n d e d last
weekend with Albany
finishing
last in t h e university c e n t e r s
t o u r n a m e n t after losing b o t h of
its games. N o w it is t i m e t o look
b a c k at w h a t originally looked
like a very p r o m i s i n g season.
Back in S e p t e m b e r , t h e team
o p e n e d its e x h i b i t i o n season
with
some convincing
play
against
several
established
schools like Colgate. T h e t e a m
l o o k e d great, a n d this served t o
raise h o p e s . N o w t h a t t h e season
is over, several c o m m e n t s can be
m a d e a b o u t t h o s e games. First
of all, w e can look back and
point o u t w h a t was t o be o u r
weakness
ail
year-lack
of
scoring. We only averaged 1 goal
a game in t h o s e pre-season
games, a n d this was t o be slightly less than o u r season average.
S e c o n d l y , w e can a t t r i b u t e t h e
t e a m ' s success t o t h e o t h e r
t e a m ' s p o o r c o n d i t i o n which was
r e m e d i e d as t h e season w e n t on
a n d t h e e x c e l l e n t soccer we
p l a y e d in t h o s e games which we
did n o t play d u r i n g t h e season.
In o u r o p e n i n g game versus
G e n e s e o , t h e p a t t e r n of the season was established >-the officiating w e n t from b a d t o worse,
t h e t e a m c a m e o u t flat a n d
q u i c k l y fell b e h i n d , t h e r e was a
general l i c k of aggressiveness
a n d h u s t l e , t h e n a s e c o n d half
r e s u r g e n c e w h i c h resulted in t o o
l i t t l e a n d t o o late, m a n y missed
o p p o r t u n i t i e s , and t o o m a n y
costly mistakes.
T h e o n l y break in this p a t t e r n
o c c u r r e d versus Q u e e n s , in a
g a m e w h i c h featured 6 A l b a n y
goals t h a n k s t o s o m e u n u s u a l
h u s t l e o n several p l a y e r s ' parts,
a n d t h e i r t o t a l l y i n e p t goalie. We
p l a y e d well e n o u g h t o b e a t
H a m i l t o n , b u t t h e refs gave t h a t
o n e a w a y . T h e loss t o O n e o n t a
w a s e x p e c t e d d u e t o their being
t h e N o . 1 S U N Y team by far.
T h e losses t o C o r t l a n d , RPI,
Oswego, S t o n y B r o o k , a n d Buffalo w e r e inexcuseable, especially
since we blew t h e lead in each of
those games. O u r tie with New
Patlz s h o w e d h o w s t r o n g o u r
defense really was, and h o w
weak o u r offense was.
T h e season was highlighted by
o u t s t a n d i n g play by Larry Herzog a n d Cliff Walzer. T h e s e c o n d
half of t h e y e a r saw the emergence of Mark Solano and Leon
Sedefian.
George
Keleshian
never really c a m e a r o u n d for us,
partially d u e t o his p r o b l e m of
leaving games early d u e t o a
d i s a g r e e m e n t with o n e of t h e
refs or an o p p o s i n g p l a y e r . Perhaps the biggest d i s a p p o i n t m e n t
of all was Carlos Alvarez w h o
was billed as o u r s t a r s c o r e r and
offensive
player, b u t
fizzled
right from t h e s t a r t . T h e defense
was
rounded
out
by
John
S t r e e t e r , Bruce Michaels, and
G r e g Macmiilan. Karl Hauesing
s t a r r e d at halfback in t h e t o u r n a m e n t , b u t was a d i s a p p o i n t m e n t
in m a n y of t h e regular season
games.
Unfortunately,
last
year's
s u p e r s t a r goalie, J o h n T h a y e r ,
was plagued by injuries all year,
y e t still did a good j o b in the
goal. Fifty saves m i g h t s o u n d
p h e n o m e n a l , b u t t h a t is t h e
record he set against O n e o n t a .
So ends another disappointing
soccer season, our f o u r t h in as
m a n y years. H o w e v e r , there is
h o p e for the future. O u r star
defensive unit will all be buck
n e x t year, as will L e o n Sedefian
and Cliff Walzer.
Hopefully,
s o m e m o r e offensive p u n c h can
be a d d e d to the t e a m via t h e
E O P program with which Coach
Wingert will work h a n d in hand
wit I), and via t h e o n e soccer
player w h o will be a d m i t t e d next
year on t h e basts of ability
alone. Lastly, several
players
w h o were i n e l i g i b l e this year
will be eligible n e x t year, and
they .should be w e l c o m e additions.
All in all. il has t o he a very
d i s a p p o i n t i n g season for rookie
coach Winget't, hut next year
will he different.
The DanesAre Back
Coming Soon:
Winter Sports Preview
THE WHO ROLLING STONES CR
tttu i/..// tht wi/.iy /torn
in annuls hit thru- an J
rub ymr toit/orrtitvt of Inn.
>BY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG JET
HRO TlflJL EMERSON LAKE & PA
emko
Fo*m nlfeis ><>" ilic torurJ: pfouiMtm .mil peace of
nd you v.it\l ami nevd for your
loUayi and tomorrow*.
Developed Willi your needs in
mind No hmmom-j ih«( might
disturb yuur body tysrvm or affe<l
your |ii in r.il health iml well'
being. Feminine. Dainty Gentle.
Natural. (Neither of you will bv
aware of it* presence-)
Use only when protection is
needed. Applied in iecondi; effective immediately. Backed by over
ten years of clinical telling and
use by millions of women.
LMEI
Emk
"J
L j
i/
RADIO
14'ALBANYJM
^NIGHTLY
Monday - FridayiH
OODY BLUES ALICE COOPER JOE
Tilt' must .'X I'M mi* wintt'i al
i rati i
n Albany, llif (ircal
Dane bliskellmll
li-am. matli'
il 's ' In si a|i|iraraiit'i' ill' Hit'
y ,.; u - I''i itlay . in a pre M'ason
scruilniagl' against Ihe 11 til vt-t si 1 >
cil Hurl ford
Surprisingly. u|i
...
,
wards "I seventy live pfiipli'
'
r a m i ' mil In waltil Dm- Sauers
.
, , , , - ,
.mil his b u y s ill's lilt' Mir lat'l
,. , ,,
.
•,
,i
i
lh.it [hi' I'Vriil wast) I publicised
Willi I llli'y saw was lllisiculfv a
guild shuwing b.\ I h r D a n e s ,
wllu limit
forward
In great
t h i n i j s 1'nlliiwini! lasl Ji'iH 's 17 li
i ,., ,,
. ,
. ,
mailt Willi i-1 M
| 11 ,,'turning h't
li'i'inrn, stunt' promising lu-w
t u r n e r s , and urn' til Ihi' lini'sl
c o a c h e s in tin' BailU'. Albany
slltmltl hi' libit' I" ||i' as la as
1111>> want In
On Friday, e v e r y b o d y saw ac
lion, as Cuai'b Sailers liiulti'il I'm
wbal lit' t e r m e d " w i n n i n g ctiill
hinatitins " Offensively, Reggie
Sinilli, never k n o w n tor being
.
i ,. . .. i
. ,
Him s h s , and Huh slltitil I rum
.
,, ,,
anywhere
KIISHI, wfri' t'onsls., .
liri'ssi'tl hul
on defense,
ami Hymn
ii-nlly
Dave Welchons
un
Miller
did
likewise
un
the
b o a r d s Jiihn Q u a l l r o c c l n
al
though mil lulling, played bis
Cringle capped the drive.
Jeff O'Donnell was furious
that he was unable t o break up
the play, but White's t h r o w was
an unbelievably accurate pass.
T h e Cardinals faked a P A T and
w e n t for a two point conversation but were unsuccessful in the
attempt.
As the half drew to an end, the
Danes m o u n t e d another scoring
threat. Lonnie Davis added some
punch lu the ground gain and
once again Albany got rolling.
Noel Walker picked up a few
good blocks and raced ahead for
a 11 yard gain. Bertuzzi then hit
Bob Baxter on the 28 yard line.
Witll forty seconds remaining
and a second and four situation,
the Danes decided to use a play
that was successful in Ihe Hudsun Valley game. Bertuzzi gave
the ball Lu Vic (iiulianelli w h o in
turn passed il. This time, how
ever, (Iiulianelli was intercepted.
Plaltsburgh was c o n t e n t Id let
the cluck run out so they trailed
Albany 7-li at hall'limc.
in the second half Ihings gut
even
lighter. The
Gridders
moved Ihe ball well and Plaitsburgh had success in Ihe air hul
neither learn was able to put
anything
ingelher
until
the
fourth period mishap
The call which set up Ihe
clinching
touchdown
seemed
particularly suspicious
Alter the whistle was Mown mi
flags were druppt'd and the
1
,
»1
H
..*m
1
- "* 0.1 •
>AJ
by Kenneth Arduino
Fifty-nine sehotiis from across
the nation m e t in W h e a l o n , Illi
nois lasl S a t u r d a y - l o r the NCAA
College Division C h a m p i o n s h i p
Cruss-Country m e e t . T h e Albany
State t e a m was o n e of the invited t e a m s along with eastern
power C. W. Post, w h o was also
the A l b a n y Invitational winner.
HIT and G e n e s e o S l a t e
The A l b a n y t e a m which n
ished 2!ith of 52 teams lasl \e;n
again finished Until. The leain
was b u m p e r e d by n iniur\ It. its
slur r u n n e r V i m n e Itcili. Vinine
hud hurl his ankle during pirn
lice lliis week and was nut given
diielors permission lu rim null)
Thursday. Though
hampered,
Viunii' ran ., beautiful race I'm
ishing 97 out o f . I l l i I,, lead the
Albany Stale team
.Inn SI...id.-i. ihe number two
man mi Ihe Alham learn, fin
ished
I l.il.
C
plain
Hill
Sure! finished Hinth
Local h
I'" Klikallsllagl/a
along
Willi Sii -It. i i.. .iiiiii.il, •
Kevin Daly w i l l .is iiiihvidtl.ils
li, Ihe meet .In, nl... i ,-. I,, hi
,,l lh. lop rutin, is in Hi,,
stale finished a 1. u uii.nl il'.llh
I ... 111 in. Ihe lead. . In ..nl\
,e. mills II.ill liiiisheil I -.,11
AYALL HOT TUNA JEFFERSON A
IRPLANE FLASH DOORS VAN MO
RRISON DEEP PURPLE THE BAND
SEALS & CROFTS AMERICA HUM
BLE PIE GORDON LIGHTFOOT BU
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Ihr
I,'In
returnees
ait'
Qii,,ll,,.c.hi
yin. Ml\
•
T&Lf'l/'ll
J*
Ji
Ink J
IV 1
\ -.
10
. ^ A Si
w
• '•
. *
- L '
.is y
* •I .
$
PlattsburRh
fans
violently
chanted pass interference. Then
ii I'hiH ben ring n o t o r i o u s signs of
h o m e t o w n reffing c a m e sailing:
down.
The Dunes bad a n o t h e r c h a n c e
lu try to score b u t w e r e unable
to capitalize.
After Bertuzzi suffered a bad
hip bruise, Gordy Kupperslein
came in and guided the Danes to
two first d o w n s .
Albany tried the Giulianelli
play but once again lie was
intercepted.
Plattsburgh then held on for
the win as time expired.
T h e loss gave A l b a n y a 6-1-1
record for the season. T h e defeat
left t h e team d o w n c a s t o n the
ride back to the capital city. But
NCAA's, finished I I 111. G e n e s e o
si .mil KIT finished ISth and
f.nth respectively.
North Dakula S l a t e , the favorlie and del'cnding c h a m p i o n ,
won ihe meet, paced by t h e
individual winner Mike Slack.
Albany had its lasl race yesler
tl.ii, Ihe IC-I A ' s Albany is one
i.l the few S l a t e sch,mis thai has
membership in Ibis elite oigain
/.it
Il II ill lie .1 IOUfll II I
especially ('..lllliig nisi Iwu days
i the NCAA's
lliipeiully.
V
- lll'lkl s ankle will lie
healed ,11 11 111.' Al'll-r lllls week's
pei I
l a m e . Ihe Albany Slate
I 'HISS 1 'ulllilrj 1, .OH Will iippeili
,ui Ihe map as .. silting running
school
4
it m u s t b e r e m e m b e r e d t h a t in
pre-season
the thought
of
posting such a record would
have s e e m e d impossible.
; For all Sound Enthusiasts -
| soiiiMOI j
I Nov. 16-19 at the Sheraton Inn I
(near bus
terminal)
Featuring
\ Exhibits & Demonstrations
OVER 25 EXHIBITS OF THE LATEST
IN HI-FI COMPONENTS & 4 CHANNEL
SOUND BY MAJOR MANUFACTURERS!
\
I
i
•:
•
:
"Introduction to Hi-fi Components"
"Four Channel Sound"
"Classical Concert"
and more!
i
!;
:•
j
i Guest Speakers
Leonard Feldman - noted author and
lecturer on hi-li components
Liny /ide - Ltliloi ol Slticu III
:
j:
I I I lines
;•
MICA - electronic & synthesizer srotsp
Knik,
Pop,
.mil
( OML
i
Ihuisday
:
I n
\
Sunday
,< S.il.
Classical
|:
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|:
1:00 p m
1 0 : 50 p i n
|
10:00.1111
10 .50 p m
\
H 0 0 pin
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daily!
e
;50 off coupon
admission price $2. °°
with this coupon • ' 50
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
:•
i 4 Channel Concert
prizes given mvay
Tl'i' l''»m as II whole 111..veil
' h e n p a l l . i n s well, although
then liming was a hit ul'l On
defense, Hie press needs a lot .,1
work ami Hie r e b o u n d i n g llillsl
I"' u n p r o v e d In gmiurul t h o u g h ,
IIHI
Danes seemed t o meet Hie
'rsl of Iheir first scrimmage
iiili'i|ilillely. T h e first gallic, Dee
'.!, is Ihrcc weeks uwuy -plenty of
n i n e lo iron nul a n y m i n o r
prulilems
;i
!;
:|
I Live Concert
:
t'ti
\
\
f
I Seminars
:
.
.
passes
tough " Willi
U . " 01'ntxiil
lilt'
usual ami
alert a style,
new personnel, Dennis Terry
shuwi'tl eri'al (|iiii'kni'ss while
R u b Kapnci iippetiri'd in he
Inline, in well
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
fr-a.
i
in.
ll.'Uglt' Sll
guards II.n.' Wei
. h u l l s ..nil Huh Hussl, ami big
men H\ run Miller, Wei
Kulln,
Hub Curl iss, ..ml M a i n Julius.in
T h e " r o o k i e s " are Dennis T e r r y ,
H u h Kapner, Mike Hill. J e r r j
lllll'l'nuin ami KelttMl llycntl, Ihe
hillei Iwu u p from .1 V T h e '12
Danes s h o u l d be like every o t h e r
Dm- .Sailer's team
small ( t h e
lulli'Bl man
is 0 ' 4 " ) , quick,
siniirt, a n d a winiier In lllls. his
)!|tjl|ll*
«f '«t Urn.'
- .A.'
-J.
COCKER ERIC CLAPTON JOHN M
c.tplallls
.!
State 25th in NCAA Meet
I Hlh seas in, Clinch Sailer
net'iT had ; losiiiL' year
In Hill Heller
II.M.hue
PAGE FOURTEEN
The
Albany
football
team
which has b e n e f i t e d from a n u m ber of b r e a k s in s o m e close
games t h r o u g h o u t the season
had t h e tables t u r n e d o n t h e m
Saturday.
A q u e s t i o n a b l e pass interference call against t h e Danes with
just u n d e r four m i n u t e s t o play
led t o w h a t t u r n e d o u t to be the
winning s c o r e as P i t t s b u r g h slipped by A l b a n y 14-7.
As C o a c h Bob F o r d ' s s c o u t e r s
had p r e d i c t e d , t h e game proved
t o be a tight c o n t e s t .
After b o t h clubs e x c h a n g e d a
series of possessions in the first
period, F r a n k Leader c a m e u p
with a big play for A l b a n y .
Loader b l o c k e d a p u n t and dove
on the ball ift Plattsburgh's 4 3
yard line.
J o h n Bertuzzi, McCoy Allisier,
and Marvin Perry t o o k t u r n s
racking u p y a r d a g e to move the
Dunes forward.
After six plays, Perry s p r i n t e d
hard t o his left t o p u t Albany on
the s c o r e b o a r d . Mark
Fuller
a d d e d t h e kick a n d S t a t e enjoyed a 7-0 lead.
In t h e s e c o n d q u a r t e r quarterback T i m White of P i t t s b u r g h
put o n a classy passing exhibition t h a t got the hosts moving.
But
two
costly
penalties
against A l b a n y - a pass interference infraction and a personal
foul c a l l - h e l p e d the Cardinals
along. Finally, a 21 yard t o u c h d o w n pass from White to Chris
PAGE FIFTEEN
MM
RI DAY
BOONE'S FARM, MODESTO. CALIFORNIA
Vol. LIX No. 47
State University of New York at Albany November 17, 1972
(AP Wirephoto).
Two black students lie dead in front of the administration building at Southern University in Baton Rouge after a clash with police
Two Students Slain In La.;
Guard Quells Violence
Combined News Services
All
A u n i v e r s i t y c a m p u s was o n c e again the scene o l v i o l e n c e
and d e a t h as t w o s t u d e n t s w e r e k i l l e d y e s t e r d a y
morning
at S o u t h e r n U n i v e r s i t y in f i a t o n R o u g e , l . o u t s a n a . Several
< a hers w e r e i n j u r e d .
2D. " I N e w R o a d s . The o t h e r r e m a i n e d Lin i d e m i l i c d .
A coroner's report
confirmed
that
l>\
Hjppolytc
either
hmkslioi
01
shrapnel,
holli
had
head
Louisiana
Governor
learned
of
Edwin
stepped
up
Edwards
.iltci
p u n liases
ol
Sherill
guns
Al
and
a m m u n i t i o n in the area.
ap[ le turnover*
powei
P.uish
County
i o set a can l e w
ami
the
measure
gave
if n e c e s s a r y . Sale o l
East
[lie
Baton
mayor
f i r e a r m s was
also p r o h i b i t e d .
A
curfew
night.
student
deaths
climaxed
between
weie
warned
looked on f r o m
sherill
a
bloody
deputies
lo
move
as
some
the outside. When
were
ten
and
minute
student
building
police moved
111 w i t h
2.(1011
students
five minutes elapsed,
leashed d o g s a[
[lieu
side a n d
a r m e d w i t h r i f l e s , s h o t g u n s a n d p i s t o l s . T h c v f i r e d teal gas
i n t o [ h e b u i l d i n g a n d the s t u d e n t s f o u g h t
back b\
hurling
"Two
and
\\,ivv
been
shot
m effect
guardsmen
on
remained
the c a m p u s
on
last
university
grounds.
Earlier in t h e d a y , t h e governor had ordered the N a t i o n a l
and
there
Rouge M a y o r
may
be
more
W. W. D u m a s .
if
"We
a i e g o i n g t o t a k e b a c k over tin- adit) u i i s i i al ion b u i l d i n g at
a n y 11 »sl . "
l i u i [ h e o c t u p i e r s l e f t w i t h In t i e resistant e s h o r i l ) he I o r e
noon,
was r e p o r t e d l y
Police
T h e n , g u n s h o t s w e r e f i l e d a n d ( w o y o u n g b l a c k m e n lav
dead.
net e s s a r y . " said b a t o n
T h e stale o l emergency e x t e n d e d t h r o u g h o u t
Rouge
in d o r m i t o r i e s ,
fiagineiu.il ion b o m b s .
A n ,ue.i state o l ei ne i g e m v was d e c l a r e d in Hat on R o u g e
Amiss
living
o l [lie p r e d o m i n a n t l y b l . u k c a m p u s .
[lie
L . i n d i s said last i n g l i i hot li m e n w e r e
m jin les.
bs
The
confrontation
They
b o t h had b e e n s h o t .
( (lie s t u d e n t also s u f f e r e d ,i 11 us lied s k u l l .
killed
ihosc
p r o t e s t o r s w h o w e t e oc c u p y i n g i l i e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n
( die n l (he slain m e n was i d e n t i f i e d as D e n v e r A . S m i t h .
Coronet
students, except
o r d e r e d home-.
tiling out
with
their
h a n d s over
I In- h e a d s , past a
puddle of b l o o d o n t h e sidewalk in f r o m o l t h e b u i l d i n g .
S h e r i l l A m i s s of East Baton Rouge denied his m e n w e r e
responsible for the shootings.
" W e d i d n ' t use a n y t h i n g but tear gas," he said.
G u a r d o n t o the university after the registrar's office was
set ablaze.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SIXTEEN
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972
continued on page twelve
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