'•'.:'. HJl Lv.State University of New York at Albany Friday, May 4, 1973 Tracksters Top Williams For Unbeaten Year 1 Page 18 I 1 Hunsberger Alleged to have Opened Others' Mail by Glenn von Nostitz Special to the ASP It has recently been learned thittwhile Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Massachusetts, I. Moyer Hunsberger allegedly opened the personal mail of some of his subordinates. According to Professor Ryan Drum, who has since left the Massachusetts School, one of the major reasons Hunsberger was forced to resign from U Mass is because 'he was "caught illegally opening • other people's mail." Drum says that much of the other University politics Hunsberger was engaged in was "not totally unexpected among some of us" but that it was "shocking to everyone" that Hunsberger was allegedly engaging in such activities. Drum says that he was one of the "victims" of this alleged mail opening, and that Hunsberger had a personal vendetta against him because of the popularity of the courses he taught. He claims that oftentimes his classes were overflowing with students who were not even enrollled in his courses, and that "Hunsberger did not like this." He claims that Hunsberger "tried to shut me up" and, in a telephone conversation yesterday, he said that Hunsberger refused to confer w"h him about the controversy surrounding the courses he taught. Apparently, the discovery that Hunsberger had been allegedly opening mail came when he began to make public statements containing information which appeared only in the personal letters which he supposedly intercentM Why Allen Resigned There have been several other disclosures since Monday con- ALBANY STUDENT PRESS S t a t e University o f N e w Y o r k at A l b a n y Vol. LX No. 24 cerning Hunsberger's activities both here and at U Mass. In an interview earlier this week, former Biology Department Chairman Robert Allen explained some of his reasons for stepping down from the chairman's post. He says that his resignation was prompted by a crisis regarding a National Science Foundation departmental developcontinued on page 4 Wednesday, May 9, 1973 Students Plan Sit-in at 2:30 Today in President's Office by Hob M a y e r Students continued to express and Arts and Science dean I. bul a 're,11 titulary faculty' as their dissatisfaction with tlte ad- Moyer Hunsberger's position in well. Smith added that the rea- ministration and |heir the university. son that concern fur the victims " I a tenure system they feel "discirminales there were not more Chris Masierson, a membei ol faculty members at the rally was the steering committee asked the because, " t h e administration and teachers" crowd to "get ii together." She reactionary Tuesday at .1 rally held between said, " T h e students here must duced an atmosphere of feat, an the believe themselves and tbeii con- atmosphere o f i n t i m i d a t i o n . " He against llie ablest Administration and I ine A i t s buildings. The - 0 0 people attending the told the audience t.ilii one icason Carol Waterman and himsell. place up il we don't allow that we don't matter " freedom the outsiders to convince us both condidates not winners ol academic I. Moyei llunsbeiger has been receiving the brunt ol ibis latest because' " w e attack but there are those who c Ii a in p a s n e in third end consecutive day of such expressed public concern. Kick Ginsberg, member ol the feel he is only Vice-President Si 11) I k i n s "hatchet Hunsberger's man." Out- thai award was w o u l d not dung wit b Dea n llunsbeiger - a prerequisite for success." student steering committee and Siiotkin mediate superior history department professor. istiation David Goodman, told tacuity membei who spoke pri I'sychology d c p a i t m c n l . I'elton, gathering, "We have to icmeiii valely said. " S i i o t k i n is the one in one llie bet that we pay the tuition beie. lliey should he a l l e i . lie is one speeches o f the das said, "We we pay taxes in the slate, lire ol the niajoi obstacles and be is have to change llie priorities ol university lire ibis uiiiveisily • we have to cxeil is bete lot us - the students. We are the employers, the administration .ne piess l be l'oi and I acuity employees. what We inusi we believe 111, what we rightfully deserve." 111 the admin- heaurocracy one who im- the Awards, were a st roup supporter ol Associate the is of standing Teachet on this campus. It was "purge" pro- shake this condemn the allege is a have cerns. Qui collective energy can tally beard faculty and students what faculty and is one letting Hunsbeigci do tin d u l y w o i k . " ( tut Smith, one ol those I lie only otbei bei who was faculty mem- addressed the crowd l.eioy ol I'elton front mine the vigorous pressure b> closing this univeistly down till they change whose contract is not being con- ibmgs." He warned bis audience. tinued, told the audience "II uuiveisiiy has gone agaisnt "the the you Willi think these people (admin- staled principles o f democracy." Istiation) you have got anolbci generate enthusiasm for the con- lie went on to say thai lliing c o m i n g . " tinuing struggle w i l l i the admini- is not stration over tenure procedures that is responsible for the purge I be purpose o f the rally was to only it the administration SUNYAs' Continuing Crisis you can reason The day's activity ended w i t h continued on page 4 demands. 10 pieseul by Hob M a y e r the dem- ands which a list ol demandslo A student second occupation ol the I hull administration present the demands which included the suspension o f Dean building has been called I'm 2:,'() Iluusberget llus afternoon by some two I11111- ligation do'd sludeiils who attended a view ol lally yesterday system, The rally was a pending the tenure/pioinotion lo .1 continuing con- existing Council on tioveisy ovei and Continuing and Appointments. 10 inlcude .1 m i n i m u m 0! Moyei studeul lepiesentation. as Dean ol llie College ol A i l s a n d Suen.es the scene ol seveial 1111 idenis Mr; llie sit-in was staged by I >0 students I lie Albati.) Campus lias heeu the Promotion tenure and the suspension ol I lluiisbcigei inves- and a revision ol [espouse pipiuoiioii an by a committee, a re- Monday at noon ies. t i l l ol dass past when offices since Sunday evening when Ml ol students met in the Lee line Celt- being occupied h) students up- iiiuveisl> piesidcius weie let to engage in a dialogue about set over the wai and then univer- promotion and teniue. sity os complicity w i t h the milit- Ai the close ol the meeting it was decided that the students would meet office ntonday noon a list liene/el in his of ary same industrial television complex. The cameras weie present ready lo exploit the sensationalism of an almost foiuot continued " " pfly. Jack Leahy Hopes For a Shot PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER Page 19 in bene/ei's office. Il was leiuin- The Watergate Monster Grows Larger *6 Im " Getter, Davis to Head SA 1 Last Friday e v e n i n g after Gerber grabbed a the M SA Presidency took t h e Vice- Tuesday afternoon 1* * * * ^i—^HI Natansohn election which ran t h r o u g h M o n d a y a n d Tuesday of t h i s w e e k . N e i t h e r h a d garnered fifty percent vote during t h e of the four-man race for the office last w e e k . T h e Ballot the bated y O.iurt proposal Stokem. from candidate foi Ken Centra) Barry Davis Steve Gerber Council from D u a l ) Q u a d S t o k e m claimed in a briel he s u b m m e d t o t h e S u p r e m e C'ouri thai students had been dis- kem's proposal to e x t e n d years, and n o students ir. tne the past elections foi t w o days Stokem commented "I have claimed ihe inline procedure worked againsi '.hem was couraged i i o m veiling b \ a mix not c o n c e r n e d over the o u t c o m e S i o k e m argued thai the Housing up in the dispersal of residency of tiie election Office slips some must have a residency slip in ordei 10 vote foi A student candidates from his home quad thai claimed dorm handed in hi: brief direct ots sometime* out resident-) slips in b u l k , s o m e t i m e s separate!) a n d . in either case, directors wert- often hard t o find Craig J e n k i n s for merited S.A President eon, waiched ifif confusing deubera Mike Lampert President iwo-houi hearing, dismissed Slo- have outgoing SA aigued against an t>. currem beei. u noi He ar election force laws ior four widen.) arid thai I he i e ample nominations, tht time •.tic final da) Id submii li"ii*.ne reception the case which determined fi.t were l o b e considered "Act: .,:' CP 'C " were ir wfietj those a^li'ins conflict with Siudei:' Association aclivme* WAIT? ORDER YOUR JOHN ROBERTS RING THIS MONTH,SAVE $4 AND DON'T PAY FOR IT'TIL YOU PICK IT UP THIS FALL*! 'Gel $4 0 0 off on any personalized John Roberts Ring ordered before J une 1 by specifying 8 15'73 Delivery The balance is not due until the ring is delivered Order Today' This was the second year for Rienow were the p r e s e n t a t i o n of this a w a r d ; year's Out- last ihis was held Monday in studeni d e m o n s t r a t o r s After criticizing the " s t r a n g e alliance of police and Gov Nelson A Rockefeller signed TYiursday a bill r e q u n imprisonment or supervision for sellers of major n a r c o t . : d "1 applaud the courage of t h e majority leaders and mem state legislature w h o s t o o d against thai strange a l l i a n c establishment interests, political o p p o r t u n i s t s and misg,. liners who joined forces a n d tried unsuccessfull\ to Program. ' Rockefeller said al the start of rarefullv . 1 . monies for the signing of the hill WEDNESDAY, MAY Dr. Rienow received a the A l b a n y S t a l e T e a c h e r ' s College in 1 4 3 ° . In lite fall, the University n o m i n a t i o n s , o f w h o m b5 were eligible and 5l> said they w a u l e d to speak lo be c o n s i d e r e d . (Eligibility re- office all d a y . Peak, an i n s t r u c t o r , was also n a m e d o u t s t a n d i n g leachet of ihe \lil2 Physics department in In a c c o r d a n c e with univer- sity policy, Ins contract will mil he iciicweil. because he received quirements were that the teacher was a regular a p p o i n t m e n t had been and Then six m e m b e r s of the faculty that and six s t u d e n t s , lltal comprised leaching the committee, used student forms, y e a t s . he has d e n i o n s l r a t e d gieat colleagues, i n e n . and depaiimenl chanlo a lessei e x t e n t . abiliu sludenl advisees though he has taught only is :i leaclici two lie believes the Rienow is a piofessoi I'oliltcal Science ictogiuiion fin who lii-. ot includes inlv con vcinniy the ciiviiotiineiii .inione ol nonunation. Richard llausei. ,i of tuialily "good change" the c o i i c e n t i a l i o n iased that totally .tudeiil faculty One ihe siiidenis. weie joined by a n n u s . D o i o t h y H a m s , m . w h o is Ihe Chancellor's Screening ( .an- cbaiipersou tnillee. and in this is .in iiii.iii.ucii-d ,,l il e\i, i n , c \ l > M s W l \ a U e d ., siti.lenl eoieiiunji IKc hods the Ihe leels bei ol applicants ,,| ilns seal .mil icspoilsihllllK', Us base I,, i n l i in ill Physical ssill , ,,, n n g i, M V S K A M A h o p e M . . b u n g ba „ „ m . ,,| p.isi ,|ie li.uhl ions ,,| i,, ssoik ,il ihe giossiui' niiiieisils il serin veil dl'lil in,my MYSKANIA stands 1,,i ililfeienl things liadllton As Ihe I'm this \1>'SKAKIA a e i s a s a I,, ihe some ,,is iiieinhci, ne\l loi Ihe,, mem sill .lie h ,11, ills high ( h.iiiiii.ni .,. and pcisouahsui lo llns c a m p u s and Kalian. menial in loiinulaling ihe amis have lesulled l i m n out evei ineieasing I'loltssoiship educalii a icipineinenl degiec ,,| al Neu longei turn isaiveis will n o lougei loi effect as ol die same dale a 11iv Slate N. .i k al e l l e c l i v c Willi Ihe com- Ibis change in pohes is niiisis tent isuli lhal l e c o i n m e n d e d hs ihe iiieitieinenl ,,l ihe I u 7 ' 7-1 ae; deiiu, seal Augiisi 11. | 0 7 i iddllion. iheiel.ue In loiinci poll , ics dealing m i l l physical idiica- hem Sl'NYA Mas I luveisils Senate 1. I ' l ' : and ssnh action o | ihe lioaid ol ihe liuslees ol Stale I ' n i v e i s l l y o l Neu > m k on Apnl : 5 . l')7,t Allen Sieve Vkc Secie- Allinan. tie net. John Koch. Andy Debbie Palley, ha I'edowil/ and d a i y Siissnian si/e kindle the ll.ime ihal lies ssilhin sils s I ii d e II I e o m in il II i I s evei) sludenl and enlighten linn MYSKANIA's esisieiice. lollmi MYSKANIA also lo lite insolvcnicul lhal llus inn lllg II is lip I , , ihe Teaching -ml Di tin- Scllgsoll .mil obiecltves of the tiiiiseisits as seeks lo guished Auaids Chancellors .in,I .mil in i n l e i p i e l l n g those l o the ;uls MYSKANIA lire II,ei Wayne l l a l p e i . Dave l l u s . ' , . Bob Naiansolin. thai in Teaching I"' to l-xcel- i. I,,. •. • liialei Bemsieiii. ntallly sicnliis Sue i.HI I le.ismei. Jell pieseni and Icnce names has, a, hsilies bids kmieK d o w n ihe haiiieis ,,l I'm 11 is insliti seal Dase d.illeils link belwecn the Alumni .mil I lie siuileuls ihe Ii . l o u i i e e n lildelil .illalis ( lianinau svaiinlli ,,l p.o.illcl .i.mding ii, student i,, Ailiieving lliese goals may help hack iiieinhci •eiiue liouoi it deseives \nmp , .K.ideini, In I,,I il all,I , le.ile gie.ilei .iss.nelless coinmu- selects for the Imu been , h o , e n hi poplll.ll ele, linn Hi leg; he i,, lhal ,,| Sigiiuni I .null, landing In ihe es e. ol Iml.is he haclielm's M Y S K A M \ i. .in ! ,,l shulenl ,i. m i he il that tecommend Gym Requirement Ends I h e ,,,iiuiui sei ais , an help him cxpci leiu e lies | ,,, position sixadministiatots lot R e i m e i . ex|ilarned how dillicull .mil .is .i p a n ol that oiicnl.itioi plays .in iinpoii.ini ihe leacliine siill iitaiit- i.mis in the u n i v e i s i u Mb.ins In Ihe c.i 11 s MMi ,hin,-, indicate this awaid Iheothei nxrmhciMil liteconimiilee (..ill it was to naiiow down t h e mini gu.udrans ol Ihe In lunaii J a s esiablisluueiit iiiuieisilN would i tnpi upoilance In Sue Seligson • 111cs11c.n of the c o m i n i t t e e . si a I eil thai hopefulU I'lmeisiis "in nily. c o n s i d c t a i i o n the s t u d e n t s evalu- MYSKANIA 74 Elected Whai is \ n s l s \ \ l \ • I • mans s o m e t h i n g thai pie- evalualioiis ( m i n u s ,ui\ of lot on ic- usually mi lee l o o k e d set thai person apart from the test, a l w a y s taking into primary u h n i l i l s t i a l i u ' |i,iiticipaIlon I s | l a l , d ,, v , „ | , e i v I'aculis neiuhei on ihe c n n u n i l l e e a d o n u n a l e s al S.l: N Y ' A . ' I lis bc,ie) [ | u ( | , | n s | l o | ] n | s | , l u | ] j , w to be n o t e d thai Ihe gieaiesl em]ihasts was placed on [lie lesull o| the slttdent evalualioiis. is search, stalcinenls and d e t e t n i i n e t h e w i n n e r s li should cuiiintu- lecogniliiin fiom from in the importance "I trying " t o feeling ot letters letters establish ,i David Peak a n d R o b e r t R i e n o w . after receiving a w a r d s . teaching a lull y e a l l evaliialion his d o c t o r a t e l i m n Albany. Even sei-.its ALBANY Kcllcy. to 1 I came in guardians ,,l N E * YORK After a three w e f t court and m e d i a b a t t l e it, ot'.n.. Mario BiacfP appear? to be left now with one Ian n . f nearly complete disclosure of hit 1 9 " : prar.d j u n '.<•>: The Bronx Democrat has unlit Fnda> u . pel.tmr. '..' i Court ui hear hi!, appeal of the federal court rui.nj a of the testimony except for the n a m e of third p a r t u s Che U S Court of Appeals,, which t u r n e d oowr. r. i ruling last Friday, refused on M o n d a y 10 grant Biagp a Later Monday night. Biaggl (.aid hit request lot a • "strictly procedural ' He gave no indication o! w h e n . , to pursue the case t o Ihe high c o u r t Biagp, a candidate for m a y o r , is figr.tmp newspaper rt invokedthe Fiftl A m e n d m e n t 30 times during a p p e a r s federal grand jury looking i n t o Congressional bills > behalf of aliens Dr. Bene/el w h o had not i Store were page iiieiuheis MI the iiiniei n \ t ' S District Court Judge Matt Byrn* : : • - . • • • • papers trial ; ur> :"da> for tht- r e m i n d * - : ! :M -••• • full-scale heanng into Wat-ergatt links - : r t c ^ * The iur\ was brought m a, . '• o rr. t.nx. rebuttal was t < >m pie ted and tne defence v* witntss*e> 'That br.ngs u. an end the eviaenc* : :: ..• ..•..-• :• He told tne i u n which is r.t>t be.r.j: •-,- ,.«-t'-f . the c o u r t r o o m Monday m o r n i n g n u r - . i r.^. : ••» exposing themselves to an> news : lh< wist- , _• -ti'ld h\n J I m e alleged involvement •' VVai*rpat* •''• Whit* House aides m the burglar} ' '•'>* • --• ' psychiatrist recipients Awards c o m m i t t e e received 71 Di LOS ANGELES year's J o h n Therrien and D r . Richard similar a w a r d while teaching at m t \ " in the classiooni VOlNDEDrCNEE The 70-day siege of W o u n d e d Knee Indians surrendered their arms and V S secured the historic hamlet The federal officers t r a n s p o r t e d e^eryorc p'-rmanent residents w h o had r e m a m e c :.'-' be al I o wed lo r el u rn Wedn esda > i!: e • weapons, explosives and "evidence of c-r.rn. Interior Department Solicitor Genera bom bs were disc,:»\er<-d in Indian bunI:e: arrested with c weapon after t h e federa. <J an h o n o r . David ident B e n e z e f s office (see s t o r y , I)r National The bill becomes effective Sept 1 Among, o t h . i thmgi prison terms for those convicted of violent crimes ai •econdfclony offenders, establishes penalties for giving bribes m dangerous drug cases, provides SI 0 0 0 rev information leading t o t h c a r r e K l a n d e o n V ) r t l o n of » drugpusher, a n d limits bargaining ALBANY STUDENT PRESS He views t h e award as s o m e t h i n g w h o had been silting-in at Pres- GUADALAJARA "Thank G o d . " said U S . Consul General Terran-when he returned h o m e M o n d a y night and cmr.-r;i. hours after a guerrilla band k i d n a p p e d him "r h sir<~<-: "I am very h a p p y . " t h e 58-year-old d i p l o m a : sac. eyes and a heavy, gray s t u b b l e o r h a c h e e h ; anc •• brief bppearnce for p h o t o g r a p h e r * support-ed by r. ,* v and Jack Higgins of t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t on ;r.' d o c t o r would not allow h i m t o answer n e w s m e n ? •_._* Leonhardy was freed, tired but u n h a r m e d ':•'« * Mexican government released 30 persons- frorr v. .• Cuba to ransom the American accomplishmenls. t o be lived u p t o rather than just During Ihe reception a b o u t 50 of other at llteii h o n o r . me poml r e f e n e d t " an earlier WHY PAGE TWO as many not here s t a n d i n g Teachers. A c h a m p a g n e Larnper 1 ji thai actions of the Housing Of- lias instruction. Peak and Robert 6el»eer elections ar.J p a c k e t ! ifus )rear (. Murt of vtitmg days tiie had dispensed slip: irregular!) was i i'.ismg candi "This is l a m a s ) ' ai K lerision C o u r l . afiei gotten tions of the C n u n gued Supreme noi the o p p o r t u n i t y it* vote a The I was w o r r i e d s t u d e n t s had dait- Stokem exceptional been in his de- leaching thc wayside A l b a n y S l a t e . In r e c o n g n i l i o n of Edited b y Daniel S. R o s s Internationa/ c o u n t i n g was de- Supreme in by President layed i w o h o u r s Friday evening while fallen BEIRUT Lebanese President S u l e i m a n Franjieh cancelled b:r ordered an i m m e d i a t e cease-fire b e t w e e n a r m y m>up> nian guerrillas t o n i g h t . H e a p p e a l e d t o both side*, to ifij.oA broadcast by Beirut r a d i o said t h e cease-fire wrncn hour-long Lebanese air force r o c k e t attack on guerrilla ;•the airport, would go i n t o effect at 8 p . m T h e stand-down "will give j o i n t c o m m i s s i o n s a chant* half hour t o start w o r k on e n s u r i n g t h e enforcerr.** cease-fire/' Franjieh's o r d e r said. were t h e sole c a n d i d a t e s in a special t w o - d a y cellence designated after a quiet run-off. Davis a n d D e b b i e !<f C o n t r a r y t o p o p u l a r belief, ex- Presidency b y a w i d e m a r g i n . Barry Davis by Judy Daymont • " tangled Supreme C o u r t decision, Steve Peak, Rienow Named Outstanding Teachers tc I lie iiesl path loi yoin iiinsei llle ss ill he III hs Graduation Cards at PEARL GRANT RICHMAN'S STUYVESANT PLAZA sou -WWV\A%VW A t t e n t i o n June Graduates; Tickets for Senior Week Would you welcome the o p p o r t u n i t y of haviruj your credentials forwarded to many of thu leading companies all over the United States at no expense to you? The professional counselors at Wm. P. Allen Associates are presently screening college graduates for top notch career opportunities in all areas of endeavor. As leading i n d u s t r i e s have become increasingly aware of the very valuable resources a growth conscious college graduate provides, the demand for people like you has intensified. There are many opportunities available; to you and our consultants will d o all that is possible to find the right area in which to launch your career. will be sold one last day May 10 WEDNESDAY. MAY 9, 1973 CC Lobby Extra tickets for "Night at the Races" are available. Perhaps you are planning to continue your uducation, Perhaps your plans are somewhat nebulous al this time. Either way you owe it to yourself to stay on top of all possible opportunities, whether immediate or delayed and we wish to extend our services to you. We sincerely hope that you will take advantage of this opportunity to broaden thu horizons of your life's work, Merely call for an appointment. The results will amaze y o u . Very truly y o u r s , Wm V Allen, AHHDV (ufii-m-y) 10 Coiuin Ave. Suitf (i Albany, NY t'J'JOti 459-6600 11-2 No casual attire may be worn to the Race Track, Women may wear pants suits. M e n must wear jackets & ties. The only event that is sold out is the Lake George Cruise. ,, -m ALBANY STUDENT PRESS ** , . tutiaud by M i l l i o n l.l» ^ PAGE THREE Hunsberger Alleged to have Opened Others' Mail continued from page I ment grant of approximately • S525,000 back in 1970. After the grant had been definitely approved by NSF, Allen discovered that the administration had cut the biology department budget considerably, expecting the gap to be filled by the NSF grant money. Specifically cut were seven teaching assistantships as well as other new programs and general operating funds. The administration expected these cuts to be made up for by the NSF money. The Biology Department, on the other hand, expected the grant money to be used for certain "growth programs" and for improving the quality of the department. Dr. Allen says that he complained "bitterly" to the administration about the cuts. He claimed that department was "digging its own grave" since the grant lasts for only five years. After the fifth year, he says the department "would be in a hole", since the grant monies would no longer be available. JERUSALEM When Joshua fought the battle of Jericho 3,000 years ago to win the Promised Land for the Jews, he set up headquarters at Gilgal near the River Jordan. Today, countless wars later, Gilgal lives again. Associate Dean Malcolm Smiley reportedly told Allen that he was only acting on orders from above when he cut the biology appropriation. Hunsberger told him that it was a "very difficult decision to make". Vice-President Phillip Sirotkin insisted that he saw no reason to reverse Hunsberger's decision, and Benezet said the same. The long-vanished Biblical post is a Jewish settlement on occupied Arab land, where young Israeli soldier-farmers grow tomatoes and guard against Arab guerrilla infiltrators. It is tiny, but it is symbolic. Benezet tried to convince Dr.Allen not to resign, but Allen persisted. The NSF affair was apparently not the only reason the chairman stepped down. Election Results Continuing Crisis Students Plon Sit-In continued from page 1 those present voting lo participate in another sit-in at the president's office this afternoon. Benezel is expected to present an administration reaction to the latest demands by students al 3 30 in the Campus Center Assembly Hall. The meeting is open lo the university community and will provide an opportunity lui students and faculty to question Uene/ei on the spiraling promotion and t e n u r e controversy. Senate cont'd from page one ten student action. The same telephones were dialed as a few students eagerly called their friends to casually inform them that a sit-in was in progress. The administrators with their same business-as-usual faces huddled together defensively to evaluat this new development. The same secretaries huddled next to each other as they witnessed the invaders disturb the peaceful monotony of the day. Only the issues were different. apparent that the university has failed to follow the principle wupon which it has been founded. Academic freedom exists nominally fur the faculty and not al all for the students. There has been a purge on this campus with the intent lo end diversity f thought among the faculty. This purge has had the effect of closing to us, the students, the opportunity to pursue diverse avenues of thought." The outcome of a meeting with Benezel lalei that afternoon was disappointingly lo many students who waited lot the president conclude a closed dooi meeting Willi eight student organizers. Whal upset studnets nlosl was lienezefs stacinent thai the cases of teachers already denied tenure, peiiiianetil employment, or promotion would not be reconsidered. A leaflci that had been distributed by student organizers, and which also served as an open letter to Benezet, explained the students' concerns. "II is becoming increasingly GLENDALE COLLEGE ~ OF LAW Benezel agreed the make a statement today explaining lilt" administration's reactions u> lhe students demands. Yesterday, students were informed tahl the statement would be made al an open meeting with students in Ihe Campus Cenlei Assembly Hall this afternoon al 3:30. > A Degree Procjiom Qualifying Groduules tor Calif. Bar Exam • 5 Mm From Downtown lew Angeles III A Suburban Community . Em oilmen! Now Being Accepted For September Teim • Inquiries Arc Invited By [he Dean 01 Admissions. G L E N O A I E COLLEGE OF LAW 220 NO. GLENDALE AVE GLENOAIE, CA. 9 1 2 0 6 (213)247 0770 Senate Commuters: Charles Bauer Andrew P. Dolan Eric Lonschein Mitch Zoler Janice Forde Jay Hashmall Sieve Gerber Barry Z. Davis Roderick "Kick" Reed Alumni Senate: David Coyne Mark Pickering Colonial Senate. Angelica "Angle" Antonio Wayne llalpei David llnscli Receptions - Lee-Lure Center Lobby area (poor weather) 1 p.m. Graduates and faculty assemble at Physical Education Building in Caps arid Gowns 2 p.m. Graduation Ceremony (good weather) football Dutch Quad: 10:30 a . m . - J I'd l.npatin Colonial Quad: Lew Barr Wayne llalpei Stephanie Stewaii Dutch Quad: Ken Slokem Richard Guidon Barbara Poskleusk\ Indian Quad: Lewis I'ldlci Jtm ICeougli State Quad: Randy Hieidhail State Senate Jell Sherman I'elet II. Johnson Hams I'aslich's Km I Zoi in f front I n c e p t i o n s - in f r o n t of PAC, Campus C e n t e r , L i b r a r y (good weather) p.m. David Coyne Allan Gary Spivack lhe , . , „ inc— — , , the - « ^ ^ "The root of the problem," says Premier Golda Meir, "is that our Arab neighbors have not reconciled themselves to our existence." Noting the latest threats of war from Egypt's President Anwar Sadat, Israeli Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. David Elazar adds, "many Arabs still think the only solution is to destroy Israel." For the Arabs, destroying Israel would be an awesome task. Willi only smuggled guns and an improvised army 3,000 regulars, 14,000 undertrained recruits, lour cannons, no tanks the Israelis beat the armed forces of seven Arab nations in 1948. That was when the Jewish stale was born and the Arabs tried lo wipe il out. In 1956, wilh an organized but untested force, Israel routed Country Squire Motel corner RT 20 &OT146 3 miles Thruway Exit 25 close to Schenectady & Albany Restaurant-Lounge-Pool Class Officers: 1M7S President l.iuda Wc-in VI'.: Kaudl [Siolnv. Sec: Katie Hiedlaml Class Officers 1974 President: Jell lleiirJ.n V.I' :Hub Kalian Treas.: Alan Altiu.iu Alumni Board Richaid Aiken Ron Daniel Jay Goldman Vicki Gottlieb Michael Lampeil Adjoining Family Rooms $10.00 - single TV & Phones $14.00 - double 3898 Carman M. 518-3SS-3J10 Schenectady, NY 12303 among its Arab neighbors. Mrs. Meir and her government insist that negotiations are the only way to peace. The Arabs insist that before a start can be made Israel must withdraw from every inch'. of the 26,000 square miles of Arab land taken in the 1967 war. Israel has never made it clear exactly where it wants its new borders, but it is no longer waiting for Arab agreement on a map. Informally, it is taking over the land it wants with concrete and asphalt instead of the ink and seals of a political contract. Israel lives in peace with its own 366,000 Arab citizens-the families of those who stayed instead of fleeing their homes in the 1948 war. But the only other signs of Arab-Jewish coexistence to appear in 25 years have been in the captured zones, where about one million Arabs lived under Israeli occupation since 1967. More than 40,000 of them now commute to Israel to work on Israeli pay scales. Almost all the apartment buildings springing up in Israel, and the new hotels appearing in Tel Aviv, are built by Arab labor. The fact that 40,000 Arabs are helping build the Jewish state raises the troubling question of who will replace them as laborers if they return to Jordanian rule, and how would Israel handle the west bank population if it stays attached to Israel? A virtually unpublicized nuclear experiment, to be conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission, is scheduled for a Rocky Mountain area in northwest Colorado this spring. The code-name of the controversial project is "Rio Blanco." And the experiment will involve the explosion of three 30-kiloton nuclear devices- all at the same time- at the bottom of a 6000-foot hole. "Rio Blanco" is an attempt by the A.E.C. to hollow out an enormous underground chimney which will presumably fill up with billions of cubic feet of natural gas. "Rio Blanco" was given the go-ahead by the Environmental Protection Agency only after the agency was reportedly pressured into doing so by the White House. If this initial experiment is successful in creating natual gas supplies, then A.E.C. proposals call for the exploding of between 12 and 30 nuclear bombs underground by 1975. And if that experimenl works, phase three of "Rio Blanco" suggests - believe it or not - that between 200 and 300 bombs would be exploded together, probably late in this decade. Environmentalists, as might be expected, are lining up lo oppose the Rio Blanco tests. The A.E.C. concedes that large quantities of radio-activity will leak into the atmosphere, even in its small initial tests. In addition, lhe agency confirms Ihal all of the natural gas produced will be made permanently radio-active by the blast procedure, bul the agency insists that these radioactive levels will be low. Some of the natural gas to be produced al first is expected to be so radioactive that the A.E.C. is already making plans lo sell il al dirtcheap rates. ZNS The dilemma is philosophical as well as practical. Morally, most Israelis do not wish to rule as masters over an alien population. Many feel the Israeli creed of Jewish labor is wcakend by relying on Arab workmen, and Mrs. Meir admits "what worries me is that we are gelling used lo it so fast" On the practical side, some Israeli leaders warn that if the occupied territories became pail of Israel, Arabs would he 45 per cent of the population hv I9K0. The plight of the Palestinians outside Israel is the most troubling problem in lhe Middle Easl, and the Arab refugees are the fuel that keeps Ihe fires of crisis burning. l-awmakers in about a dozen slates have restored the death penally, and measures lo bring back capital punishment are under consideration in at least 15 more states. An Associated Press survey showed (hat measures reinstating Ihe death sentence for certain aibant Steatee sinema 1btfW*\ CH&BUK OR fitolttd I !THE ANDERSON TAPESl i., May 11 7:30 & 10:00 SPAGHETTI Theatre. IN THE NATION (The last film of the semester) LASA0HA\ ,„ Modern Israel, which celebrated its 25th anniversary May 7, still relies, like Joshua, on armed forces to maintain a Jewish state in the Middle East. It has won three wars against huge odds, and is ready for another, if it comes. E g y p t . And in six days in 1967, the Israelis eviscerated the armies of Jordan and Sovietsupplied Egypt and Syria. Today the Israeli Defense Forces are vastly stronger than in 1967, and Arab strength is questionable. Moscow still arms the Arabs, but the Russian advisers have gone home from Egypt and Israeli reports say Egyptian defenses are a shambles. King Hussein of Jordan wants peace, and the Syrian military in the past has proved less than effective. Israeli Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir disclosed in April that Israel has spent $6 billion building its defenses since the 1967 war, and plans to spend $10 billion more in the next six years. Thirty per cent of this year's $4.7 billion budget is for defense. With its American-built Phantom Jets, Israeli-made missiles and supcrtrained pilots, the Israeli air force rules the Mideast skies. Foreign reports say an Israeli-built jet is almost ready for production. For the ground, Israeli engineers have modified and improved the army's American and British tanks, and designed an Israeli "Galil" assault rifle that its designer claim outshoots anything in its class. The Israeli navy has started to produce its own advanced gunboats. The Arabs appear lo have none of this self-sufficiency, and little skill wilh sophisticated weaponry. But as Israel turns 25 it is not lighting but seeking peace and a permanent, secure existence Indian Quad: Ken Slokem T o u r s - A r t G a l l e r y , Computer C e n t e r , L i b r a r y , N u c l e a r A c c e l e r a t o r Lab, Educat i o n a l Communications C e n t e r , AtmosphericS c i e n c e Research C e n t e r p.m. Alumni: Glaucn A "Tony" Pen / Mitchell " A c e " KassolT U n i v e r s i t y Wind Knsi-mble Concert in o f 1JAC 10:30 a.m. 11 a . m . - I field Central Council Commuter Representatives Charles Bauer Gwendolyn J. Dudley Laura Grunberg Payshonne Jones Erie Lonschein Josephine Lumpkuis Gloria J. Thomas Edward " E D " Williams Bob Cohen ToMMENCEMENT DAY (MAY 26) SCHEDULE OF EVENTS 11; 30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Israel At 25: An Evaluation LC18 Take a break from a studying 50 c with tax & ID $1.00 without crimes have been enacted in Florida, Montana, Nebraska, Georgia, Connecticut, Nevada, Arkansas, Wyoming, Ohio and Utah. Arkansas and Tennessee legislators also have passed capital punishment bills that are awaiting governors' signatures. The Supreme Court ruled last July, in cases involving Texas and Georgia, that the death penalty as imposed in most states was unconstitutional. Most of the new. laws and the pending measures list specific crimes for which the death penalty may be imposed-usually the killing of a policeman or fireman and various other types of murder. The most recent restoration of the death penalty came in Connecticut and Nevada where action was completed last week. In both states, the conditions leading to imposition of the death penalty include the murder of a policeman or fireman on duty, murder for pay and murder committed by prison inmates serving life sentences. Arguments over just when the death penalty should be imposed-if al all-have stalled capital punishment bills in several slates. In Pennsylvania, for example, the House Law and Justice Committee combined six measures into one bill that would have mandated death for persons furnishing drugs Ihal cause a user's death, for hired assassins, for anyone convicted of a felony Ihal results in death, for killers of on-duty policemen or firemen and for those who murdered a hostage or committed a killing during a hijacking. After two days of healed debale, the measure wenl back to committee for further work. Opponents claimed lliat the bill had too many inconsistencies. The Mississippi legislature passed a bill Ihal would have made the death penalty mandatory for a convict committing a murder and for persons convicted of premeditated murder, aircral'l piracy, treason and rape of a child under I 2. Gov. Bill Waller vetoed the bill, saying that, although he favored restoration of capital p u n i s h m e n t , the measure enacted was unclear. AP Thanks To lhe residents of Dutch Quad: I would like lo thank all those who voled for me during my recent campaign lor Council. Without your support and efforts on my behalf I could not have been elected. I can only hope to prove myself worthy of lhe confidence you have expressed in me and will do my best to represent your interests in the coming academic year. I remain, Sincerely. Gloucu A Perez Member o f Council Dutch (Juad t)«lpi«*>"« m* PAGE FOUR ALBANY STUDENT PRESS WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, IV WEDNESDAY, MAY 9. 1973 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAC1E FIVE i&?iim$ Watergate Monster Grows Larger i WILL, wow peMoNSium *H Bote »®T»« wsiowMtv, THE L 6 M « . & VK fe#!_£, T H E PfWHev OF gETTCR I WILL BEGW W BEING <Hu»w-6 M»D SHAKES Under testimonial immunity, a witness cannot be prosecuted for what he admits. But it does nor prevent prosecution on evidence gathered independently of his jommittee voted Tuesday to grant testimonial immunity to Dean and at least five others should they invoke their constitutional rights against selfincrimination. WASHINGTON Ousted White! House counsel John W. Dean 111 will be subpoenated and required to testify before the Senate Watergate^ committee on his reported claim that he can link President Nixon to the scandal's coverup. Dean will be granted immunity to gain his testimony if he invokes his right against selfincrimination. Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C, the committee chairman, said Tuesday he will not decide whether to call the President to testify "until some reason to call the President is known to exist." He added: "So far 1 have no information the President was personally involved." The hearings are scheduled to begin May 17. The committee voted to subpoena Dean, fired April 30 as Nixon's official lawyer. It was learned the Justice Department was asked Monday to waive a rule requiring 10 days notice by the committee that it intends to ask immunity grants. The department was given six requests for waivers, testimony. A tederal judge issues the order compelling a witness to testify after application by the Justice Department. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked Tuesday whether a broad White House denial of presidential involvement in Watergate was intended to include a denial of awareness of any coverup. Sources close to the committee said the leadoff witnesses will be Bernard L. Barker, Eugenio R. Martinez, Frank A. Sturgis, and Virgilio R. Gonzalez, four men from Miami who were arrested with James W. McCord Jr. inside Ziegler said he could not go the Watergate offices of the beyond the statement, but Democratic party. The four will added the language "was not be interviewed by the committee chosep to draw a distinction staff Wednesday. between participation and Also on the tentative witness awareness." lists are E. Howard Hunt and G. The Watergate story continued Gordon Liddy. The Miami men to develop on Capitol Hill, in the and Hunt pleaded guilly al the Justice Department, in the Penstall of the Watergate trial to tagon papers trial in Los conspiracy, burglary and wireAngeles, the State Department lapping. McCord and Liddy were and in the federal courthouse in convicted of the same charges Washington. after trial. Hunl already has been Ziegler said Nixon was degranted immunity by Chief U.S. voting very little time to the District Judge John L. Sirica. various investigations but he is "We're going to do our thing in "spending a good deal of time" a calm, orderly, and objective on restructuring Ins While House stall, shattered at the top by way." said Son. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., the ranking minority resignations, member of the committee. The Asked about a report that the first .seven sessions will explore President once had wondered the Watergate bugging affair italoud whether he should resign, self, he said, and that will lead the press secretary said: "I have the committee into the financial never heard him wonder that out side of the Nixon re-election loud." campaign and alleged sabotage. t h e seven-member Senate The statement, issued Monday with Nixon's concurrence, had said "any suggestions that the President participated in any coverup activity or activities is untrue." Congratulations Ann n e w U^trw ft* THE tfcTtaatre AC-nvmeSi kTHlKl&S TO COME.. J office! HAIL T O T H E CHIEF! LOS ANGELES Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt has testified that special presidential counsel Charles W. Colson directed him to forge cablegrams linking President John F. Kennedy to the killing of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem. Hunt, in a Watergate grand jury testimony released here Monday by the Pentagon papers trial judge, said lie had found enough in State Department files to hint at Kennedy involvement in the 1063 assassination. But he said Colson declared that wasn't "good enough" and ordered the forgeries. In Washington, Colson denied the charge. U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne released the testimony as part of the mounting evidence of government involvement in the Pentagon papers case and the prosecution of codefendant Daniel Ellsberg. Hunt sais he was working on a White House probe of the Pentagon papers leak in 1471 when he spotted documents that might be used to embarass the late President Kennedy's family. He said some documents also appeared to be missing, and he figui.'d those would be the most damaging. Hunt said he relayed this information to Colson, and Hunl quoted Colson as saying, "Well, what kind of material have you dug up "ii the files that would indicate Kennedy complicity?" "...I showed him three or four cables that indicated that they had pretty close to pulled the triggei against Premier Diem's head, but il didn't say so in so many woids." Hunt said in testimony before (he grand jury last Wednesday FOR SALE AlJD F|KlAu_V, HEWS THe SHOUJMMJSHIP MJWtD I AS -me spipmiAL w w ^ . gecetvEP 21 yews AGO [AFTERfcSltvVlAg. SPECCH.', OF V°U, MV M0UCAMS.., FOLLOUJ^> E*» M y 6LE36K06 MOD PRAVSBS, 64 Cadillac c o n v e r t i b l e , m i n t condit i o n , 4 n e w tires, snows Included, l o w mileage. . " 7 5 . Call K e n , 4 5 7 - 8 7 1 8 . S O N Y . . . ,\0 Stereo tape recorder w i t h t w o m i c r o p h o n e s . Excellent c o n d i t i o n . $ 1 3 5 . 0 0 Call 4 5 7 - 3 0 4 9 . 1967 V o l k s w a g o n Station Wagon, sunroof. $ 7 9 5 . 4 8 2 - 7 3 5 2 . 65 Valiant, a u t o m a t i c , good condition, MUST S E L L , $240, 465-1350. For Sale very cheap. Winter tires like new. Call 4 3 6 - 0 1 3 4 . 1969 VW bus • Excellent mechanical c o n d i t i o n . Must be sold. Call after 7:00. 465-7278. "Inferentially. one could say that it was a high degree of administration complicity in the actual assassination of Diem and his brother." He recalled that Colson said, "Well, this isn't good enough. Do you think you could improve on them?" "I said, 'Yes, 1 probably could, but not without technical assistance,' Hunt testified, noting that as a former CIA agent he had been given training in "Floating forged newspaper accounts, telegrams, that sort of thing.... "So he Colson said, 'Well, we won't be able to give you any technical help. This is too hot. See what you can do on your own." Hunt then detailed h IW III' used a Xerox machine, O l / n l blades and a typewriter and "I set about creating two cables which bore on that pai llculai period." Another Watergate ci iispua tor, E. Howard Hum granted immunity helmic the grand jury, and is com iideiod safe from further prose IIOII III the case. Colson denied giving the mdoi but said it was possible Hunt had misinterpreted something Insaid. The forgeries appaicuiH are those eventually desinnod by L. Patrick Gray III. v. In. resigned as acting FBI due, im after the destruction «.i- di closed. yBBaWBt«aaot»BBBBwt»PBty^ i S ITHat I I s All & °%s> HAVE A GOOD SUMMER Love, (This is the Last the ASP Staph ASP of the Semesterl Girl's 2 6 " bicycle f o r sale. Best offer. Call Sharna (evenings) 4 82-411 7. Bl c y c l e s - Now--1,3, S.and 10 speed. European, Japanese, A m e r i c a n . Many brands. F o l d i n g bicycles l o o . Prices f r o m $26 t o $ 3 0 0 . Special: 10 speed Czech racer, 2 4 ' / ; lbs, w i t h free t o o l kit, extra cables, a n d shoulder bag: $105. AM guaranteed. Free set-up. Call David Comarow 4 6 5 - 6 8 1 4 . Bicycle - 3 speed, good c o n d i t i o n $25.00. 4 3 8 - 8 3 9 8 - call Chris. Panasonic Stereo Cassette Deck originally $ 1 4 0 , asking $ 1 0 0 . Excellent c o n d i t i o n . Call 7-4656. For Sale. G u i l d electric guitar SC-90, 3 channel amplifier, speaker cabinet w i t h 2 I S " . Call Laurence 41)7-4027. SONY stereo, 4-track tape recorder. Call 4 5 7 - 4 5 0 9 . Used L g m o n d guitar case - Stow 7-4693. Friday-Saturday-Sunday 12 Noon to 6 pm Swimming Pool* Friday-Saturday-Sunday 12 Noon to 6 pm $.50 Admission $.75 Guest •Weather permitting - Please call the Mohawk Campus at 371-6941 if you have a question on weather. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS W E D N E S D A Y , MAY 9, 1973 Jobs Available: Middle Earth Drug Education Program - seeking Graduate students t o ( i l l the f o l l o w i n g positions, Fall "73: Co-ordlnator of Training C o m p o n e n t , Co-ordlnator of Education C o m p o n e n t , Co-ordlnator of Counseling C o m p o n e n t . Pick u p applications and j o b qualifications at Middle Earth, Ten Eyck Hall, D u t c h Quad. A p p l i c a t i o n deadline May 14 al 5:00 p m . Someone w i t h van or truck t o help move f u r n i t u r e . Will Pay. 4 4 9 - 8 5 2 8 . Students full or part-time for spring and summer. Haircut unnecessary. Call Larry at 4 7 2 - 4 0 5 4 . SERVICES Si' Hng lessons at Mohawk Campus. 8/3 hr. lessons lea son able. Call 438-1088 for more I n f o r m a t i o n . typing Service 439-5765. Reasonable, HOUSING 2 and 3 b e d r o o m apartment available lor n o w and Fall. Very nice. Near busline. $ 1 5 0 . Call 4 8 2 - 8 0 5 1 . Immediately. Hou sell o l d Herns: dishes, silverware, eleclrlc can-opener, end table, pots. Cheap. 456-40O8. Wanted: 2 girls for summer sublet, own rooms, nice douse o n busline. Call 4 5 7 - 3 0 1 9 . Do y o u need household 11 urns lur next year • beds, rugs, chairs, pots, lamps, etc Jul I 4 8 2 - 8 8 0 1 Mansion in Washington. Excellent < o n d l t l o n . Must vacate due t o unexpected u p c o m i n g impeach men I. Call Dick 202-456-1414. j.O cubic t o o l t o l r l g e r a t o nation call Rone / / 0 8 8 . Girls t o itiare Hat, We pay u l l l l l l o s . I V 9 - 0 / 2 5 - Allen Street. Rooms $95 or $85. Very clean. 2 b e d r o o m Mobile H o m e , 10 X 55, Excellent c o n d i t i o n t h r o u g h o u t , 15 minutes f r o m campus. Cheapest living possible (furniture available) $3100. 37 1-2566 eves, weekends. Medium size refrlgoralor w i t h freezer. Good c o n d i t i o n . $ 5 0 . 4 5 / - ' J ? 1 2. I oj rent for summer and ( a l l , 2'/* bedroom apt. furnished. Call 4/2-9838, Excellent Coat (beige and b r o w n ) . Acrylic f u r lining. Size ?-9. 415, 489-662/. Largo J-bedroom Duplex, Available lor summer and (all. 10 minutes in Latham, $ 2 1 0 / m o n l h . 783-6652. 1 wo beds In very good u i i u i l i Ion $15 and $ 2 0 . Call 4 36 14 2 i Canoeing Use y o u r skills In L a t i n A m e r i c a , F i j i , Jamaica, A f r i c a or here In t h e U.S. Gain valuable experience setting up co-ops, c o r p o r a t i o n s , credit u n i o n s . Conduct m a r k e t i n g and labor surveys. Establish long range economic goals at all levels of government. Teach p r o d u c t i o n , m a r k e t i n g , e t c . The Peace Corps and V I S T A need y o u . C o n t a c t : Theresa M a r t i n , Division of M i n o r i t y R e c r u i t m e n t , 90 Church Street. 212 2 6 4 - 7 1 2 4 . nponent Syste bleu turntable, Radio Shack npllfler, Fisher speakers. A l l In excellent cond i t i o n . Priced iar below new. Pertecl for dorms or apartments. 4 8 9 - 6 6 6 1 . Used f u r n i t u r e cheap. Plus r o d Iguralor. Call 4 6 5 - / 9 9 1 . MOHAWK CAMPUS HOURS T o teach English In 14 Frenchspeaking nations i n A f r i c a . The Peace Corps. Call Denlse Harvey f o r information 2 1 2 264-7124 or see Placement O f f i c e for an a p p l i c a t i o n . $ b ' j Including aOBPUBBBtMBBK30BattBanwoaaBaaaB»OM8W»oat»MBww V hf till i n P H I . I * IrnOia HELP WANTED Siereo: New c o n d i t i o n . Pioneer 'j?b rucelver. Fischer speakers. Dual t u r n table. $390. 4 8 9 - 2 8 1 0 . 6 CU. I I . rofrlyoratui In good t u n d l l i o n , $60. Call 4 5 7 - 8 9 6 9 $.75/hour/craft PAGE SIX CLASSIFIED JFK Cables May 10 to 26, 1973 Announcing the opening of the Mohawk Campus pool! on assuming your AffEAfclWG "ID MTEPT TME Hunt Forges Oct, 1 9 7 3 . Marcla 462-2SSS nights, 4 8 2 - 6 3 1 1 days. WiU&Jk* Gone Water F or sale: Llvlngi o o m - t y p a fur n i l ore. Call 4 3 8 - 4 2 0 9 . Wedding Dress - size 10 ivory, veil included, cost $2 50, asking $ 1 0 0 . 434-4488- WANTED Will buy N O R T O N A N I H O L O G Y : Vol. I and/or V o l . I I •),», ut loss each Call Mike 4 8 2 - 2 1 3 7 . Wanted: Double bod and b o * springs. Call 4 5 9 - 6 9 2 3 . L o o k i n g ' o r musicians, organ, bass drummer, t r u m p e t , t r o m b o n e , singer lo f o r m band for Fail 7 3 Call l e d or Rich at 7 8 / 4 3 . 'juwlng machine, cheap, workable. Coll 449-6U81 after (niii) p.m Uouks:UigdnlL Chemisti y [ 2 n d odl Hon) M o r r i s o n and B o y d ; Science of Biology Wols/. Call D o n : / H720" WEDNESDAY, MAY 9,1973 For rent beginning Juno 1. 2 bedroom apt. o n busline. $ 1 0 0 per m o n t h . Call 4 6 5 / 9 9 1 . $160 Jay Slrout 2 bedroom apart merit. Nicely furnished Heal and utilities Included. 439-924 1 , 4 / / 7384, 869-8248. Female needs apartment tor tall, if you need an apartment -mate, pioaso call 4 5 7 - 8 9 7 8 . Need room In apt., for next year. Call Pater 4 5 7 - 8 7 0 0 . Female A p a r t m e n t - m a t e wanted o w n r o o m • on busline - fall a n d spring. Call 4 5 7 - S 0 0 6 . Need a r o o m f o r summer and/or n e x t year? We need o n e person t o c o m plete f o u r b e d r o o m a p t . o n b u s l i n e . Call Monica 4 8 2 - 2 2 4 1 . Female r o o m m a t e w a n t e d . S u m m e r and Fall. O w n r o o m - o n bus l i n e . Call a n y t i m e : 4 5 7 - 7 8 8 6 or 4 5 7 - 7 8 9 4 . Stuck here f o r o n e m o r e semester? Girl w a n t e d t o share b e a u t i f u l , furnished, busline apartment from August t o December. $ 8 0 t o t a l per m o n t h , o w n r o o m in six-room a p t . Grad preferred b u t n o t necessary. Call 4 3 4 - 2 6 3 7 . R o o m m a t e w a n t e d , o w n r o o m , located on bus r o u t e . Caff Sue 4 5 7 - 8 9 7 4 . 2 people needed t o f i l l 3 b e d r o o m apt. o n Madison and W l l l e t t St. Rent $55 each plus utilities. Call B a r r y Z . Davis 4 6 2 - 0 4 8 4 or 4 5 7 - 6 5 4 2 . Beginning June 1. A p t . right b y park. One male wanted t o c o m p l e t e apartment. Near b u s , 62-50. Call 482-5781. Apartment for summer sublet (JuneAugust) on busline. Comfortable. Four people. 8 1 6 3 per m o n t h . Call 4 5 7 - 4 0 1 9 or 4 8 2 - 3 1 7 7 . Summer Sublet • 2 large bedrooms, 2-4 people, furnished, near bus and Washington Park o n Morris Street. 8 1 8 0 call Bill or Rich 4 5 7 - 4 5 0 0 . Chablbl, H o w y o u say; C'est dommage? Have a good year In A r e t z . For Summer. 2 bedrooms available. Washington Ave between Quail a n d Lake. $ 6 5 / m o n t h , Furnished and u t i l i t i e s . 4 4 9 - 8 4 5 7 . Either gender. Summer Sublet: 3 people needed t o complete 5 bedroom apartment. Available June 1 , corner Washington and Quail. 7-8937. Summer Sublet: 2 girls, f u r n i s h e d , o w n rooms, rent f l e x i b l e . Washington and Quail. Call 7-8930 or 7-8939. Large one b e d r o o m a p t . available I m m e d i a t e l y . Summer sublet. Immaculate. Near b u s . $ 1 3 5 / m o . Utilities Included. 457-8770. Summer Sublet - 2 females (near busline) Call 4 5 7 - 4 6 8 1 or 4 7 2 - 8 7 1 7 . Still needed f o r summer: 3 girls t o complete a 5 b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t back and f r o n t porches. $ 6 5 / m o n t h Including u t i l i t i e s . Marcy 4 7 2 - 5 0 4 7 . Sublet May 15 t o August 2 0 . $ 1 5 0 month, bedroom, llvlngroom, k i t Chen, b a t h , elevator apt. on campus busline, one or t w o people. N o Pets. Call J. R l c h t m a n / - 8 4 1 2 or 465-J658. Needed: I wo men lor Madison s u m mor sublet, Furnished, u t i l i t i e s , convenient. $ 7 5 / m o n t h . Call 4 5 7 - 4 5 0 / . Summer sublet 3 bedrooms. 3 or 4 people. Reasonable. 4 5 7 - 4 7 7 1 . Suminor sublet: Large 4 b e d r o o m apartment near busline. Girls prefer red. Call 4 57-5213 or 4 5 7-5214. Su minor sublet 2 girls needed t o complete 4-bedroom a p a r t m e n t , lur nlshed. right o n busline, $60 a m o n t h . Call 4 6 5 - 6 7 5 9 . Summer sublel - 3 bedrooms, furnished. Call Eileen 457-8777 or Fran 457-8767. Ideal Summer Sublet: 4 b e d r o o m apt. noxl door t o Silo Restaurant o n Western A v e . F u r nlshed, Call 457-7740Sumim r Sublets 1 girl, o w n r o o m o i l busline, lur nlshed, $5 5 or less. Call Diane 4 5 7 - 4 0 8 6 . For Summer t ooms. On 430-1/JO, O c c u p a n c y : 4-5 bod busline. Reasonable. Female needed (or summer sublet o w n r o o m , m o d e r n a p a r t m e n t , bus line. $ 5 0 / m o n t h . Call 4 6 2 - 1 7 9 1 . Summer Sublet - $ 1 2 0 / m o n t h plus utilities, 3 bedrooms, l l v l n g r o o m , dining r o o m , T V r o o m , k i t c h e n , b a t h , p o r c h , furnished. Call 4 3 4 - 4 8 9 3 after Summer Sublet • furnished 4 bedr o o m apt. w i t h bath, l l v l n g r o o m and k i t c h e n • Washington and Quail $ 2 4 0 / m o n t h . Call Chris 4 3 6 - 8 9 3 7 . LOST & FOUND L o s t : 2 0 0 1 A Space Odyssey Term Paper Call 355-6255 ur mall Duncan, H U 286. L o s t : A p r i c o t Poodle p u p p y - Please Call 4 7 2 - 8 6 1 6 . F o u n d : Men's sliver I D . bracelet Name " R o b e r t . " Call Sue 4 5 7 - 7 7 2 7 . RIDES/RIDERS F R E E R I D E o f f e r e d for help w i t h driving, A l b a n y l o C H I C A G O , May 24-25. Call Cathy, p m , Schenectady 377-4277. Ride wanted t o N.Y.C. L i t t l e Neck. Mori. 5/14 after 9 p . m . or Tuos a n y t i m e . Call M i t c h 4 5 / - 8 8 1 4 . U R G E N T - Ride needed A N Y T I M E Frl. or Sat. or Sun. (May 1 1 , 12 or 13) t o N.Y.C. or Long Island. Call Barry 4 5 7 - 8 7 5 / or Jean 4 5 7 - 7 8 9 6 . Will share expenses. PERSONALS Need girls (or summer - May l b , furnished, $ 5 5 / m o n l h near bus, o w n r o o m , call 4 8 2 - 9 2 1 7 . Su minor sublet - 4 b i g fur nlshed bedrooms. Facing beautiful Washing t o n Park. Call Mike, Guy 465 9 6 6 0 Summer sublel, next l o Silo for 1 t o 5 poisons, call 4 5 7 - 5 2 3 4 , D a n or Grog. Summer Sublet: Western Avu o n busline; 2 bedrooms suitable lor J , semi-furnished; finished basement Available May t h r o u g h August, $40/person. 4 8 2 3440 Spacious A p a r t m e n t o n busline t o . summer sublet. Call 457 4 / J l Larry, Beth, Jeff, Julie, Gall and Paul, Congratulations and G o o d L u c k . Karen Dear Roberta, Well, It's that t i m e of year so... G o o d Luck in Israellland! Be happy always. Love and Peace Tha Know-Balls Mustard Mess, Happy I w o months (or should I say nino weoks?)l I love y o u m o r e than ever. Frlsbee Failure Dear Jackie. Get well soon 'cos I lovo y o u . Nood an apartment-mate starting In June. Call b o b b y , 449-8595 Nood a fuinalo a p d ' l n i o n l - m a l o starling In June. Call Mlni.lv, 438 5453. Wanted: 2 oi more bedroom apart merit for Fall semester. Preferably furnished. Call Jill 457-7739. If y o u havo an apartment lor Seploru bor w i t h an e m p t y b e d r u u m , I'd like to live with y o u . Call Lenoto 45/3040. Wanted: 3 b e d r o o m apartment o n busline June t o Juno. Call 4 6 5 / 6 2 / Qlri Imagine a June 25 without B.S.If $ 4 0 per person for a 3 s t o r y b r o w n stone. Groups or singles f o r summer sublet. F u r n i s h e d , i n c l u d i n g 3 water beds. Corner o f Dove a n d Lancaster. 463-4092. Female needed t o c o m p l e t e E.B. four b e d r o o m apartment o n bus r o u t e . Call 4 5 7 - 5 2 8 9 . Student l o o k i n g t o sublet June 3 June 23 (presesslon). Near school or busline. Call B o b Schiller 7-5063. W h y Isn't Summer S u b l e t : Female, f u r n i s h e d , u t i l i t i e s , on busline. 4 5 7 - 7 9 6 8 . Summer Sublet. 472 H u d s o n . 3 singles, 1 large d o u b l e , reasonable. Call Holly 457-5236. House w i t h 3 apts. subletting single rooms or whole apts. M o d e r n , carpeted, panelled, busline and park location. Reasonable rates. 4 6 5 - 3 7 6 6 . June 2 5 Is c o m i n g ! ! ! BRAD? S t u d Nemllch: Come up between the holidays. Your pervert. I need an apartment-mate f o r next year, beginning Fall. I can m o v e anywhere. Senior. Quiet. Call B i l l 457-5337 a n y t i m e . Need female t o fill apt. preferably i n June. Call K a t h y 4 5 7 - 6 3 9 3 . fuck you world f eathy ganek T h e A S P o w e s y o u MONHY! Buster B o b and Mike • H o w about meeting us at Red Barn In Cornwall o n J u l y 1? A l l o u r love, Pat a n d Dtna Bob, Thanks f o r m a k i n g RPI m y h o m e away f r o m home away f r o m h o m e . I love y o u ! Pat MlkeThe Unlvac and I w i l l be t h i n k i n g of y o u over t h e summer. Thanks f o r the help - and everything else. Love ya, cutle Dlna Kram, I understand what happened - tried t o t u r n y o u Into someone y o u ' r e n o t . A f t e r finals...Friends? Diane I have t h e answers t o t h e final exam in Physics 2 0 1 If anyone wants t h e m . Sandy, Sleep: t h e natural periodic suspension of consciousness during w h i c h the powers of the body aro rested. Matt I'm moving t o Boston Area June 1. W o u l d like 1 or 2 females t o share apartment. Call Pam 4 6 2 - 2 8 5 5 . Dear Felix, " I heard he sang a good song, I hoard he had a style... K i l l i n g me s o f t l y w i t h his song... K i l l i n g me softly w i t h his s o n g . " Felix • Thank y o u for sometimes being m y f r i e n d . Love, Robin To m y friends, Thanks lor everything. Need I say more. all m y love, Barry Darlonei F e l l / contpleanos! Hope y o u lake It belter than I d i d . Here's t o alot. R.S. Schwartz I l l i l n k we're getting closer l o making our t o m o r r o w s today's dreams. I Doaresl T . L . Love y o u n o w and always. L L Dear LaSelle, Listen sweetheart, y o u ' r e real g o o d . you're good, Bogle Punim and Punlm Productions presents In Concert: Blind Melon C h i l li n, rapping about his Ding Dong. Delalls f o r t h c o m i n g . Dear B u n k , Congratulall Hie ASP staph Dear S a l l y , C a n d y , D e b b y , J i l l , Katie and Sheryl: T h a n k s (or your friendship and help. Y o u made t h e office a place w o r t h c o m i n g t o ( e x cept f o t O c t o b e r , Sally) Love, Joel SEIDENBERG JEWELRY earrings 2 for $1 buy 4 pair get 1 free If y o u r name is listed b e l o w P L E A S E c o m e t o C C J 3 4 cigarettes 39c/pack and bring identification. Diane Kaschuk Carol Turnei Laurie Steinberg Don Sehunche Monica Keuss Laura Freund Bob Schwartz Arthur Newman Mrs, DerOhannesian Victor Saffrin Afro earrings 264 Central Ave. cor. N o . Lake Ave. Albany needs place to live. Sept. and ALBANY S T U D E N T P R E S S I PAGE SEVEN A n y individuals interested in selling any homemade goods (jewelry, leath- er goods, etc.) at Alumni Day on Newman May Mass Schedule f o r week of 14-18. Tues. (May 15J t o F r i . (May 18): Mass at 1 1 : 1 0 A M . Tues. Saturday May 19, please call Dennis (May 15) and Thursday (May E l k i n at 7-7210 or Pam Carrington at Mass at 1 1 : 1 0 A M and 1 2 : 1 0 P M . Union for Radical Political Economics (URPE) meeting on Friday M a y 1 1 , 2 P M , M o h a w k Tower, 4th . f l o o r lounge. a Is & letters/ 17): LC 1 - 7-8864 during the day. 8 : 3 0 PM Wed. May 9. for an Interesting panel discussion cm sex Any s'udent desiring transcripts in eluding spring 1973 grades to be sent to another institution should place their request w i t h the Office of the — « • • - . - — » - —*«._*•> — _ _ . I H ' f f i 5 ! ! ! ! ^ 1 ! Accommodations for Commencement guests are available o n F r i d a y , ^ a y 25 Reservations may be made in Person a. the Eastman Tower O f f i c e , State Quad. T h e final date for For information o n library hours all reservations is M a y 18, 1973. Registrar, febore Administration end of semester. may be pick- A Senior Mfee/r Events Calendar was mailed to each Graduating Senior's ed up at the Bookstore d u r i n g regular local address or hours f r o m May 21 u n t i l n o o n , May local address was registered w i t h the 26 to his h o m e if no ,0 continue Krawl, PARSEG trial p o l l u t i o n and Pine Bush w i t h an ronmental Volunteer w i t h some coarchmg experience needed to coach Well problems. We Where T o Go to set up a n e t w o r k whereby S U N Y A students can participate or for CYO in initiate projects of their o w n o n the 274-2475 evenings campus, local, state, and federal level, If there are any questions Dizard, call A n n home-465-6516; school- ment this week Pa.sec s free w i t h student la*. w i l l sponsor a class in bicycle repair o n Wednesday. M; f y . at 8 30 PM m the Flagroom Bicycles welcome Hiss, former official, will , Cathexis w o u l d like l o express ns thanks to all of the members of the Psychology Episcopal Sunday Services .it 10 30 helped Department lo make who our have programs successful this term welcome to our advisor. Dr Waterman, for her funher information Special so A M in Chapel House All Protestants For give ,i pnh Era, »• •• F u n c t i o n R o o m of C o r t l a n d Cnile• •,.• Corey i n f i n i t e source of ideas and encour Chdpel House 489 8573 anement 9. A H,UBS.1HHI [»•- dent study Balfior faculty Thursday, M,iy Till) Early Music I'i by ( Monteverdi C^D in the PAC All the salad Oven fresh breads'. tcs of the ' Hmn.il .' HI Wlnte M Judaic Studies Minors student;, MO •1 0<J PM ( JurjrJH i SlurlM", Mi'.' rnu(tliri-j /. I bui i m p o r t a n t " 1 NOTICE from 6 to 10 pm We wish to thank you for your Rock guitar at its best SMKEH 785-3236 past patronageHave a safe and healthy summer RTE 9 South of Latham Circle I UJ< RIGHT Majors & thru Friday May 14 to 18 9' A ALBANY STUDENT PRESS some serious funding members. The disagreements with and a National department talented Also is being as well pianist, Dennis Helrich. being asked as e x p e r t The most professors to being Robert Science the Allen's he administration Foundation t o get rid o f C a r o l literally grant, as Waterman, decimated, to and an largely irreplaceable leave is t h e popular musicologist Daniel Nimetz. visible case here is C u r t oboist. bassoonist. (See Smith, who lias d o n e most of h i s s t u d i e s h e r e at e x t r e n i e l v p o p u l a r a m o n g s t u d e n t s , as w e l l as f e l l o w Geology: Chairman the administration. Ruth letter from is b e i n g fired S U N Y A . H e is a l s o have been an faculty. B y r d r e s i g n e d b e c a u s e of s t r o n g d i s a g r e e m e n t s w i t h His resignation internationally Geography: KU DBUVEW c Guitar and seems led t o t h e d i s s o l u t i o n famous team 1:1 »*cto Although there of what would tectonics. specifically identifiable controversial cases here, relations b e t w e e n tins d e p a r t m e n t and the dean are limit one to a customer with this ad and his M a faculty l a m e n t a b l e loss here w a s C h a i r m a n music Prnis. McKcc. • I 10 Beer PLUS MICHAEL who scientist a n d an e x t r e m e l y c a p a b l e a d m i n i s t r a t o r , of departmental Rene ' I'M I • " M . W.ilii'h'Mv ^iOTICE^^TubENTS e because amazingly New Bio Chairman no. 4 Choice 1 HU SBAKEfS most A noted Music:The Zomttii During exam week Pizzas will be delivered from the Campus Center- Monday at most intelligent Wheelock. w h o Wed . M.iy <) I ' l c , i v i t i t v i Thursday Nite Hunsberger, I . mental representatives /* ndud by studtint tax Dean a t t r i b u t a b l e t n t h e e f f o r t s o f D e a n H u n s b e r g e r . B e i n g f o r c e d t o l e a v e is t h e Fields will nuil i- hi • "• in Pool Sharks. Ihi'i. . , • • . ' ray paralyses Pans The C w Tree Planting Protect Mtwirty [unsday M.iv '> H HM I '•<•>• Western Ave. at Fuller Rd. and here, ... WHO ONLY EA1?N $9% 99? a n d o n l y t h e m o s t c o n c e r t e d effort b y s t u d e n t s u p p o r t e r s w i t h t h e a i d o f m& INEQU/TY CRIES OUT TOR TAX -REFORM AND A- ANP> PAY INCOME TAYE3 BUT t h e s t u d e n t p r e s s s a v e d h e r . L e r o y P e l t o n , a n o t h e r p o p u l a r p r o f e s s o r , is a l s o e x p e r i e n c i n g d i f f i c u l t y . A l s o , H a r o l d M i l l e r , a n o t h e r v e r y p o p u l a r t e a c h e r is CONCERN FOR VEOPLE LIKE SHOULDN'T HAVE TO I MYSELF. . . already gone. Twenties I' IT LASAGNA • CLAMS • BEER BURGERS • SPIEDIES- ETC,ETC applications due before 4pm May 11, 1973 Sciences Psychology :The administration attempted M.i, F i n a l l y . Bi'l.i I mjus PIZZA-PIZZA rw the English: IN.' foi faculty l a r g e l y l o r i d e o l o g i c a l r e a s o n s : H e is a M a r x i s t . A l s o b e i n g r e l e a s e d is A l a n I,I,us Stan ..I Applications of system m u s i c s t u d e n t s in t o d a y ' s a r t s s e c t i o n . ) 1,111 w i z a r d /V/M'WC?/-/^' and tenure w e l l as p h i l o s o p h i c a l d i s a g r e e m e n t s w i t h t h e u p p e r a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . ,|, : •• 16th Century Tale of Lust welcome lo coma .>•<• " i • fivu! tailed The Play ul India Spanish and Porlorjusn I,. ente Thursday evHimui M.i, PM HU B39 II 'lit" n..•.,'• a n d cheese I . SPAGHETTI SPAGHETTI CC 1 3 / 0 «10 0|» resigned In. i n s t r u m e n t s , Sunday CMfltik is... see Don Bielecki •v numbers the all t h a t is w r o n g w i t h t h e s y s t e m . Biology: T h e / June 4-Aug. 24,1973 £0 large of epitomize resignation. mission is tree ) that condition with over Music Arts the D e p a r t m e n t b y d e p a r t m e n t t h e s i t u a t i o n is a s f o l l o w s : -••!- . I I K -.• • Free PM Our own Abruzze style saute. you tail eal! Tailgy Dressings. Creamy Butter! obvious witli especially popular, and Reality B.mdi'Mj S t u d i o Theater upset a x e d arc clearly t h e " c r e a m of t h e c r o p " . and ented by Nancy Pending SA budget approval for 2 full time laborers to work on the Dippikill Property for 12 weeks this summer increasingly arc We a r e w i t n e s s i n g n o t h i n g l e s s t h a n a p u r g e - a p u r g e o f t h e b e s t , t h e m o s t U n i o n at 8 15 PM on -,'•!••• nesday, M a y lhanks please contact the Rev Harold Baum, Summer Jobs Available becomes students State Dei M I address o n The McCarthy Women-Dreams ^ S ^ ^ ™ ^ ' * SUNYA Witnesses Purge It Aiger w i l l f o l l o w his address 7-8569. ...«. D u t c h Quad Living Lear nr i Center TOR A VEMOCRACV, THIS 15 oVER THE MOST PISGRACEFUL FAWlN6-*IOQ,000 MP W ABSOLUTELY NO INCOMEMO> 6HAMEFUL THIN6S TVE EVER NEARP OF! TAX WHATSOEVER? hope, as grammar possible. Call Joe 457-8297 days and CC364. A l b a n y ' s Science F i c t i o n Cir^i IJISHT this semester such as indus- University. Those Seniors w h o d o not M a r i n e , w i l l begin d i s t r i b u t i o n later lecturer - Sociology increased emphasis o n campus envi- receive the i n f o r m a t i o n may pick it u p iit Guest Ph.D. projects May T r o y . One night per week as soon as Cap and gown orders p|ans pYE started 12, education. C o m m . College. Bldg B-5 1973. school age boys in boxing call 457-8551. Clubs & Meetings _ _ _ » _ - » — — ——— ———— — campus center food staff WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 197:: r e p o r t e d to be very Theatre: Joseph having his c o n t r a c t H i s t o r y :'l'he m o s t poor. B a l f i o r , t h e e x t r e n i e l v p o p u l a r t h e a t r e i n s t r u c t o r is n o t renewed. t a l k e d a b o u t c a s e h e r e is t h a t of D a v i d G o o d m a n . ( S e e A S P , M a y 4.1 Art:Mary Roddant, whom chairman Cowley calls i r r e p l a c e a b l e is b e i n g takes orders from the Dean ,-, office On M o n d a y a new chairman of tinBiology D e p a r t m e n t was chosen t o re place R o b e r t Allen w h o is leaving because of p r o b l e m s he e n c o u n t e r e d with the administration. There are m a n y professors in that dep a r t m e n t w h o are e x t r e m e l y upset over who was chosen as well as how he was chosen. According t o t h r e e t e n u r e d biology professors, the new a p p o i n t e e was toUrth on a list of c o n t e n d e r s -meaning thai he was t h e d e p a r t m e n t faculty's fourth pre fere nee. He was n o t , h o w e v e r , Dean Huns herger's or the Associate Dean's fourth choice. He was their first choice, and a p p a r e n t l y t h a t is why he has the job T h e new chairman is r e p o r t e d l y "very scientifically visible," being well k n o w n nationally and even internationally. Strictly as a scientist he is held in high regard by other faculty m e m b e r s . B u t w h a t seems to b o t h e r most people in the d e p a r t m e n t is that the new ap pointee shows essentially no " l e a d e r s h i p qualities." He is merely a scientist, but not a good " c o m m u n i c a t o r " F u r t h e r more, he U relatively u n k n o w n to many of t h e d e p a r t m e n t faculty o n a personal basis, whereas it has been said t h a t the other t h r e e c o n t e n d e r s would have inter acted in a s m o o t h e r , m o r e productive manner. What also b o t h e r s t h e three professors is that the a p p o i n t m e n t was m a d e largely by Hunsberger alone, and essentially ig noring t h e vote of the d e p a r t m e n t faculty. T h e faculty placed t h e new appointee in fourth place on their preference list through a d e m o c r a t i c voting process, b u t the faculty acts only in an advisory capacity with t h e final decision left up to the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . Why t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n w a n t e d the n u m b e r four mun is unclear. Perhaps it is his high scientific visibility. Or perhaps thoy are looking for a n o t h e r administrator whose emphasis is on research rather than teuching and w h o readily forced t o leave b e c a u s e she lacks P h D . Tliere was apparently inure to Huns herger's closing of the U Mass art show than was reported on these pages directly before the last vacation. It all look place the year before Hunsberger was forced to resign from the Massachusetts school The exhibit in question, by resident artist Click Close, was taken down by Workers under orders from Hunsberger and a few other administrators because of what was t e r m e d '•concern uboul its appropi latness for display in the student u n i o n . ' ' According to the head of the I! Mass art d e p a r t m e n t , neither he nor the a/tist was notified when Die painhngs were being removed, of where they were being taken Kor several days artist Close did riot know the whereabouts of his $H,U0(J worth of art work. Close strongly defended his paintings, arguing that " t h e r e are nudes on the walls of the Sisline Chapel " He said that although Hunsberger and a few other a d m i n i s t r a t o r s considered his work obscene, he did not and " n e i t h e r dues the Ail Department T h e closing ol the exhibit stirred up very strong feelings on the (J Mass campus. A special edition of the s t u d e n t newspaper was published and petitions were passed c o n d e m n i n g the closing as "censorship." There n, no much more to write about the functioning* of the Arts and Sciences College, but no more issues of the ASP in which to print it all A lamentable situat ion, indeed. Almost every day this r e p o r t er is c o n t a c t e d by a n o t h e r professor or s t u d e n t with tales of woe concerning his or her treatment by the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n Suffice it to say t h a t this University is in a bud way, and the sooner we see un administrative s h a k e u p , the heller. G o o d luck t o the reformers and I'll see you in • this same spot next tall. Slavic L a n g u a g e s a n d L i t e r a t u r e s : Nadja J e r n a k o l f tins d e p a r t m e n t . tenure, but Also. Professor O b o l e n s k y is b e i n g r e l e a s e d from w a s slated for p r o m o t i o n and h i s files h a v e m y s t e r i o u s l y b e e n " l o s t " b y C h a i r m a n S h a n e , a " f r i e n d " of D e a n Hunsberger. Economics:Professor Marvin p r o f e s s o r in t h e d e p a r t m e n t Sternberg is b e i n g r e l e a s e d . H e is t h e only w h o t e a c h e s tin' radical criticjue. E n v i r o n m e n t : The p r o b a b l e l o s s ol L o u i s I s m a v is. i n d e e d , s a d d e n i n g . H e w a s o n e ol i In1 p r i m ipal i i r g a n i z e r s of t h e e x t r e m e l y p o p u l a r E n v i r o n m e n t a l Forum, and properly. is o n e o l I li does the Dot only persons have a w h o s e e m s c a p a b l e of r u n n i n g it Ph.D.. and that a d m i n i s t r a t i o n ' s reason lor releasing h i m . P h i l o s o p h y : P r o l e s s o t l i y n u m is b e i n g r e l e a s e d seems to be upsetting many the students here. T h e list g o e s o n a n d o n . I t ' s f i r i n g s a r e n o t m e r e l y a r e s u l t of tin- " t e n u r e sciUee/e" in positions. It which too many contenders is .1 p u r g e , l o r t h e are vying for too lew prolessors being kept are often tenure mediocre teachers. The University Allen, w h o is b e i n g seriously is l a r g e l y r e s p o n s i b l e for h u r t . We are losing m e n making the biology like Robert department the " s u c c e s s s t o r y " it p r e s e n t l y is. This d a n g e r o u s a c t i v i t y m u s t b e s t o p p e d . Technical Founded Editor-in-Chief ann e bunker News kathy gary ncciardi Arts gtenn von n o s t i t / rnindy in 1916 Editorial Panes alttnan eckerle Off Campus bob mayei danny ross Preview lestlt! davtS andy palley b i l l br Sports b i uce maygin ken arduino rob amlsh b| chall matt meyer Circulation ron w o o d Exchange mark litcolsky Photography jay robenbeiy davld slawsky funded by studuni la* jtticeCCava phoin i <!!,/ 71UU ftinoridl M « y is don* i i n i n o d by the E d i t o r i a l B o a r d . Advertising linda mulff linda d e s m o n d Business phil mark jerry albieclit A d Production debbie kaemen sheila schenkern gaiy b u i i n u n Classified A d s cathy ganek Graffili ruth sibley Out of the Closet Out of the Closet ,At Last Letters to the Editor Nothing to Speak Of :$ I .;.. & •$ •g ss ijij; fig :>3 & £ £• # j$ w ;:•:• •:•:! g. •:*: •:•: :§ •$ •:•: •$ •:•: •:•: :|;: *$ •j;: £: ¥: ft T o the Editor: As a member o f the Language and Culture class (Anthropology 3 2 4 ) it has c o m e t o my attention that our professor, Dr. Helen Ullrich, has lost her battle for tenure. I was shocked because I believe that she is a fine scholar and teacher, encouraging her students t o d o independent research and to use the material provided in the course as creatively as they can. The problem does n o t s t o p there. Dr. Ullrich's dismissal will leave the Department o f Anthropology without an Anthropologically oriented linguist. As a n y o n e w h o has any contact with Anthropology will know, that will be leaving Anthropology students with an academically poorer d e p rtment as Dr. Ulltrich full time linguist in the e mrtment. A linguist will replace Dr. Ullrich, b u t one whose background is not in t h e field of A n t r h o p o l o g y . S o future and current Anthropology students b e w a r e . . . n e x t year y o u r d e p a r t m e n t will be seriously w e a k e n e d . T h e A n t r h o p o l o g y d e p a r t m e n t , it s e e m s is n o t really t o b l a m e , as they s u p p o r t e d her case for t e n u r e , as did her s t u d e n t s a n d t h e University Council. Melvin Bers (Assoc. Dean of Arts a n d Science), however, has t u r n e d her d o w n . It is interesting t h a t he gave no reason, which I believe is s o m e t h i n g he o w e s the A n t h r o . s t u d e n t s a n d faculty. It is also interesting t h a t t h e r e has never been a t e n u r e d w o m a n protc^sor in this departm e n t . Dr. Ullrich's firing n o w becomes part of a t r e n d , a t r e n d t h a t violates the Affirmative Action Plan. It is a b o u t time t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n s t o p p e d dragging its feet a b o u t the Affirmative Action Plan and started desegregating this University! Janice Pinchot by Doug LeComte o f a n y o n e o n this campus w h o is suffering from the same problem as this character. I have a m o u t h and I a m using it t o scream t o y o u t o motivate yourselves t o the cause of the preservation of this s c h o o l ' s superior instructors. If y o u the s t u d e n t population c h o o s e t o shut , your m o u t h s in apathy instead of screaming out in favor of these people, then m a y b e y o u d o not deserve t o benefit from their talent for teaching. Marleen S. Barr ; Torch Fizzles To the Editor: Again I was disappointed by this year's TORCH. I thought for sure J o h n C h o w and his staff would m a k e a b o o k t h a t represented the s c h o o l a n d t h e various groups and organizations that make A l b a n y S t a t e w o r t h w h i l e . As I paged ; through the book, I wondered where the ; 52 s t u d e n t association clubs were, t h e : fraternities a n d s o r o r i t i e s , t h e m e m b e r s of : s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t w h o labor all year t o ! provide for things s u c h as T O R C H . I : l o o k e d t h r o u g h t h e s p o r t pages a n d saw ; c a n d i d s h o t s of all o u r varsity t e a m s . I ; c o u l d n ' t recognize a n y football p l a y e r s : t h r o u g h their h e l m e t s . I n o t i c e d t h a t no : m e n t i o n was given t o a n y A M I A w i n n e r s : at all. My friends have p l a y e d on varsity t e a m s for years n o w a n d their faces have never been r e c o g n i z e d by T O R C H y e t . I was a s t o u n d e d t o 3 pages wasted o n o n e f r a t e r n i t y ' s s t r i p p e r w h e r e t h o s e pages c o u l d ' v e been given t o m a n y Greek organi z a t i o n s . Besides all this I care n o t t o be r e m i n d e d a b o u t past historic faces or events in m y college y e a r b o o k . If I care t o see t h e s e faces I can go t o the library w h e n I ' m old a n d grey a n d get o u t microfilm. I t h o u g h t to myself t h a t this y e a r b o o k typifies t h e s t u d e n t s w h o a b s o l u t e l y d o e s n ' t get involved in t h e university. It gives t h e impression t h a t the majority of A l b a n y s t u d e n t s go to t h e p o d i u m at d a y , library at night and do n o t h i n g inbetween. % TQ the Editor: So as I was strolling a r o u n d the p o d i u m :•: I have the desire t o scream, I have the lately, 1 w a t c h e d for p e o p l e w h o I sus:•:; desire to scream at m y peers at this p e c t e d of being " u n i n v o l v e d " in t h e *• university w h o lack t h e will a n d t h e s c h o o l . I t a l k e d to s o m e a n d got the :*:• m o t i v a t i o n to d e m a n d t h a t superior i m p r e s s i o n t h a t they c o u l d n ' t care less :•:• teachers w h o are genuinely interested in a b o u t t h e b o o k after t h e y t h u m b e d :*:• s t u d e n t s remain at this institution. t h r o u g h . I then a p p r o a c h e d p e o p l e w h o I :•:• Sunday night t h e r e was a mass m e e t i n g t o k n e w were involved extra-curricularly. :•:• discuss the issue of p r o m o t i o n and T h e i r o p i n i o n was they were slighted. :•:* t e n u r e . T h e a p p e a r a n c e of thirty-five With all this in m i n d , I m e t J o h n C h o w vi people o u t of a s t u d e n t p o p u l a t i o n of w h e n I b o u g h t m y b o o k . I had a long rap £• fifteen t h o u s a n d d o e s n o t c o n s t i t u t e a and c a l m l y expressed my p o i n t which :•:• mass meeting. Where were you all? I was, w h e r e was the b a c k b o n e of the Q realize t h a t this is the e n d of the semester s c h o o l in the b o o k ? " W i t h o u t t h e stu$• and t h a t your first c o n c e r n s h o u l d be d e n t s t h a t provide movies, diversion, :•:• directed t o w a r d y o u r a c a d e m i c pursuits. media, g o v e r n m e n t , clubs and s p o r t s we $; However, I did n o t notice a lack of w o u l d have n o t h i n g here. I basically '£ people in a t t e n d a n c e a t t h e beer parties asked what happened. :•:• and movies t h a t a b o u n d e d o n this c a m p u s J o h n t h e n replied t h a t he realized all :•:• during t h e d u r a t i o n of the w e e k e n d . If this b u t t h a t h e c o u l d n ' t have g o t t e n all :•:•: you have the t i m e t o d e v o t e t o entertain* the o r g a n i z a t i o n s on c a m p u s in o n e b o o k . ^ m e n t you should have the t i m e to take an His w h o l e premis was t h a t it w o u l d be 4 interest in the preservation of your b e t t e r n o t t o i n c l u d e a n y g r o u p s if h e j:-: superior teachers If you do n o t care ah c o u l d n ' t include all. Wee I just c o u l d n ' t '& o u t y o u r e d u c a t i o n w h a t are you doing believe t h e logic. I said in m y o p i n i o n it gj spending four years of y o u r life a t t e n d i n g w o u l d be b e t t e r t o at least try t o include £f a university? r a t h e r t h a n t o e x c l u d e . 1 suggested h e '••'••• I did n o t e x p e c t people w h o are n o t c o u l d ' v e advertised p h o t o g r a p h i n g dates %; directly involved with the professors a n d all t h o s e groups s h o w i n g up would be whose t e n u r e is in q u e s t i o n t o a t t e n d this used. T h a t could've eliminated the ^Km e e t i n g . David G o o d m a n teaches a b o u t apathetic population. ^ five h u n d r e d p e o p l e . At t h e lowest estiAll in all it was his basic premiss which :<• m a t e I a m sure t h a t at least t h r e e h u n d r e d p r o m p t e d m e t o write this letter. In m y & of these s t u d e t n s are in favor of seeing o p i n i o n the s t u d e n t s w h o d o n ' t particiG o o d m a n ' s p r e s e n c e o n this c a m p u s p a t e in t h e university events w o n ' t care semester. I a m an English a b o u t T O R C H . Those who have I'm sure « again n e x t would like a m o r e c o n v e n t i o n a l e d i t i o n . I <•; major w h o has never heard a bad thing d o n ' t care if m y y e a r b o o k wins an art %\ said a b o u t the t e a c h i n g ab ility of Curt prize for p h o t o g r a p h y , 1 want it to ;# S m i t h . Where w e r e all of Dr. G o o d m a n ' s r e p r e s e n t this school us w h a t Albany •8 s t u d e n t s and where were all of the people S t a t e can offer. •y\ w h o have such good things t o say a b o u t I ' m n o t a d v o c u t i n g a sterile High School % D r . S m i t h ? Dr. G o o d m a n a n d Dr. Smith t y p e b o o k b u t as I said t o J o h n , he has % are t h e o n l y teachers t h a t I have w h o face e n o u g h i n g e n u i t y to c o m b i n e the conven£: dismissal from this university. Where were tional with the m o d e r n . I h o p e by writing £: t h e s t u d e n t s w h o s u p p o r t t h e o t h e r pro this t h a t s o m e r e a d e r s will s t a r t t h i n k i n g •fc feasors at this university w h o are having a b o u t n e x t year's T O R C H S t u d e n t s w h o ^ t e n u r e p r o b l e m s ? K n o w i n g t h e value p u t in their t i m e h e r e at Albany a n d {£ s y s t e m of Albany State's s t u d e n t s they m a k e this school a part of themselves £: were p r o b a b l y c o n t e m p l a t i n g the angle of s h o u l d n o t be r o b b e d of t h e m e m o r i e s £** elevation of their respective frishecs. and c r e d i t they deserve. £ C u r t S m i t h o n c e t a u g h t me a b o u t a H o w a r d Bernstein ability c htaor a cscream ^'Vihave s c i e n c et h e fiction t e r w h obecause does nhoet zfdoes n o t possess a m o u t h . I d o n o t k n o w * * * It is time t o c o m e o u t o f the closet. It w o u l d be very easy and painless t o sit idly by and watch the storm waves c o m e and go, going a b o u t business as usual, and n o t venturing t o o far o u t i n t o the deep lest the ship capsize. But s o m e things need explaining, as much has been misunderstood. I wrote a s p o o f s o m e t i m e ago which lambasted a certain political group on campus. It was not meant as good-natured fun, though I enjoyed writing it and, others I know, regardless o f their o w n political leanings, s e e m e d t o enjoy reading it. If I hit hard it was because this organization's o w n actions and rhetoric warranted it. My c o l u m n elicited from this group an extraordinarily malicious letter published in the ASP. I would n o t dignity such rubbish with a p o i n t by point rebuttal, nor would I wish t o waste time or ink giving the group a n y m o r e free publicity it has t o o much already. L e t it merely be observed that t h e person who purported t o represent this organization's v i e w p o i n t via this dribble did n o t have the character t o sign his name. What sort of person writes such a n o n y m o u s hate letters? A very small person. Very small indeed. If y o u ask s o m e o n e t o diagram the political scale he will probably put Communism on the e x t r e m e left and Nazism o n the extreme right, with the middle a kind o f vague mixture of social d e m o cracy and republicanism or whatever. Where are anarchists o n this scale? What about classical liberals and individualists w h o abhor totalitarianism and statism of the left or right? Where d o they fit o n such a spectrum? Of far more practical use would be a spectrum indicating the relationship of the individual t o his g o v e r n m e n t - a spectrum t h a t lumps Nazism ( N a t i o n a l Socialism) off o n the e x t r e m e left w i t h C o m m u n i s m w h e r e i t belongs. T o t a l i t a r ianism, w h e r e individual l i b e r t y is minimal, i n c l u d i n g Caesarism, F a s c i s m , milicontlnued on next page : : : : : : : : : \ It was the liberals in t h e 1 9 t h c e n t u r y , s u c h great m i n d s as H e r b e r t S p e n c e r and John S t u a r t Mill, w h o c o n s t a n t l y w a r n e d of the t h r e a t t o individual liberty posed by an e v e r g r o w i n g g o v e r n m e n t a p p a r a t u s . S o m e w h e r e a l o n g t h e line liberals c a m e to s u p p o r t individual liberty in a m u c h n a r r o w e r sense, d r o p p i n g the idea of e c o n o m i c l i b e r t y a l o n g t h e wayside. Individual l i b e r t y , of c o u r s e , is practically meaningless w i t h o u t t h e right t o keep and dispose of o n e ' s g o o d s a n d p r o d u c t s as o n e pleases in a free m a r k e t . A n d . w h a t a b o u t t h e conservatives? They s o m e t i m e s q u i t e p r o p e r l y a c k n o w ledge t h e t h r e a t of g o v e r n m e n t t o liberty, yet we see conservatives such as William Buckley gloating with glee at the p a t h e t i c sight of R a l p h G i n z b e r g being sent off to serve a five year prison s e n t e n c e for^ printing a sex magazine. Conservatives wish the S t a t e t o regulate morality, yet they h y p o c r i t i c a l l y h a r p o n t h e clangers of " b i g " g o v e r n m e n t . T h e old right q u i t e c o r r e c t l y c o n d e m n s those C o m m u n i s t regimes which have practiced g e n o c i d e a n d m a d e their citizens slaves of the State, yet these socalled s u p p o r t e r s of freedom are strange ly silent a b o u t t h e dictatorial regimes of Greece a n d Spain. T h e left s c r e a m s at h o m e when the right to speak freely, assemble, vote, or protest is t h r e a t e n e d , y e t s y m p a t h i z e s with those " p e o p l e ' s r e p u b l i c s " a b r o a d where secret police deal swiftly with a n y o n e w h o dares exercise s u c h basic rights as these. and I must scream' PAGE TEN Keeping such a revised s p e c t r u m in mind is helpful in discerning t h e ambiguities and c o n t r a d i c t i o n s of m o d e r n day conservatives a n d liberals. T h e left q u i t e p r o p e r l y a b h o r s governm e n t laws t h a t interfere with our privacy by in effect invading our b e d r o o m s , b u t the left is silent when t h e g o v e r n m e n t regulates w h a t an individual may buy and sell. "I have a mouth lDr. continued from preceding page tary dictatorship, is o n the extreme left. Moving t o t h e right o n such a spectrum the progression is towards lesser govern* ment and greater individual liberty until one c o m e s t o n o - g o v e r n m e n t a n a r c h y o n the extreme right. The p o i n t is t h a t t h o s e w h o are on the old right a n d t h e new or old left all seek an u n w a r r a n t e d a m o u n t of g o v e r n m e n t intervention i n t o t h e individual's life. T h e political t r e n d is t o w a r d the left toward a m o r e powerful g o v e r n m e n t resulting in less freedom for the individual. We Were Not Alone by Mike McGuire Ed. Note: Upon the occasion of his leaving the school, the author would like to say goodbye and at the same time take a took at the school through the eyes of someone seeing it for the first time. Earrh, May 8 In a historic visit t o the m y s t e r i o u s third planet of our solar syst e m , Plutonian e x p l o r e r s have found t h a t t h e r e was o n c e intelligent life on t h a t w a r m , v e r d a n t alien world. O y c z 3 7 a s t r o n a u t s t h u s c o n f i r m w h a t astronomers and science fiction writers have been telling us: if there is any life elsewhere in the solar s y s t e m , it w o u l d be on a planet like Earth t h a t did n o t have t o rely o n internal h e a t i n g s y s t e m s left by visitors billions of years ago. But here follows the news, which c a p p e d off w h a t world presid e n t Nicksou called " t h e greatest day in the history of the u n i v e r s e " : T h e explorers h a d the good fortune t o land in t h e ruins of a city called Albany, which m o s t a n t h r o p o l o g i s t s h e r e believe was the world capital of the d o o m e d planet. T h e y first u n c o v e r e d the remains of a series of buildings, one of which was identified by r e m a i n s of signs as "Legislative Office Building". T h e buildings thus seem t o have s o m e t h i n g t o d o with the world g o v e r n m e n t ; however, they a p p e a r e d t o have been in an ad- ALBANY STUDENT PRESS vanced s t a t e of collapse when the earni n g s met whatevever it was t h a t did t h e m in. F r o m there, t h e m e n j o u r n e y e d t h r o u g h what m a y have o n c e been s o m e sort of housing, a n d knew they hud found t h e true world capital when they c a m e u p o n a huge e x p a n s e of once-beautiful white c o n c r e t e rising n e x t t o a fairly o r d i n a r y g r o u p of "'office buildings". T h e capital was, of c o u r s e , a r r a n g e d s y m m e t r i c a l l y like o u r s . T h e r e were ]'A buildings in u central core, s u r r o u n d e d by four m o r e clusters of 9 buildings each. Eight of t h e buildings in t h e cluster h a d t h r e e floors, and t h e r e was also a t o w e r in each which had 21 floors (Earthlings h a d a strange preoccupation with odd n u m b e r s , which m a y have been t i e d t o s o m e of their equally strange religious t>eliefs, which we will look at later). T h e r e were also t w o o t h e r buildings o u t s i d e the central area, also of t h r e e floors. T h e core building wus the " n e r v e c e n t e r " of the p l a n e t earch. In o n e were h o u s e d the r o b o t a d m i n i s t r a t o r s for the planet, w h o m u s t have l o o k e d h a n d s o m e in their polished metal c a b i n e t s and reels of t a p e strung from one side to the o t h e r Above this c o m p l e x were plush offices a p p a r e n t l y used by t h e h u m a n p e t t y bureaucrats who aliened to the d a y (.(Jilt l l l l i i i l ) On DUX I In past c o l u m n s I have tried to point o u t s o m e of t h e erosions of liberty that have taken place: t h e store keepers w h o are forced t o close o n S u n d a y s because of archaic blue laws, laws t h a t forbid con sensual s e x , laws against gambling, FDA regulations keeping life-saving drugs off the m a r k e t , regulations c o n c e r n i n g what cars we drive, w h a t we sec on television, which charities we m u s t s u p p o r t , and on and on ad nauseam. T h e r e is a m o v e m e n t , however, mostly active o n college c a m p u s e s , which recognizes the hypocrisies and con tradictions of the d o g m a e m b r a c e d by the left and the old right. Libertarian ism, a d o c t r i n e of individual liberty, s e e m s t o e n c o m p a s s what is best from the n e w left and the old tight Tinkey idea is laissez-faire. I may do as I please so long as I do n o t infringe on vour right to d o as y o u please Very simple And certainly n o t a new idea Bui an idea that seems t o be going o u t of style, as in this c o u n t r y , as well as o t h e r s , Hie Si,idtakes over mure and m o r e of lho.se activities which used t o he the perogalive of the individual We need radical changes in America to bring a b o u t laws t h a t recognize Unit •••"h person has a right to his life and the p r o d u c t of his labor S o if you must cull me names, you may if you insist fall me un individualist, a radical capitalist, per hups even an egoist, b u t please, of all the epithets you hurl my way, do not call lite u conservative. The Making of the Budget, 1973 by Mitchell Zoler For t h e past t w o m o n t h s , an unbelievable volume of the m o s t p r e t e n t i o u s backstabbing, two-faced dealing a n d delicate negotiations have been taking place, m o s t of it occurring on the third floor of the c a m p u s center. M o s t of it also occurring u n b e k n o w n s t t o 9 5 % of the s t u d e n t b o d y , regardless of t h e fact t h a t these dealings involve a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 comprising the net assets of S t u d e n t Assocaition. I am referring t o the melodramatic saga of the b u d g e t for 1973-1974. T h e s t o r y began t h r e e m o n t h s a g o o n s o m e three dreary days in F e b r u a r y . At t h a t time we s t u d e n t s were c o n f r o n t e d with an o p i n i o n poll presented t o us c o u r t e s y of Central Council. If you think back to the t e m p e r of t h o s e times, Council was getting a lot of flak over the distribution of funds t o S.A. s p o n s o r e d activities, particularly over Concert Board, which, at t h a t point of the year, had yet to p r o d u c e a satisfying c o n c e r t . T h e o u t c o m e of this poll was an apparent desire by the s t u d e n t s to give much m o r e m o n e y to Concert Board, fund the switch t o WSUA-FM and in general support activities such as movies, the ASP and t h e a t r e . Cultural and academic groups, speakers, periodicals and Torch all came out as losers. With this in mind, the budget c o m m i t t e e began work on s u b m i t t e d budget requests at the begin- Not Alone continued from preceding page to=day details of running a large planet. They apparently had excellent internal c o m m u n i c a t i o n s , for large c o n f e r e n c e r o o m s were even m o r e plentiful than the offices Although only government officials were normally allowed inside the core, workers (most very y o u n g ) were s o m e t i m e s allowed in t o p a r t i c i p a t e in strange religious rites. Traces of the old religion were eviden all over the capital. In the middle of the core lies a reflecting pool presided over by what is so far the largest phallic symbol ever found in the solar s y s t e m . From the fountain could also be seen hemispherical domes on top of s o m e of the buildings. These domes had a darkening near the l o p and might have been maternity s y m b o l s . The fountain drew h u n d r e d s of workers during the Earth's mild seasons*-' once there they would prance m the rejuvenating waters, pray to the phallus, and s o m e t i m e s t h r o w a small disc in c a d i oilier m a highly ritualistic exercise Upon catching the disc, ihey would hold il close to their hody. leading experts here to believe iL was ;i highly evolved form of r e p r o duct.ton Many other t o n u s of religious n I u a Is are pictured in the only book surviving from that era, a partially preserved piece called ••'fordi I!l7;f In front of the core were two tall poles s u r r o u n d e d by several r o u n d e d stones placed at regular intervals. Although it has been suggested that these were aisi religious symbols, the presence o| slrangely Colored spheres on the lop indicate Ihitl il)"V wen- fantastically effi cienl gatherers for ihe solar energy that ran Hie capital I'll" use ol Ihe Free .solar energy ••bun (Kited Ihe e c o n o m i c need lor work as we know il Tlie rulers, however, were wary itl tin- whims <>l .i populace wiib nothing l„ do. and I he}, used one ol the I Wo outlying buildings to keep ihe former workers occupied Inside wen- many van elies ol brutal make work machines. The low regard the ruling elite had lor Ihe workers was shown in the fad thai the Workers were only provided with a huge c o m m o n cesspool on the lowest level ol the building lor their bodily wastes A Urge clock hung on each end ol the cesspool, apparently to make sine thai Ihe workers didn't linger oi c o m m i t suicide II is believe thai a n y o n e w h o stayed in the area m o r e than two mint una was severely beaten Tin- other great problem Ihe govern ment had was with aged hureai ueraU who ning of March. The committee slashed through the budgets a first, a n d then a second time, cutting almost every group, totally eliminating others and m a k i n g s o m e fairly o u t s p o k e n (if not outrageous) suggest i o n s . Foremost a m o n g s t t h e s e was the e l i m i n a t i o n of s t i p e n d s (Lump-sum paym e n t s of s a l a r y ) t o various S.A. positions (oh yes, didn't you k n o w ? S.A. president, ASP editor, A M I A c o o r d i n a t o r , WSUA s t a t i o n m a n a g e r t o n a m e a few all get $ 5 0 0 a year for their services while n u m e r o u s o t h e r positions get s o m e sort of m o n e t a r y c o m p e n s a t i o n ) . A d d i n g fuel t o the fires already being s t o k e d by Budget C o m m i t t e e was the Allman B r o t h e r s c o n c e r t controversy, which t e n d e d t o have an effect o n the $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 plus allocation C o n c e r t Board had r e q u e s t e d . This mess was finally c o m p l e t e d and s u b m i t t e d t o President L a m p e r t w h o used it as a guideline for issuing his own proposal. His version carried along the s a m e t h e m e s of the c o m m i t t e e , namely re-shuffled groups (in an effort t o achieve this year's golden by word-"Mass Prog r a m i n g , " whatever that means) and slashed budgets. Lamport's budget Council, w h o , after few weeks, finally last T u e s d a y , April had served well b u t could n o t carry o u t their duties any longer. T h e o t h e r outlying buildings gave t h e m a place t o go in their old age. T h e y could rest in convenient chairs or beds while waiting for t h e end to c o m e . If they wished, they could read p a m p h l e t s (some of which h ave b ee n m iraculously preserved) warning of such age o l d dangers as LSD (considered a deadly disease by the older earthlings) VD (believed to be a malevolent spirit), a n d " a t h l e t e ' s f o o t " (meaning unknown). T h e only building t h a t seemed to have a really specilized p u r p o s e is identified by a rusty old sign saying " C a m p u s Center". A p p a r e n t l y , it was n a m e d hastily hecuase the capital in no way resembles a cm pus and the building isn't even near the center. T h e building h o u s e d s o m e comm o n dining halls for the administrators ( c o m m u n a l i t y being a big thing on the late great planet), as well as radio facilities which they probably used to plead for help as the end drew near. Unfortunately for Ihein, their e q u i p m e n t was primitive; it c o u l d n ' t even reach all parts of the capital, let along Pluto. A n o t h e r enigma is posed by the sign saying " J o s e p h Henry Physics Building" Although s o m e microfilm found in Ihe building mentions Einsteinian and Newtonian physics (apparently named after two scientific geniuses), lleniian physics wasn't mentioned. Perhaps llenrian physics led to earth's doom shortly after its invention by the wellmeaning m a n , but that the building was n a m e d when it was still t h o u g h t of a welcome addition to scientific knowled A suggestion of how far Earth's science could have gone was found in the Campus Center. Next lo a labor saving machine in the kitchen area of the most elegant of ihe dining halls were two b u t t o n s One was m a r k e d " n o r m a l " , and the oilier was marked " t i m e d e l a y " Time travel is only now coming within our reach, but earth had control over ihe fourth dimension centuries ago 'f'he bureaucrats seemed to live in one ol Ihe lour outlying groups of buildings. quality thai epih nth tin ini/.ed hie among the ruling class, all rooms looked exactly Ihe same, as did all ihe furniture Evening Meals were taken in m o r e large c o m m o n dining halls, one ol which existed in each group of resi deuce buildings All eating was apparently done ot of large c o m m o n howls, many of which are still in their original place on large tables in the middle of each dining hall. There are lew hints as to what sort of loud was euten by the people of earth. By digging deep into the basements (or what the earthlings called "fallout shelters") |i,H)U WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1973 WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1973 was given to Central p o o r i n g over it for a decided t o attack it 2-1. One m u s t under- ALBANY STUDENT PRESS stand that Council is c o m p o s e d of many would-be politicians, each with his/her o w n special cause which is championed in the throes o f debate. The floor is constantly yielded t o the group's spokesp e r s o n who then pleads a case that will invariably split the council i n t o timec o n s u m i n g debate. T h e result was a m a r a t h o n m e e t i n g t h a t p r o d u c e d few results o n T u e s d a y , e x c e p t an a d j o u r n m e n t a t 2 : 0 0 A.M. Wednesday t o s t a r t a l m o s t from scratch on T h r u s d a y night. It was n o w or never since Council m u s t s u b m i t s o m e sort of b u d g e t by 12 Midnight T h u r s d a y or else face i m p e a c h m e n t (which really w o u l d m e a n little since guess w h o w o u l d try t h o s e i m p e a c h e d t h a t ' s right, Central Council). S o , at 1 1 : 4 4 P.M. it was decided t o go big t i m e and s t o p the clock. This allowed t h e m t o c o n t i n u e until 7 : 3 0 Friday morning, only to s t o p with the i n t e n t i o n of resuming Friday a f t e r n o o n , a n d t h e n perhaps final ly finish. At least progress was n o w being m a d e C o n c e r t Board was given its increase of $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 over this year and s t i p e n d s were said to be a c c e p t a b l e . Calmly Central Council forged o n . Bearing an only slightly dazed face, b u t a m i g h t y , deft sword, it left n u m e r o u s g r o u p s lying in the wake, b e m o a n i n g their n o w financially future. J o n e can find s o m e rather disagreeable wafers called "Survival ( p r o b a b l y a brand n a m e ) C r a c k e r s " and a beverage called " E m e r g e n c y Drinking W a t e r " which our explorers dared n o t sample. T h e m e n also found cans of s o m e drink called "CocoC o l a " all over t h e capital. In the residence areas, but strangely not elsewhere, there were bottle.; of a beverage called " B o o n e ' s F a r m " , which was n a m e d after a p o p u l a r performer of the day and which m a y have been use;in rejuvenation rituals. Our explorers were surprised t o find miles of tunnels c o n n e c t i n g the core and the four residence areas. Their p u r p o s e was a m y s t e r y until s o m e o n e back here suggested that they provided a refuge for the b u r e a u c r a t s if the workers should decide to riot T h e r e was m u c h to do in the capital for recreation T h e r e are t h r e e elevators in each of the residence t o w e r s t h a t were p r o b a b l y not used for t r a n s p o r t a t i o n because Ihe previously mentioned "'Porch', hook s h o w e d m o s t earthlings walk up stairs and d o n ' t rely on m a c h i n e s . T h e r e f o r e , elevator racing must have been an enjoyable past time. Large numbers of gambling, or vending, machines were found all over the c a m p u s . T h e prize was s o m e piece of food or a can of s o m e beverage. Due to the overflowing cashhoxes and the still full c o l u m n s of prizes, our scientists feel the earthlings usually lost. T h e tunnels t h a t c o n n e c t e d the core buildings also hosted a n o t h e r kind of race, o n e held between small electric carts found all t h r o u g h o u t t h e t u n n e l s . N u m e r o u s access d o o r s t o the tunnels testified to the p o p u l a r i t y of the races during lunch breaks. T r a n s p o r t a t i o n was amazingly simple on earth. Outside the core buildings and inside the residence areas are huge overhanging concave discs used for instant t r a n s p o r t t o any spot o n the planet Before this t e c h n i q u e was invented, it is possible air cars landed on the flat roofs of all tin' buildings. The workers rode huge t r a n s p o r t vehicles s o m e t i m e s referred to as " s u n y b u s e s " on their way to and from the forced labor building? one of these is b r o k e n d o w n right in front of the capital grounds. Our explorers say that the majestic a r c h i t e c t u r e p r o b a b l y impressed most visitors to the capital at first, b u t thai sweeping vertical lines must have looked like jailhousc bars after Ihe visitor saw the low regard most of the proletarians were held in by the elite. And our explorers c o n c l u d e d their message by saying that a l t h o u g h there o n c e wus life, they don't know if there was ever any "civilization". PAGE ELEVEN READERSHIP SURVEY In an effort to plan the future of the Albany As a token of our appreciation for your help, Student Press in accordance with our readers' bring your completed survey up to the Albany needs and desires, v e are asking you to fill Student Press office, CC 334, and you will be out the following readership survey. The entitled to a Free CLASSIFIED AD Surveys survey will only take 5 minutes to complete may also be dropped off at the CC Garcia's Funk and Some Odds St Ends by Bill Brina S o m e musicians add more t o a performance or a recording than sheer technical skill; call it what y o u will-verve, drive, charisma, funk: s o m e have it a n d s o m e don't. Eric Clapton, for all his technical skill, does n o t . Jerry Garcia does, and his presence on Merl Saunder's Fire Up (Fantasy 9 4 2 1 ) makes an already good album even better. Merl is a master of that style o f keyboard playing best described as " m e l l o w funk." It's sweet, a bit gritty, proficient without being ostentatious, and goes down just fine behind s o m e equally funky Garcia guitar work and singing. 11. Please check the appropriate item(s) for each question. As I listen Lo "Around the University" for the 3 5 7 t h time, I wistfully recall the raw beginnings of this revolutionary step towards a multi-media yearbook.... It was a blustery Thursday in January when the courier summoned me t o the office of J o h n Chow. U p o n m y arrival, I was ushered i n t o the " i n n e r chamb e r " by a 6 * 7 " m u t e entirely bald save for t h e long braid down his back. The " c h a m b e r " was a myriad of tapestries and incese. A man-servant a p p e a r e d and, with a forceful blow s t r u c k a huge gong. Before t h e deafening reverbarations ceased, Chow e n t e r e d with his inter preter Jay Rosenberg. Both looked e x t r e m e l y u n h a p p y . I q u a k e d with nervous a n x i e t y . Information Desk. How much money did you spend on records and tapes in the past month? 1. Sex: female- male. 2. Age: 19-21 26-34 35-54 22-25 55& over 12. 13. Marital status: married other 4a. University status: faculty member _ staff m e m b e r graduate student undergraduate student yes 14. off-campus more than $20 $5-$10 none For information about weekend activities, which one tower tribune kite Washington park spirit knickerbocker news other times union h. II you live off-campus, do you travel to school b y : bus under $5 albany student press no on-campus 15. car Which edition of the albany student press do you read most thoroughly? other asp/tuesday times union Washington park spirit knickerbocker news • other most frequently? asp/tuesday 7a. Do you own your own car or have use o f a family car? no asp/friday both 17. b. If you answered yes, how much money d i d you spend on What sections o f the albany student press do y o u read regularly? gasoline and oil in the past 30 days? arts <& l e i s u r e s graffiti less than $ 1 0 . $21-$40 classified ads news $ 10-$20 more than $40 e d i t o r i a l s <& l e t t e r s sports How many times have you gone to the movies in 18. 1 time . 4 times arts & leisures 5 or more times classified ads 3 times none 19. graffiti . under $10 __ I at Trinity United Methodist Church, I | I • $l.'ill mi salt' nl the dour beginning nl 7 pm A l l pi IH I'd!'. i|o to 11 vo Miiilr.on Avenue ( o m n i u m ly i entei Sutimiei I1' ocjr .nn Cusforv — sports OMA graffiti none news editorials & letters sports cult 273-lSV\ _ — — — c o u n t r y artist attack r-and-b is in itself a n o v e l t y , b u t Stampley d o e s it well, particularly o n t h e title s o n g and o n You Make Life Easy. But the killer o f the album is his all-out version o f / Can't Help Myself, o n e o f the best soul singles o f 7 or s o years a g o . Stampley really gets d o w n with it, shedding his polish and sacrificing all other values t o urgency. K u d o s also t o the unidentified pedal steel guitar player o n this cut; h e manages t o impart a generous w a l l o p f o soul with an instrument that is hardly, if ever. identified with the genre. A f e w artists alone d o not make a trend, but 1 would not be at all surprised t o see more attempts t o mix t h e t w o musics that have been strongly identified with separate races: soul and bluegrass/country. Both forms have a g o o d deal more in c o m m o n than is generally realized; s o m e rock bands (the Dead, t h e Flying Burritos near their e n d ) have played with using e l e m e n t s o f both styles together; and n o w genre performers themselves seem ready to take t h e plunge. Both musically and socially, this promises to be o n e o f t h e better developments in s o m e time. Astonishing Absolutely astonishing. Even a long adm i r a t i o n for Ingmar Be.- ( ,man as a great master of the cinema doesn't fully prepare one for this wondrous accomplishment During t h e 94 m i n u t e experience of his newest searing personal d r a m a , y o u are virtu ally transported into t h e inner beingsof tour w o m e n . Bergman, showing his utter mastery, gives you his eyes with which to see, and hib sensibilities with whicn t o feel. I h e acting is extraordinary Harriet Andersson lies dying a slow, horribly painful death in a country manor. One sister, Liv U l l m a n n , has had an affair with the doctor, and has watched her h u s b a n d a t t e m p t suicide. Another sister, Ingrid Thulin, judges her own married life " a tissue of lies," and at one point c o m m i t s a defiant act of sexual self mutilation that may jolt y o u as n o t h i n g has before. Kari Sylwan, as the f a m i l y m a i d , h a s lost her child and extends her love, maternally a n d sexually, to t h e sis ter w h o is dying. In exploring their lives t h r o u g h observation, conversation, i n t e r a c t i o n s , reflections, confessions, a n d d r a m a t i c crises, t h e w r i t e r director penetrates t o an e n o r m o u s range of psychic nerve endings. Pain, coping w i t h death, loss, h a t r e d , lack of c o m m u n i c a t i o n , desire for c o n t a c t , love, and repressed t h o u g h t s a n d feelings — t h e s e are some of the volatile elements t h r a s h i n g with blender like effect on your insidcs. 1 have told y o u n o t h i n g . It is the ex perience itself that tells all. This great, b e a u t i f u l film represents the purest possible use of cinema as an a r t t o r m capable of probing t h e h u m a n spirit. —WILLIAM Are there any special features you would like to see in the albany student press in the future? 7 or more limes . 3W V *" V none . "Vn>y, NcioVovK WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1973 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS V Y V W C . . . U»25a*J*-30 arts & leisures 20. CORNER OF LARK AND LANCASTER I'lCKKTS What o n e s e c t i o n of the a l b a n y s t u d e n t press d o y o u classified a d s How many times in the past month have you gone PAGE TWELVE JOHN bIMSON ' L A R R Y HIIOWN with S I E AMER t I AROUX I NSI M i l l I RICH 1 A R R I S | IOI IN I M'OM I I) J A / / | BRIAN, Al I A N , AND I Rll Nl) news $40 or more $21-$39 room. Since there was only room for one in the machine, my voice is the only o n e heard on the record e x c e p t for Jay Rosenberg's grunts at t h e beginning of t h e "hamburger m a c h i n e " sequence. Finally, after a week o f hard-pressed record making (pun intended), we headed back h o m e with 4 , 0 0 0 recordings. Back in Albany, however, things were not s o good. Edward Durell Stone was filing suit against the Torch bacause the record was round i nstead o f square. Security t o w e d away m y car. And Dutch Quad sank 3 inches. A summit was held, and following much deliberation, I agreeded t o c u t five minutes from the record. Again 1 was s u m m o n e d t o Chow's office. Goliath, expressionless as ever, ushered me in. Much to my surprise there was Chow...smiling. "Moo g o o gai pan..." he cried with tears of happiness. "Na zdrowie." 1 responded, bowing from the waist. We sipped tea a n d played ping pong. It was a pleasant afternoon... In retrospect, my primary pur pose in writing and performing Around the U. was to capture, as closely as possible, the feeling o f life at SUNYA and, having listened to the production .*tf>7 times, the feeling that 1 net from if is boredom. I think 1 have accomplished my purpose. is • Wilson-Pickett-influenced shouting m o a n . T h e band consists o f a standard soul rhythm section, occasional brass, a n d bluegrass-picking banjo a n d fiddle. H i i s o d d mixture works best o n t h e title cust and o n t h e nine-minute h o e down/souls t o m p Bo Diddley. l l i e juxtaposition o f t h e street- corner jive, a driving Slyderived electric bass, Bascomb's frantic pleading, and t h e b o u n c y , bIuegrass-bright playing o f t h e banjo a n d t h e fiddle produces a result I'll guarantee you've never heard before. There are a few mistakes and s o m e e m p t y space o n this album, but t h e concept is sound and these people should g o far. Are y o u ready for black grass?? Bad Bascomb isn't t h e only o n e trying t o create this n e w hybrid. Working from t h e other direction, white country singer Joe Stampley is doing t h e same thing. Soul Song ( O S 2 6 0 0 7 ) Dot Records, w h o cases Stampley with material that ranges from pure Nashville countrypolitan, which I assume most readers o f this will dislike (so d o I; ya gotta be a member o f the "Silent Majority" t o get o f f o n that junk) t o pleasant, rhythm and bluesy material. Hearing a FOLK ROCK JAZZ CONCERT Friday, May 11 - 8 PM read l e a s t o f t e n ? the past month? 4-6 times . •— . editorials & letters How much money have you spent on clothes in off-campus t o eat? 1-3 times We then went to the bank, withdrew ¥2000.1)1) in change and drove in New York City t o n Tunes Square penny arcade where they have those " R e c o r d Your Voice" machines Using a record player for p u r able t he cassette the Hind effects, track, and a few quarts of Budweiser, Donald, .lay, and I kept plunking tpinters into the machine stopping only t o go to N a t h a n ' s Katnoiis or to the bath What o n e s e c t i o n o f the a l b a n y s t u d e n t press d o y o u 2 times ... "You misunderstood your o r d e r s / ' a d m o n i s h e d Rosenberg, " w e w a n t a script that lusts t w e n t y m i n u t e s . . . n o t o n e ilia I Lakes twenty minutes to write!!!" Chow n o d d e d in agreement as if h e u n d e r s t o o d every word. The giant m u t e was expressionless. He was asleep. "Moo shu pork!" snarled Chow. " Y e s , " said Roserhcrg in his cruel, claeulating voice, " N o w GO unci get it right...and r e m e m her..this is TOP S E C R E T . " C h o w a n d Rosenberg disappeared t h r o u g h a beaded cur tain a n d Ape m a n eyed me coldly. 1 s u c k e d t h e d r o p l e t s of sweat from m y m u s t a c h e . '' Arrghsnfwrragh," he said, m o t i o n i n g t o w a r d s t h e door. " T h a n k y o u , L u r c h . " 1 furred a liny laugh. He remained ex pressionless... lie was asleep again. Once I was on t h e p o d i u m , the words " t o p secret " echoed m my brain i n t e r r u p t e d only lie people asking " H o w ' s ihe record, h e y , I hear y o u ' r e doing a record, . y o u gonna d o an ;il hum'.'... I low's it going 1 hem' t h e y ' r e g o n n a m a k e ;i movie ol your r e c o r d . . . e t c . " 1 suspected a security leak. In my darkest h o u r I t u r n e d t o my friends...both of them. Boh Sugarman of the Theater Depart ment d o n a t e d t h e use of his sound effects records and wished me luck on " w h a t e v e r it w a s " 1 was doing, I wanted t o tell him but 1 c o u l d n ' t . Donald Person is an electronic wizard a n d former mail o r d e r g r o o m w h o knows h o w t o make miracles happen. He must have put something in that cigarette 1 was smoking because, before I knew it, my conversation became a verbalization of my stream of consciousness which s o m e h o w became centered u p o n university life. Donald then removed t w o batteries from bis son's flashlight, popped t h e m into a cassette player, a n d by stimulatint* m y conversation with interjections such as ..."uhh u h ... yeah ...right.. .oh , really'', ( a n d ) I sec what una m e a n . . . " recorded the entire voice track of Around t h e 11. read m o s t o f t e n ? the past month? $10-$20 . 16. Which edition of the albany student press do you read kite . yes asp/friday both What newspapers do y o u read regularly? albany student press 10. How much money have y o u spent on beer, wine, and of the f o l l o w i n g do you use most often? 5a. Do you live: 9. In which supermarket do you shop most often? $11-$20 b. If you arc a student, do you have a part-time job? 8. none liquor in the past month (exclusive o f taverns)? single 6. over $20 $10-$15 $16-$20 18 & under-. 3. under $10 K S A N broadcast, Lonely Avenue. The fidelity o n this o n e number isn't the greatest b u t the playing really does a s l o w burn. A good deal bouncier but just as funky is t h e debut album o f Bad Bascomb, appropriately titled Black Grass (Paramount PAS 6 0 4 8 ) . The record c o m a p n y didn't supply a n y background information and the album itself doesn't either, and s o I don't know w h o these people are. Whoever they are, they're good. Bab Bascomb appears t o be a mainly black sou I-blue grass band. The singer (Bascomb himself, 1 think) assays a variety o f soul styles, but what he's best at Behind the "University" by Bill Polchinski and all answers will be kept confidential. Jerry's playing here doesn't bear much resemblance t o the style he employs on his o w n s o n g s ; it's closer to the r-and-b styled playing he'd use o n Pigpen's material. With expertly styled backing by bassist John Kahn, drummer Bill Vitt, and rhythm guitarist Tom Fogerty, Merl and Jerry (with help from various other assorted musicians) tackle material that ranges from J.J. Cale's After Midnight, which is rendered in a manner more reminiscent of JJ than Eric's version was to the soul-smooth Charisma. The album concludes with a nineminute scorcher from a live W E D N E S D A Y , M A Y 9, 1973 iftskin [exdffrt r sGo r ALBANY STUDENT PRESS (Oct 22. IV?2, Cutt M * J * * H I C WOLF All Rlflhti Roiervctf .{J HELLMAN STUDENT DISCOUNT WITH ID'S SUN.-FRI. f SHOWN AT 7:00 9:00 PAGE THIRTEEN fl Entertainment for Fun — -MOST HAPPY FELLA "V The folks from i.. The Staff and Management of WSUA albaFiY steafee QineRaa wishes to thank the university community wish all a pleasant, and enjoyable summer When you return, be sure to see: for their help and encouragement. FRITZ THE CAT M It's been a pleasure serving you this year. Friday and Saturday, September 7 and 8 coming attractions: EASY RIDER THE GETAWAY EFFECT OF GAMMA RAYS ON MAN-IN-THE-MOON MARIGOLDS | THE FILMS OF CHARLIE CHAPLIN DIRTY HARRY THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE FANNY HILL PETE 'N TILLIEJ LADY SINGS THE BLUES SOUNDER FELLINI'S ROMA j THE LAST PICTURE SHOW PLUS MANY, MANY MORE luiHlucI by MiKlunl U« ;; PACK KOURTEEi ALBANY STUDENT PRESS HAVE AN ENJOYABLE SUMMER A '*-! ^ . . i i m AV1NUI_ see you I f once again thank you in September WSUA 640 S n 0>«rbmiled meaton a ikewer! . WEDNESDAY, MAY 9. 1973 funded by sUidutit i.i WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1973 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE FIFTEEN to Ebbie, Gang Hunsberger Expected To Address Faculty Today by Gary Ricciardi I. Moyer Hunsberger is slated to speak before an assembly o f the College o f Arts and Sciences 2 : 0 0 this afternoon in LC 1. His scheduled appearance will be his first public o n e since this week's c o n f r o n t a t i o n s b e t w e e n students, faculty and administrators began over the question o f his possible suspension and related issues. The scheduled meeting o f the College o f Arts and Sciences is Vol. LX No. 2S o f the College o f Arts and Sciences at this afternoon's meeting. The Steering C o m m i t t e e o f the loosely organized students w h o have held sit-ins in President Benezet's office and public rallies througout the week, is encouraging students to attend today's meeting. ordinarily a routine affair, but the controversy surrounding Dean Hunsberger adds t o this assembly the tension w h i c h has characterized administrative and student relations this past w e e k . Last night Dean Hunsberger announced in a written statement that he has accepted the post o f Provost at the University o f Oklahoma's Norman Campus. It is expected that he will personally announce his resignation to the assembled faculty State University of New York at Albany The Committee is urging students, however, not to interrupt what is, in formal terms, a faculty assembly. According to Chris Masterson, a member o f the Steering C o m m i t t e e . "Several faculty members arc drawing up proposals concerning Dean Hunsberger's review and that o f the tenure and continuing appointment system. I hope that students will be there t o support these proposals. But I think the faculty should be allowed to dominate the meeting. This is their issue as well as the students'. I hope students do not try to take over the meeting, but help faculty at their request." Friday. May 11, 1973 HUNSBERGER OUT The controversial Dean announced last night he will take a position at the U. of Oklahoma tending a dinner in Massachusetts. There was no comment from the Benezet residence. I. Moyer Hunsberger lias resigned. Hunsberger's announcement confirmed Tire Arts & Sciences Dean, a controrumors of his imminent departure that versial figure in numerous tenure cases at had circulated around the univerisly he university this year said in a written throughout the day. statement last night that he will accept a The search committee that selected provost position at the University of Hunsberger to be Provost al the OklaOklahoma. homa campus had been looking foi avail"I have been offered and I have acable candidates since last fall. Corcoran cepted the position as Provost of the said. Hunsberger was one of three names University of Oklahoma al Norman," the sent along to the university president statement said in part. "within the last week." President Sharp, Corcoran added, seAs Provost, Hunsberger will be second lecled Hunsberger on the basis of the only to Oklahoma President Paul Sharp in committee's recommendations "as well as deciding internal academic affairs at the personal interviews." university. Jack Corcoran, Director of Communication al ihe Oklahoma camCorcoran revealed that Hunsberger had pus, said m a telephone interview travelled to the Oklahoma campus last yesterday that Hunsbergei will be in week to meet with the president and charge of "preparing the total academic discuss contract terms. program and budgel lui the university." Reading from a press release issued by Hunsberger, he added, will be "in charge ol ihe Board of Regents yesterday, Corcoran all faculty appointments, promotion and quoted the Oklahoma president assaying tenure issues." His salary will be $38,000 "I am delighted Dr. Hunsberger has a year. agieed to seive as Provost." The position was characterized by the president as In his statement last night, Hunsbergei being "one of the most significant at the said he made the move "with mixed university." emotions" because "I have truly enjoyed my work here and am leaving because this In the release, Hunsberger was quoted new appointment appeals so promising." as saying: "I look forward to my new "I have appreciated the opportunity to duties as provost." work with faculty, students and adminCorcoran also revealed dial the search istrators at Albany," Hunsberger's statecommittee and the university president at ment continued, "and particularly the Oklahoma bulb knew of Hunsberger's support extended to me from many sides, past problems at the University of Masseven when the circumstances may have achusetts and SUNV-Albany. But he indibeen difficult." cated that knowledge did not seriously University President l.ouis T . Benezet lessen Hunsberger's chances of employwas quick to offei congratulations to the ment al the university. departing dean. Benezet, in his public The search committee was described as statement, said the appointment "is a a "faculty committee." But asencond recongniton of his stature as an eduniversity spokesman said three students ucational leader." served on it and that all elements of the Hunsberger, Benezet added, made "a university community were included. significant contribution" to the university Hunsberger will assume his new duties through his deanship. on August 1st. It is expected that a Both Hunsberger and Benezet were unsearch committee here will name his available for additional comment. An replacement as Dean of the College of unidentified spokesman at Ihe HunsArts & Sciences sometime over the berger residence said the Dean was atsummer. Full text o f Dean 1. Moyer H unsberger's resignation statement appears on Page Four. by A l Senia MEANWHILE... Students continue their day-old sit-in and press for tenure reform Page 3 Council demands Benezet order an investigation of faculty members' charges Page 3 Benezet spurns student demands at Wednesday's public meeting PAGE SIXTEEN A L B A N Y STUDENT PRESS WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 , 1 9 7 3 Page 2