sports Two-Faced Cagers Third in Tourney

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sports
Two-Faced Cagers Third in Tourney
by Bruce
'KIITMW
Roy
Maggin
O n e day t o o late. Last
Satur-
their offense wasn't
i n the s e c o n d half, as they
defeated
Ocnesco
State,
Unfortunately, the Danes
display
o f basketball
came
Dan
ting
I'anaggio,
from
ECAC
c o u l d
ited
mistakes
the
last
and
from
lime
n o t h a n d le
closing
starling
Smith,
there.
seniors;
Harry
i nan A l b a n y
Dane
the second
hall
the
It
Danes
Albany
15 p o i n t s a f t e r t h e
G o l d e n I agles o u t s c o r e d
for the
uniform and
hard
l o believe
was I h e
same
played holh
that
balleluh
Brockport
(ieneseo. Against
and
Brockport.the
i n t o t h e c o n t e s t as D o e S a u e r s i n -
Danes
tried t o
serted
Rich
they shot 52 p e r cent a g a i n s t the
t h e Danes'
lineup
a n dh e helped
lake
game
Miller
charge
of
lackluster offense but his forced
shots
would
not drop,
Brockport'*
double
completely
stilled
captain,
lie slim
as
coverage
the
a terrible 5 for
17 f r o m
t h e H e l d a n d t h e rest o f
the
club
at
equally
effort
followed
poor
with
Brockport's
an
performance.
I h c g a p widened and
final
Saturday
(ieneseo.
night
lough
needed a second
able
h i lake
shols
ihal
day,
and
in Fri-
(ieneseo.
very
rebounds.
hands
a number
15 b i g
young
More
Danes
Danes
hall.
I e d by M i l l e r ,
outscored
held
iniiililcs.
(ieneseo
t h e Blue
l o i mine
As
Hyron
Golden
Danes,
a
ihe
very
game.
pro\ed
loo
l o i t h e Danes.
I he
I agles d o m i n a t e d
ol the second h a l l , aftei
much
takingu
Miller's
shuts
started
(ieneseo.
play.
Having
reluming
note.
I he
show
ninth
much
belter
Rich
sal
Kapner
on ihe
as i h e
iheu
best
hall
when
k,i|inei
the
" I Ihe
l i e pioved
catalyst
perlorAlbany,
i n IIIHI
Brockport
I n he
Danes
elhnl
showed
o l ihe
second
lie w a s inserted.
earned
a start
dniiblcdly
see a g r e a t d e a l o l a c -
Smith
and
pm-eil
mil
leltniitil'.!
I d Johnson
tion
nest
w ill i i n -
veal
I lie .w m i I. . m i M M | i i iseil evei \ o n e
hy p l a t i n g seventh H I a h e l d t w e l v e i l l
the
Sunyne
Swimming
championships
weekend
place
.ll
.mil diving
Potsdam
last
Hits was a n i . u k e i l i n i -
pi u v e m e n t
I
ill the even
Mas.
I Indies w
le.iinsinnsl
d i l l , H I . i l psvehe was i c l l c c l c d hv Ins
linals. which
HV ei
last
V' . u s
lenlll
I I K l e . n n s e i i i e d a l o l . i l " I 121
puslllle
nig
Dan
pel I m m e i . p
| nl ,ai et iuni ,g
in ihe
l l u e e e v e n t s a n d p a i l i e i pLai lul ,l ,l ,g, ll
dividual
e
, .v, e
. InI iKs
medics
iinpruvement
placing them
lee,ml
Cortland.
.mil
New
Pali/,
I'laiishuigli.
llinghanitun
Coach
Kelly was pleased w i t h ihe
i c o n s pelInini.iiiee
dial
nl Hiutkp.ut.
cuing ihe l a d s
D n l I ' school
broken
anil
iluu
leenids
in.,si
ul
s w i m n i c i s i l i i l i h e n best l i m e s
wele
a l s o m a d e special m e n t i o n n l assistant
Coach
li'lui
Ctulnn
as c u l l -
t i i h u t i n g i n d i e l e a r n s success
Heals
Ihe . w i m m e i s
John
.is i n d i v i d u a l s
i h e sellout
look
up e i i n s i d e i a l l n u
lee
si
piuvidiug
I w n seconds , „ h
evens
I )u,Hev
all hu.ke
lasl y e n s
l e i , n i l lit I h e 11)1) y a i d
Ihe i w n lallel
swimmers
eonsislelilly
I n i Hie e o i i b o l u l i o i i b
and
piev i o n s l e e n i d s
Ills
hv i n m e t h a n ten
iiiuseulai
lellow
llveis,
managed
v.nds
a
t o place
k e n W c h c i as w e l l .
. , --
,-)flfa
. . .
l i m e s hv i l l least .111
hick
Senleiiheili placed
ninth in
d a y ihe .'un a n e W l c v c n i h in llie loll v.iul
I hese I w o a d a y w n i k o u t s p u i d o l l
Ini
unproved
seemuls i n llus g i u e l l i n g h i l a p i a c e
I h e w i n k n u l s limilly paid n i l ,
l e n l l l u i d i e l u l l , a n d e i g h t h in l lie 2 0 0
ptcviuits
h i e a s l i o k e events
„,.,,,„,„.,, ,
leiim's peiloiniiinec
n l hicakuig
this
icenids
and
M \ I'IKd.
.Alhany
M
Mu
u ss o
l i nmi
swuninci
he
ec
ca
am
me
e
b
I n place
nl ii n
s it
i n It h ee
s h o r l dislancc lieeslyle evenis m a
s w u n m i n g s o l i d l y in i h e three i c l a y s
lunding
fSiji**'
-
J
$
•
.
"
, '• 'M*^**m. *S>6(\
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T h e team In action in their final h o m e meet o f ll
W h a t p r e c e d e d is the s t o r y o f a s m a l l
ol
administrator
11 usiees ( i u i d e l i n e s n n t h e use u l
die Mandaloiy
Activity
lee.
N Y l ' I R t i . S A I'rcsi-
(.erhci
a n dother
council
highest
educational
Chancellor
Ernest
Ich mn n
hand
State, i f i t comes,
some
long
ol SUNYA
awaited.
PIRG
students
I.. H o v e r . W h a t w i l l c o m e as s u r p r i s e
e o n l r i i n l i n g t h e Slate University o f
lor
New York,
many
s t u d e n t s is t h a t
proposal lor a two-dollar
PIRG's
voluntary
'Ihe Hartley
Meeting
.lent l . e i h e i said he I n v n r e d d i e p u r -
n i e i n h e i s discussed d i e recent S A S H
lee l i n e o n I b i s lull's t u i t i o n b i l l has
puses .nut g o i l l s o l I ' l l U i . h u l lie e x -
ciinlcicnec
yet l o h e i i i i l h o r i / e d . I h e p r o b a b i l i t y
University's Budgeting. Accounting,
piesseil Ills l e a l d i a l since S U N Y A
regarding
tin
Maintenance.
I'l K t . ' s i i l t u u i i t e g o a l is i n j o i n N Y I ' -
l n u n e i l a l s n discussed i m p e a c h m e n t
IKi,
d i n i n g ihe meeting: sonic members
,i in.iv
he u n p i n p e i I n i S A l o
hind litem.
were i m p e a c h e d
VVInle S I N \ A l ' l K d ' s C h a n p e r s,,n
I,,,
a n d I heir
SASU
e Slaighl explained
optimism
lobbying
ellorls.
h e h a l l is i n d e f i n i t e a l t h i s d a t e .
hut n o further uc-
l i n n was t a k e n .
l,,
insiiie
SUNYA
1*1 KCis,
in-
dependence.
Iheiidcisweieastolluvvs;-!
leleieilce
In N Y l ' I K d
Any
shall
he
elniiHiaied I n . i n i h e S l
NYA I'IKd
i i.nsiiiulioiibel.iieiiny
m o n i e s may
he e s p e n d e d I n u n t h i s b u d g e t . " a n d
.'
V m supplies
m eapilal
that
s,| N y \ I ' I K d has p i n chased may
i be n a i i s l e i i e d I n a n y N Y I ' I K d
\ss.ieiauon when iceugni-
is w i l l i d i a w n
hum
SINX.V
Petition
Drive,
thai
was
I nuneil
separate
hue.
lunding
a
n i g l o i a new s a u n a at I ) i p p i k i l l . ( l h a l
mimed down
mi
t iiuiieil
I'laiinnig.
l o i S A nlliec.
Advisory
and m l i e i
Hoard
liiiiinee
ihe
i n a l i e i s weie alsn
Ouad.
were s o o n
dispelled
I n i Management
unexpectedly
iranslerred
I ' I K d p r o p o s a l In Ihe C e n t r a l
SII\
s u b m i t t e d Ins
system.
hands
ball
were
Campaign
Ihe l h n i i s . i n d s . i l signed p e l i u . i n s w i l l
f o r those
students
par-
o c u l a r l y , i l was a l i m e n l pride l o r
their accomplishments.
Accepting
graciously
the
m a t e r i a l s , he d i r e c t l y expressed u p miasm
l o i PIRG's
gralulaled
llltil
I he d e c i s i o n I n c o n s e n t m i e j e c t
lesignali.iii d i n i n g ihe meeting
u l their
literature, a Central C o u n c i l Bill o f
and
\ d m i n i s t r a t i o n o l the S t a t e U i i i v e r -
I n a y I'eiev. il representative
Dulch
a
last m o n t h a s J o h n W . H a r t l e y . V i c e -
ding
\ihlcnc
presumed
I n the students'
samples
sheets,
hopes
President
puhev
I'IKd
l o i Ihe
met l o r t h e
lusl tune.
adininistiiiiiun.
Iheu g u . n l Huards. O t h e r bills regarcandid.lies
necessary
o f the PIRG
s u p p o r t , a n d a p i l e o l signed p e t i t i o n
\ny
In lepurl l o
favorable
l e w members
Organizing Committee
p i u m p t a p p r o v a l by t h i s u n i v e r s i t y ' s
lecenilyi. and lequirmembers
a
A s s o c i a t i o n vote o l
n p i n i o n n l I ' I K d w o u l d he
all
ennimiitee.
Ihursday.
a
signature
laciihy
\ llaine.ss K i c i n g ( l u b . p a y -
is c o n t r o l l e d
On
s.IIIHI
Us m e m b e r s l o he o n o n e s t a n d i n g
M A I
Hartley.
D e c e m b e r D . 1973, M r . H a r t l e y a n d
s u p p o r t , a n d a gcncrallv
( n u n e i l a l s o passed b i l l s r e q u i r i n g
hy J o h n
m a n y d i a l last s c m c s l e i ' s suceesslul
strung Student
i l i e e n , u p is n o t p a n o l N y l ' l 1<Cp
Computer, a n d
Security departments
It was t h o u g h t a n d a n t i c i p a t e d b y
dial
t iiuiieil iidded i w u n d e r s i o the bill
mi a l l i r m a t i v e answer on their
Hie supervision ol A l b a n y State
lutuie.
I h e student
con-
leaders o n
a t h i e v e i n c n l . a n d began m a k -
ing e u m p u i c i
picpaiiiii.ins
lor the
o p t i o n a l line. Piugicss w o u l d soon
loriliei.ming
State Pursuing Illegal Term Paper Go's
was H a r t l e y ' s i m -
plication
following
the midyear
inicises-
s i o n , i n late . l a u u a r y a n d a b o u t the
l i m e ut a n election o l students to a
by K e n N u g e n t
in i h e p i c p a i a t i o n .
icse.iieh i n
u i inng u l a disseilatum, thesis.term
A lesiirganee ul illegal term paper
advertisements o n many of Ihe u n isiiies ..ml colleges i n N e w Y o r k
prompted
II
Attorney
General
Louis
lellhov\ii/lucalliie.iiilcicnccol
a.lntuiisiianve
and
student
picss
I he i i i u l e i e n c e . w h i c h l u u k place
lliiiisday
dciielal's
in d i e A l l u i n e y
eonleience
inuni
I l,lite ( e l l l e l
.ui attempt
i n New
by I h e
a n d his s i , i l l
aeliun
in die
York,
Alluinev
l o gel suuie
h
the
in
in
l u l l i l l i n e i i l nl the i c q u i i e m e n t s Ini a
diploma,
ceiiilicaic
ui
cuiiisc ul study,
"_' N n p e i s o n shall sell i n n l l e i
I m sale
leim
.my
ihsscilalliui.
p a p e i . ess.iv
Ihesis.
repuilm
ulhei
niiillieili
hall
lepiesenleil
.mil
s I
I.lines
.mil
I n ( ulg.lle
Mbaiiv
III,ill
Mhunv
I isllci
say. i c p u i l
iiienl
in otliei
I n .IIIV
p e l sou
w n l l e i i assign
p e l s , , n e n i u l l e i l in a
Lisl
u l llie I f
a degree,
Umvcisllv
I. I a n d S. p i , H I , l e d I h a l d i e b u n k s
Kepiesen
m
encvtlupedlits
Ml
icgisleied
Minus
eupyiiglils
Ihe topic l u l
I I I .in n v e l - a l l u i
•Vssisiauec.
. ,i i u m p . i u v a d v e i U s i n g n i l c a u l
being
ilndei
, secutioii
I e l t k u w i i / h a d l o s . n a b o u t i h e en
live
I t i i c e i n e i i l i,I i h e law w h i c h
mnnibs
alsn
u l i h e lave
.is a
Slaies
piuleels
class
bundled
dullais
i n i.ul
11
and
upon appiuval
asked I m
lepiesenleil
e,un,in
luls
icpcale'd
help
illslllllllulls
n l d i e law
asking
lllal
lul
p i ..lilt-in
"I
siiidenls.
Iluliesl
hum
die
n i l l i l t es
l i e constantly
he was m i l
s
u l l i t i a l s a n d all
finally
given
help
in a seilullnn In a
that
was"I lauding
piulessuis
and
stall, who
said t h a t he c o u l d n o t release a n y m-
l i m n ( nlgaie in-
I m n i n t u m . M i . M i n d e l l s a i d I h a l he
l u t u l l t l a v e l l c die p i i i h l e m
lend
assistance
wilh
s i n e s " I l l s casual a p p i o a e h seemed
I n w a n i) u p llie g i n u p . a I e c h n g I h a l
nihil
sunn disappeaied
w h e n he l e l l the
a n d Ins a s s i s t a n t ,
anv
l e u n papvi ciimpaines
n u l l M i n d e l l ' s accusal inns, p u u u i n g
a i t nut-nt-state o i g a i u / a l i u n s winch
m i l ihe h i n t . i i i t i . i l i c i i g n i a i n l t
n v l u d u c k Ihe New Y o r k S t a t e law
thai I
Steven
local S U N Y A I ' I K d b o a r d . Hartley
called
a second
mosphere
now
meeting.
was less t h a n
as s n n i e l i u w
Ihe at-
auspicious
t h e Vice-
I'lesieleul
s u i n b e i a n d n u l q u i t e so
talkative
admitted
utmost
ciu-
h a i a s s i n g l y d i a l he c o u l d n u l put i b i s
lung-snu
h i decision
i n i c s l . He
eiiiinieiiiUel seveial icasnits Ini havi n g l u l e h n q . i i s l i l l u s m a i l e r l o the
si.He
I niveisiiv
headquarters
I S I NV ( e n l l a l l .
I n s t l y . i b e i e was the p o s s i b i l i t y o l
I e l l k u w i l / spoke a b o u t l i l t illegal
l l n s i c p o i l e i also v o i c e d d i s c o n t e n t
A l l nl ihcin
establishing
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I m ,i s i n e nl i l u bill'.' I he
m a g n i t u d e n l such p o t e n t i a l
c o u l d n u l basiilv
alnne
imagined
chaos
be c o n s e n t e d i n
Kin
when
asked
t h o u g h h n w i l l i c i t has a single g r o u p
even niusteied llie cunecttsusul most
ul a i i n i v e i s i l v ' s l u l l - l i l l l e a l l t l l d i l l g
siudent
population.
llaillev
ven
niodtslly
Vicc-I'restdent
conlcssed.
"not
iillen"
lie
ihen
icltncd
cdiicalioii.il lelcvanceol
( B a n k A m y n c w d & MiislofChu.ua honored)
and
VVnulil his d e c i s i o n o p e n
ulhei siiiileni gumps. w l i u i n n might
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m i l as a Imished
l l l l l s i e I n eelllealleil). u l Is 11 a c t u a l l y a
"piulil making" giutip tainoullagcd
ui p i i h h e
inleiesi
ihelonc'
I egally
spcakiuc.. il S I NV \ I ' l l U i is ever
i l e l i i i e d as " p i u l l t
ul
Mbauv's
n l a k l l l g . " Ihe use
H u i s a i ' s D l l i c e I n i the
s s s t e n i a t u e u l l e c i i o n u l lees w i l l he
d e e m e d q u i t e i l l e g a l u n d t i state law.
I ' I K d t l i t i i c h a l l e n g e d H u r t l e ) as
l u l l i e pel i n i s s i h i h u ul i h e New Y o r k
telephone
l enlei
(HIice
i n die
Campus
He p.ihlely i c l t l i t e l l o l l l l s a
" u i il i l v . " tthieli w a s i i c c o i d e d c e r u u n
legal H i i n u i n u i e s .
I n a l.uei p n v . i t e u u e i v i e w , M i .
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Please rush my copy o l the 1974 catoloij.
I've onclosud $ 1 . 0 0 - El C A S H
Ul C H E C K
iiiuvei
i v e i s i u . college, academy, school m
ineeiing
hv a
uidenng
sale i n any pel s u n e n i o l l e d in a u n -
within
bet.nut pel-
M t i u l e l T s accusal
Ihe gentleman
lluee
a n y o n e I n d o a n y t h i n g , b i l l w a s pisl
lulliiws
educational Institution
iinheel In
mis
I n ihe
I e l l k i i w u / . Ill a lllclldlv.
inaiiaei.
a n d passed hv t h e s t a l e l e g l s l a l i l l c u l l
l i t e slate u l New Y o i k a n y assistance
ul I elikowu/'s
I he law l u u k e l i t e I
iiiinieeh.iicl,
N n p o i s o n s h a l l sell u l n l l e i l o i
nieinhei
w i l h a p n s s i h l e l i n e l i p to
l e g i s l a i u i e m i lulv I. I ' " . '
u I .hsscilillliills.
piubleiu."
v. Inch is
si.He n , d i s b a n d
sale
l u ulhei
was
h u m indict
s e v e i a l l e i ill p.I pel e u i i i | ) . l i n e s in l l i e
iilllnwhil
lelelials
constant
1510
F U T U R E SHOCK
A c o l i q u e u l t o W e i ' s book
w h u h analy/us lilt* ptiysn <il p s y lu,ln<|,ral p h o n o m e n o n w h i c h
, „ , , i , ' , when IhH inilividual ,s sul.|i;i l.i.l l u rapid disruptive
, liani)., f o o t n o t e s , b i i i l i u i j i a p h v . l i i,a,|.is
2100
E X A M I N E S THE P R O G R E S S I V E R E E O R M M O V E
MENT
,n ihe U S I , n n . l l i e p o p u l i s m o l the 19th c e n t u r y
t l n i m t j l i Roosevelt's New Dual i i i l u u . i s in the Hl.'lU's Llistussi.s
Ihe views u l a historians I t o l s l a d t l l l . Hays. M n w r y . WitlbH.
t u u l n n l u s . b i b l i o l j i i i p h v . ' 2 panes.
punishable
I . I')72. I he seciiur, p c i l a m s l n
were
answer
I'.uls l i a n d 1 n l l e i i l l s t i i l e l i u n III
deme.lliul
.1 I ' S l a v i s k v
there
Each paper listed in the catalog
m a i e i i a l . ihe V s l '
was i n l l u i l u e e d b \
e n l l e g e s a n d l l l l i v c i suit's h a d
y.nk.
his w i l l i n g c l i n i c s
nilclcslcd
caused
New
i i i e n l because u l a i d I n a s t u d e n t i l l
was p.u i n u l a i l y
in wh.il
suld . l i e
Ihe I lilted
law l l
p i n i,,i i c s e a i c l i
I e,
diploma,
l e l l i l i t . i l e ,,i , , H I I S , ul s l u . l v
leacheis , n piulessuis
leseaiehed
in,,iilh
Ini
,1 i l i i l i u i i s l i u i l l n i d i , i n i e n l s in pai is
h i . lep.nlei
Having
in lullillineiil
was
weie
d i e New
u l l c i e d " n o assistance a t a l l w i t h the
Ihe g i u u p
die
inslilu-
I he law alsn p i u l e e l s l e s e a l i l l III-
ul Slinleiu
Ihal
the
ah,nil
.ispeel c n n c e i i u i i g I h e law
In a m
llie
while
u l i h e stale
NV
1 liailes
( iiinimunlv
y,nk
assciled
community
In
l a w I n a series u l p h o n e c a l l s l o
I l e i i e i a l ,,l a e i m n s l a k e n by t h e n u n -
.lllllliull
( ilv
c.uiiiiiuallv
S.ll.N.Y.A.
He
nelsilv
quucliiculs
piesenl.
Ins h i g h -
w h u sells u i u t t e r s l u i sale any such
i n i i i l l l e . l e u s i i . i l I n h o l d Ihe m e e t i n g
lucal
with
giuup
he c o n v e y e d
i h s s e l l a l i i n i . I h e s i s . l e i i n p a p e i . es
,,n
weie
llie
could
wuuld
assignment
siihllnssl.ill l u such eihicalinnal ill-
( nllcges
dial
1,iinied i h e assistant l o the A i l n i n e s
written
q u i t e s p a i c e . p n i b a h l y d u e i n lb.- last
iliinicliills
bureau,
sirintg appioaeh In ihe problem
s c h o o l u> o l b e l e d l i e . i l l n l l . i l
Kepieseiilalives h u m
Hand
agitated
institution
n u i l w i t h i n Hit' s t i l e i>l New V. o i k I m
Ihiiisdav
ullice. h o p i n g lor some i n h u m a t i o n
i n such
educational
eiinsiiineis
went t h r o u g h w h e n l c a l l e d M u n i c h ' s
head ul
assignment intended Ini submission
was
a l Ihe llleellllg
M u n i c h , ihe department
ihe
lepieseiilalives legaiihug ihe cnsis.
last
M i n d e l l . l o o k over the meeting.
p . i p e i . ess.iv. t c p n r l m n l h e r w i n ten
degice.
dieses a n d l e i 111 pa p e l s a n d leads as
* - ssBIW^
3-fi^lpSK,"Mk^l
iversiiy's
he for
he
the
'
£
S U N V A P I K C i lits w i t h i n t h e H o a r d
non
I he o i i g i n a l h i l l c a m e
VsseiiiblMii.Hl
r
. .
will
MS.i hmlgei
hi.
• .L/-!
H
,
ihe stale-wide
In
Ihe Council, allei
vestig.ili.ui ul Kcscaich
*ttfl|
^
a r r i v e d yesterday t o t h e State U n -
ihe gioup's pnssihle association w i t h
n l a hill in-
I he l a w . s e c t i o n 21 1 I I , , I i l i e S l a l c
the
Ihe
h a d hcen v o i c e d a h o u l
M r . Itoyer's i m m i n e n t announcemeat t o A l h a n y
passed
I title . i l l . MI law
( "!
| | k . nleelum.
Boyer.
His announcement isexpectcdsoon,
al A l b a n y Stale University,officially
limn
ihs
/ 9
Ken placed
- i ? > W ' •»<
eoinpcll-
SHOO l i g u i c
Suideiii
W h e n J a c k ps>
I he
lullnwed
W i l l i t h e a d d i l i u n o l these r i d e r s .
d c r h e r n o w leels t h a t t h e b u d g e t l o r
( niieein
An
o i g a i u / i i i u i n a n d shall i c v e i i hack i n
swimmers
i l l Ihe t u p twelve
e h . i i i i p i n i i s h i p i n e e l . He placed s i x t h
Albany
v hag o l hones," a
V It . h i . i k e
swiuiiueis
in d i e
school
, „ t h e 50 y a r d h e e s i y l e a n d e l e v e n t h
Ul t h e l l l l ) y a r d l i e e s l y l e . as w e l l as
as
a s k
called
elliuls
l.ie.islmkchul
I he e n t h u s i a s m w a s m a i n -
qualified
upon
Dudley,
he e o n -
I . o n e d I n i rlit- i h i e e d a y s n l I h e m e e t
m o i lung
SIN] s a i d l i e e s l v l e
evenis
iclnys
solutions | I I - I 2 | . weie guild e n o u g h
l o, q
.
n
qu
ua
a ll ii ll v
v ll o
o ii last
ve.os linals
liu(>i,c. i, e, ,l . Jack
S, ,e, .i d
,,,e
f.ivr,
, .e, ,nnheet i, g
,,,,ii
K
K ii c
ck
k
Ihuisdiiy
adinuahle
hlltlclllv
ed I h e e n t i r e meet m t h a t t h e u n i t s
m quality
n l l h
I6"H| Hnih
skinny
I h e h i e a s i i i , ke e v e n t s eh.n. m e n / -
I " "l
in the 4 W I i n d i v i d u a l m e d l e y .
hmlgei.
l e n g t h y i l e h a l e . passed I h e h i l l W i l l i a
Vlleiidailce
lell K o s e i i a n d Kussell l l u w c i also
e i g h t h in I h e 165(1. a n d l e n t i l in d i e
sixth; hul mine n l
shaved a n d leady to s u n n
V a n well in die I v m liccsivlt
with.i
H i s len-lhniisan.l
p l a c i n g .igaiusl u n p i n v e d
l l i e s w i i n n i e i s w e l e psyched a n d
ninth
caw
he s i o . n l m i I h e s m i t i n g blocks w i t h
l l I h e l i e e s l v l e iel.iv
tills Intel m i
n l Ihe t e a m ,
led t h e d i s t a n c e
I m ivpaallv
pattern
look
si.n h n u e i l l v e i
Ml) Kvn
uilliiml
pi, ,1,1CM
Ken had sub
March 19,197/1
n o w he m a d e b y C h a n c e l l o r
proposal o f
the Public Interest Research G r o u p
had
heeu c n n s u l e i e d d i n i n g I h e c o u r s e o l
ilivnliial nisiiliiliuns icgalding Ihe
s l . u i l i u l l i m e d l u p s ill Ihcsc e v c l l l s as
i c u b e d the c o n s o l a t i o n s in the t w o
Knhin
n n . i l q u a l i l y i n g n i n e hv
p r o m i s e d l l l . i l he w o u l d lead .1 s l i e a k
I hey o n l y
. I m p s in ilie distance events
seiawnv
e l e v e n t h in I lie s l l l l
hv I h e l a l g e I m l e
s n i p the
nilly
louilll.
eveinplllicd
a n d 2 U ( l \ a i d h i c a s l i u k c events, m i s -
qu.lhlied
placed
die
I I n t e a m ' s sell i m p , , , , c n i c n l was
hcsl
),,;7, .S/„/r
ssjs
I'llUi."
Iliiiiie.
luupei-ilive
t e n t h III I h e I ( O i l v . l i d l i e e s l v l e a m i
s e e m u l s m I m l h i h e 11.51) a n d 5011.
i d i o s y n t r u c i c s d u i m g d i e [ii neess u l
He even
upuii
hnl an ad-
nice
Kiihni.
v.il.l hiilicillv
e . i i n n i e h l ,,n M i t e h ' s a p p e a i a n c e as
a n d is a b l e l o e a l e i l o each s w i i n n i e i s
training and competition
he p l a c e d s e v e n t h
l i e plaee.l l i l l l l in d i e HID
t h e needed
Kelly
pniind
w i l h ,, n i n e n l ' I I S I . a l w „ see,nut
p o i n t s , neailv d o u b l i n g lasl y e a r s 6 5 ,
ahead
Mm h
n tt h
II n
i ne. i2011
|ll i n -
Ins lelased
I.a Ins i.iees.
ipioved peil
inilsl..tiding
l| |l M
ue
. ,e
. . iel.iv
..In
ii.iiiil.nne.l
\n,
( e i m . i l l m i i i e i l Wednesday m g l i l
Wuild
Albany swimmers 'Streak' to Seventh Place
drier
inn-
hv Daniel (iiiiiles
dciieial
Bull
ihe
imi /»c .//»/(• /,. i,,/e
was
hi
Ihe article
IvsrmWi i:?-u. iilmliuillalhw h>r
al<\eniee hullniine in inmititte\. t
snniliir lullpasseil llie Senate llns i\
u-imlh imi i" undents hetume ilte\
the
started
Keggie
and
in
game
deknse
/,///
the
(ieneseo
sunn.'
meeline.
the
Central
miiifil \iiinefails nliich ueiiiismier/«(•«'./. iintlilic iSt'is reprinthtf; rite
iiiliiriiiiiiinn.
llie headline in
lriilu\\ papei \intl llltil iimmll
xivmed \ ) I'IKd limits. ilie\ Jul
inn
I ntiutil Krimteil SI \ I I
I'litti, an \ I icmuni-i-il itrnirp mn
illliliuliJ nilli V ) I'lRU.ulnukel. ll
II,/. iil\" MI/,/ ///.// a lull uns ilelcalcil
HI the lexhliiline wlmli uutifil
i liaiixc ilie pi iinai i time frinii June
/., Septeinhii ilimitilrun happen. I
hinsell
o f f e n s e w a s m o \ i n g a u d t h e lea in
playing
ulnnii
i „ - | mance Committee proposing!!
bench
Ir o w a shoulder
peison
ihe middle
game,
goes,
lulling,
linked
since
in
.is i h e i c s t o l I h e b a l l e l u h a w o k e .
I hen
mi article
Wednesday's
tmiihil
tourney
successful
who didn't
Friday,
surprised
live
Miller
• HI / < , « . ' three
appealed
s e p a r a t i o n . K.ipnei was the must
3.-')
than
i i i . O U T seemed l o sp.uk
night's
the
Knights
s i i ti<' I h e I l a n e s
basketball.
|iisi
i n Ihe linals. 72-
on an upward
guards,
Hill Ihe D a n e s e x p l o d e d in the
second
some
Hi n e k p o i l
season
till
AS I' there
previous
heal
c o n t i n u e s to impress w i t h his line
l o l l i i w e d Hy i e m ' s l e a d a n d p l a y e d
talented
ihe
concluded
lime.
scoieless
I inlay
proved
Iridar's
i i . n l i i c e d hy ( , a i i i c d ' s I i n a i i c c C u m lor
Statu U n i v e r s i t y ol N e w Y o r k at A l b a n y
by O e n n i s K s p n s i t
In
on l o become
c h a m p i o n s as they
hall
with 22
n e a l I I ) o l 171 r o u t i n e f i e l d .
In
Dial
against
and
line
con-
p o i n t lead i n t o t h e l o c k e r r o o m a l
doubled his
the
went
some
17 p o i n t s i n
s h o u t i n g p e r c e n t a g e , as he s h o t a
importantly,
knowing
(>7.
changing
o l times
lake
in
on
snaring
Millci
I he first hall
d u l l w i t h t h e lead
decided
can
I limn College
up lor a n d Sauers was concerned
not
(ieneseo was able lo take a three
linished
the hoards,
Brockport
Uiurtiev
as t o w h e t h e r h i s t e a m w o u l d he
points. He was equally l o u g h u n dei
Nihility
l o r the ballplayers t o gel
motivated.
have p u t
into the finals b i n iinlor-
solation
are
against
paper.
played
games
would
tunatelv. gamesare
lo Union the
Consolation
that
half
second
as h e s c o r e d
hall
was
Byron's
i n against
led A l b a n y ' s
surge
the
charge.
weren't going
wenl
Miller
Miller
Alhany
while
A shooting pei-
like
Brockport
before, i n the consolation
pletely different story. W h e n the
Mr.
Blue Knights.
lorinance
Albanyjust
t h eDanes
.14 p e r c e n t ,
break
on
losers
shot
Danes
minutes.
game.
Danes' iiflense
I he
closed lo w i t h i n eight p o i n t s but
Hill S a t u r d a y night was u c o m -
hall s p a r k p l u g ,
press.
into t h e
e n -w e n t t h r o u g h t h e m o t i o n s i n t h e
T h e C a g e r s in a c t i o n at t h e U p s t a t e E C A C T o u r n a m e n t last S a t u r d a y
ball
Kapner
hack
ovation.
the
Miller. In
got
last
20-7.
ol Hyron
almost
ex-
p e r f o r m a n c e c a n b e a l t r i b u l e d to
play
Albany
that
Albany
Miller,
fans, w h o did attend,
was
No. U
SA Funds SUNYA PIRG, But Fate In Question
Seeks Nod From Boyer
Council Approves PIRG Budget
the
Johnson
the game
V .1. LXI
I h e still unresolved
moments
gave t h e m a standing
offense.
In
the
three
court.
press n o r t h e i r
l e l l b e h i n d by
Hyde
In
handle
the
Alhany made too many
break
luui'namcnt.
Albany's
w h o was hit-
a l l over
ihes
Friday's
t.eneseo.
in
Borckport's
lost to B r o c k p o r t , 81-64 i n
and
guards had all they could
a nd
I his Dr. .lekyl and M r .
afunsl
apart
f o r m a n c e the night before, when
Upstate
performance
fell
o n t h e heels o f t h e i r h o r r i b l e per-
tile o p e n i n g r o u n d o f the
in their horrible
change.
just
line
a b o v e is A l b a n y
for a
t e a m played near perfect basket-
94-73.
Pictured
hitting
G e n e s c o c o m p l e t e l y f e l l a p a r t , as
ball
Union.
were
lead at h a l f l i r n e . I n
the second half the D a n e offense
easily
a g a i n s t B r o c k p o r t . P i c t u r e d b e l o w is B y r o n I V l i l l e r i n h i s s u p e r
single point
day, the A l h a n y State basketball
TUESDAY
llaillev
was c a n d i d
in mentioning
Ihe t h u d a n d most salient t n c t o i i n
O MONEY
ORDER
assessing
ihe I'IKd
question.
K c a l i s i i c n l l y . N V P I K d is a p o l i t i c a l
NAME
-
bombshell
bryonic
CITY
under
Ihe
New
York
S l a t e C a p i l o l . N u t o n l y has I h e e m -
ADDRESS
STATE
NM'IKli
prepared
itiiiiinueil
nn pane
to
five
Storaska Discusses Rape
8VNY College At NmPdttzPlm
International Summer Programs
Amplications for overseas study
G E R M A N Y : Karlsruhe; J u n e 2 5 -
teaching o r liberal arts; Sept. 15-
u n d e r p r o g r a m s of the S t a t e University College at New P a l t i a r e now b e ing accepted for b o t h t h e summer
Aug. 25; $800. Dr. Peter 0. 0 .
Brown, D e p a r t m e n t of German,
Kaculty l o w e r 518, phone 257-4257
J u n e 15; S1.685. Dr. I'icrrc Francois,
Oil ice ol International Programs.
I I A L Y : University of Urbino;
a n d t h e fall, J e a n e t t e C o n n o r s , a d ministrative director of international
o r 257-2625.
I I A L Y : Urbino; J u n e 28-Aug. 24;
Sept. 20-.lune 14; $1,800. D r . G i a n n i
A/vi. Departninel of Italian, phone
p r o g r a m s , a n n o u n c e d today.
$680. Dr. Gianni Azzi, Department
of Italian, p h o n e 257-2647,
257-2647.
SPAIN:
T h e deadlines for applications are
May
S P A I N : Ovicdo and Seville; June
I for s u m m e r p r o g r a m s and
27-Aug.
26;
$795.
May 15 for most 1974-75 p r o g r a m s ,
Borau. Kaculty
Mrs.
257-2643.
C o n n o r s said. S o m e students
have already been accepted for next
Prof.
Sept.
Pablo
l-.lune
Seville
l o w e r 506, phone
University
ol'
I; $1,900.
Program.
Seville;
Director.
Office of
Inter-
national Programs.
S I N G A P O R E : Nanyang Univer-
urged
language study at New Paltz. for a
prospective students to apply as car-
m a x i m u m of nine credits, J u n e 10-
sity. lor study ol Mandarin Chinese.
M
t hl ioouugg hn
li im
n gguui isst iucoa l, l.y,
qualifiedu n d e n t s may
courses from
students
may choose
choose ci
ly as possible to avoid b e i n g e x c l u d -
July 19, $250; s e m i n a r s a t Leningrad
the regular curriculum
ed because of enrollment limits.
and Sochi plus visits to oilier places
in lite Soviet Union lor six credits.
fall,
she
added,
and
she
I he p r o g r a m s are open to all'
SOVIIil
UNION:
Intensive
July 22-Scpi. 4. $1,200.
and
enrolled
should
make
arrangements
Urhanski.
credits. July 1974-May 1975: $1.9(10
S t a l e University ol New York are
particularly invited) to apply. In
most cases, credits earned can he
Languages (257-2638).
SCANDINAVIA:
Comparative
stud;,
ol
education
system
transferred to other institutions.
Norway.
I he costs listed ior each program
include
transportation,
room.
b o a r d , and a p p r o p r i a t e field trips o r
cultural activities. Ihcy do not in-
Division
Sweden
and
ol
Foreig,'
Denmark;
Dr. George Simpson.
Main
Building 11)11:. p h o n e 257-2581 o
257-2583.
clude the per-crcdil tuition charge at
S U C Now Paltz., which varies with
the luael ol the.swiiimi
lower divi-
sion, upper d i v i s i o n ' o r graduate
a n d d i l l c r v l o r residents and nonresidents HI'jNew York Stale.
Summer Programs
F R A N C E S University ol Besancon: J u n e
Pierre
28-AUg. 25; $770.
Francois,
Ollice. ol
national Education.
Dr.
Full Year P r o g r a m s
F R A N C E : University ol P a n s
( S o r h o n n e ) : lor undergraduates majoring in philosophy or allied subjects; Sept. 15. 1974-June 15. 1975;
—2 . I 7 5 -(estimated).
S
I'rol.
Pric
Charlson.
Deparimenl
ol
Philosophy. Faculty lower 10(10.
Phone,257-2696.
FRANCE:
Inter-
con:
lor
University ol Itcsan-
students
majoring
I he United States was getting about 10 lo 14 per cent ol its oil Iron, \ r a h
producers helore the boycott was imposed.
,|vw,„
h
s n
;llu|
Oil e x p e r t s said il would take
eight weeks lor Arab oil lo reach the United States
comment pending thai notification,
acceptance
ol
s p e a k i n g a I t o the ministers- meeting. Yamani said the United State, mil
^.i enough nil lor its requirements.
'
s ainani made il clear that Ihe e m b a r g o against Holland would KIH,
in
.
lnKv
(estimated). C o s p o n s o r e d h y SUC'al
Aug. 13-28; S925 plus meals m Denmark.
lor
prior
separately or together. Dr. Henry
Paltz.
countries would review their decision al a J u n e I meeting in Cairo.
Horn their home campus
S t u d e n l s al other campuses of the
New
ol luesday.
Hut a spokesman lor nine key Arab states said the oil ministers o l i l K \ r , , h
In Washington. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said (lie White
Participants must lake a leave ol
absence
I he two
parts ol the p r o g r a m can he taken
SUC
^ j J y j J ^ v ^ u t l r i a A P - The Arabs decided on M o n d a y to lift (he oil errihuruu IhcyJ imposed on the United Slates live m o n t h s ago as a poliii r a |
' " »
'
..
_... :_ ,i... mi.i.n., r:....i
weapon to win favorable peace terms in the Middle East.
Saudi Oil Minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani said the ban would he raised as
House had not heen loimalh notified ol the ministers' action and declined
students whether or not they are
al
by Mike Sena a n d Andrea Herzberg
He ,aid the posilionol Holland and Denmark remained "IHIIIKII.I!,
\ | | | ) l ) l I I \ S I (API Syiia and Israel excliangcd ariillen hi, i..i i.,.
New 1'alt/and SUNY at Albany. Dr.
, C UMIIII straight day on the te-.se Golan Heights Irnnt Mimdav
C I ; m r c n e e H u a n g . Deparimenl ol
Ssian Studies. S U C New I'all/. or
Dr. Charles W. C o l m a n . Ollice ol
, , s k . , | , | , K V h u m s and each side claimed the olhei Mailed the I
Neiihei reunited any casualties
,„ \ „.„„;,. Hie \ i a h nil producers decided lo lili Hie oil einh.,.
International Programs. Stale I Innersity ol New York. Albany. N.Y.
I:
,h,
:•
, „ned Slates. Saudi \i.ihia Oil Minister Mimed Aiki N .i.n.n,
,hc k|ll „
„po,ed live months ago because ol Nmeinan . , . i v
[lw
12:22. pli.mv (518)457-8678.
,„, , d
I I KOI'I : Internship program
lor educational supervision and ad-
Meanwhile, the I 111 led Stales and Britain a n n o u n c e d thei wouiu
, ^ p | d c ; | | ,| K . s „ e / ( anal lo make 11 available lo unci 1 oiial -I
.„
| I K . | | l M | m l L . V1|RX . „ n i U | t | o s e d 111 Ihe 1967 si.\-iln> u.ti.
mmislration 111 selected educational
centers
in
Sweden,
semester.
I ngland.
France
and
lor minimum ol one
Student may earn six
" ' " l i t " u , w a i d Ihe 611-hour Cerulicale nl Advanced Study. Student
pays own expenses. Prof. George C.
Simpson 01 I'rol. Charles Slokes.
Mam Building, phone 257-2581 or
hl
, , ) c l l > h l - i Middle I asl war.
i|,e 1 imed Stales. Ihe Soviet Union. B r i i a m a n d I ranecliad sold"
„ | amis 10 ihe Aiahs in Ihe p a , | year,
lie ,aid 9(1 pel ceul ol (he A r a b a r m a m e n t came Irum ilic
h
Wict I
a,ise-lue
l-l m o n i h , ago tapered oil M o n d a y , hut Ihe S a i g lepotled Us Inieeswere icady lot Iresh attacks In a S o n h Vietnam. ..
mem nl 2.111)1) men.
I he command said 148 North Vietnamese and 72 S o u t h \ icitiatncv, u
"killed and III government 1 roups wounded in a hall - d o / e n battles inn m l h ol the p i n u n e t n l capital ol Koniiiiu over the weekend
field l e p o i i , said anolhei 275 government r a n g e r , w o e missing n
mi I-ma a battalion ili.it was oven tin S a t u r d a y , and thai a second lane. 1 !•••
lahon ,ulleied Ja men killed and 23 wounded.
I lie \ i e i Cong delegation lo ihe two-party Joint M i l i u m ( oni mission
Saigon said Colliuumist-lcd loice, llllhcted heavy losses on two ol Hut
Si null Vietnamese laugei baiiahons.
W N S I I I N G I O N | A P ) - Ihe ( m l \ e l o n a l l l l c s Board nlled loj.i
many nl [he an l a i e , charged by the nation's .inline, a i e uniu.i
Hi
li in deied I lie earners In laise ilien coach lares on shoi'l-lei in i n p - .ual !
ilceieiise ihe puce ol long-distance |inirneys
Peyton Bowler
Harry Accurso
Joel Aroeste
I lie bo.ud also said Ihe airlines miisi inciease then l n s u l a „ i.u.
iwo ve.u pet mil heguuung III luly
t i l l ! V O U l M ' l Dcclainig anew he is limine
I \ \ alel ;'.i'
in-.' I ' i . , u k ill N i sun vowed I i id.i\ lit would mil i c i g n h c c . n i , . 'I A,
a pailv lo ilk dcsllllUion nl the piesldcncy nl [lie I lllled Si.ill
\ n.i
.ills I
i.kasl nieellllg wilh business c s c i i l l n . ' s Hi n |"
11 ii IIIII I'll NI son's
si d
all. pledges lo d a l e nol lo quil i! •' ''
dini' in I I q u e s t i o n , d i n i n g ihe I
said M i l , w o u l d .low d o w n I
I n d i . I. i l ' . I m i
anil .1','.,
lull
i ape anil
i . i l i o n t o thesi
Si \ \
id
\ W allies lav night lie lalko| about 500. n St
loi almost tl
live Attorney General then discussed ihe broad aspects of the law.
citing lhat (he illegal companies
could
he prosecuted for
misdemeanor ol lenses by the law and
lederal ol lenses lor mail fraud.
Anyone who is involved wilh the illegal advertisement or sale of the
I ci m papers can be indicted on
charges ol conspiracy. I his could
also include the various student
press oi gam /at ions who have ad vet
Used lor ihe companies, but the Atloiney
General assured the g r o u p
al tin stale was out lo indict ihe
mpai ics. not live studenls
I le expressed his hope that the administrations ol the schools would
lake il mlo then own hands to mIuim ihe s t u d e n l s o | their individual
plagertsm policies and lhat this
would cut h ihe market on purchased
icini papers.
A great many studenls may not
lalksliow interviews.
that he is einoiioiially disturbed. He
'noted lhal some ol ihe best weapons
. mutilated, o
are humility, understand ing, and
alleclioii. "You will have lo comSlrunglt- is Aphrodisiac
municate wilh him in a high-anxiety
s a n a t i o n . " he noted Hut Sioraska
He said lhal il you stiuggl
ipisl il will act
Willi
in added that il thai doesn't work, you
aphrodisiac and will I;
him only can always scream and snuggle later
Storaska
demonstrated
iwo
about S seconds to hcci
eiecl lint
M a woman willingly
.ponds it techniques lhal a woman can use to
would lake him J-ji
miles to deleiid her sell against an assailant.
m l ne.she
become excited. In the
can thiiik ol something t
i He
"Smash I hem"
asserted lhal when a woniai
lelenslong
\ man control Us you and is ehokdine hei lite, "anvllung goHivan s i i uggle
ay gel slahb-
cli
it
med
When a woman is laced wilh a
oteniial lapisl the Insi thing she
ion kl do is coiiiinunii'aie with It ml,
loiuska said. She must lenienibei
piesei ves.
Ihe other technique can he used
when a man grabs you liom behind.
(icullv reach back and "cup his
lesiicles" in your hand. I hen "smash
them." S t o r a s k a noled thai a man
• can die l i o m either ol these techniques. He added lhal il yon are gentle
you can always nol go through with
these techniques. I his way you won't
he any worse oil.
The l.KiHi on Sunya
mg vou Reach i ip and gently place
voin hands on Ins I.u.
eves out."'he said Slo
as easy to lake mil tl
line vom
thumb
Karate Is best
I1'
all,,I
\
dclimni'
I
I,u iiil.nl had I
ises'velsioilsdlllelglealk
"
appiou-il I
, I
and then
nil,
|1 social mill,
•ipi't
1. II. ••..
a.l.a
In a phone call to Mr. Barton
I.owe. ol Research Assistance, he
was asked aboul live legality of ihe
company. Mr. I.owe inlormed me
that there was a similar law regarpapei companies in
ding t
lhal il did cause many of
C'ahlot
the term paper companies in the
state to [old. hut il did not alfect
Research Assistance because ihcy
sell research, nol papers. Mr Lowe
expressed his company's position
aganbt the accusation that they sold
lei in papers when lie said."It is a b solutely impossible to copy our
mat ci i.il vei baiuin. loi it is in
icseaieh h u m We sell research, not
papers " I owe also told me that no
steps had been taken against the firm
by New "i oi k oi any other stales. He
pointed out lhal wilh lheir catalogue
atul all iheil papers was enclosed a
mandatory
statement
loi
ihe
,ei lo sign thai assured the
puiclia
iv that he would not use their
compa
otliici as a lei m papei
I nclosed with the, C onvpauy's
lalogue is a statement explaining
nnpaiiy is also engaged in
l h a t Ihe
ss ol ui ignial icseaieh.
Ihe hip
e is done lor the lee ol six
I his sCl
llus distinction
dollar
page
lump, nil
ihe
llsell
,1 a
lalel ll.'lll-
, ,|-
.Ml
II.I
.hhl.
I lei so l e l . l l n e l . si
posill
TUESDAY, MAh( '111
.,t
makes
'sea i eh
us u l i g i n a l
ul
plans i l n l i u
the
mill"
il
tn.i,U I n
l irseareh
I n e i is
C u i l i p .m i
ol-
h.ial
esiate1 eI t k u u i i / , » l i en s h o w n l l i
inenl . Mild l h a l il "was pi o b a b l )
a n u l l ..'I a l l c m p l l it a v e r t the li 111 nisi
I.
I he inn had keen deliheialuiji Im a lolal ol less llnu s i , Imu
i c p o i i e i l l o i s Disincl C o n n ludgi lu/ei B V*yainli.il u wa, .la
lln
Research
Assistance. Inc. is
allegedly one ol the largest research
firms in the entire country. I he company has over 4,500 research papers
listed m ils catalogue, wilh topics
varying Itoni biology lo lilm. I sent
away lor the catalogue, and observed lhat all ol live papers had lootnotes and bibliographies.
haip
'• I l h ) , ' ,1 1
n . i u . l lli.il '
,11
,
Ik a,, o. 1 > M . said Monday il was I
i divided in il. deldn i.i
sewn Miles loi a guillv icidlet and live lol aeqinllal
i n d u e d I I I . in l o i c c -
I avvyerslrom University Council.
along with New York S l a t e lawyers
and l.elikowii/ himscll have determined lhat Research Assistance, Inc.
is an illegal lirm according to state
law and the Supreme Court's decision live Attorney General would
noi reveal il the slate was alter the
111 in presently.
•li.llll.ll
II,
Hill.,.,
Ui.
« n l i i l ic i e s . a i e h p a p e i h u n t
N i ' i c i l l i e l e ,s. l l u slate law d oes n o l
give p i e l e n Jnec l i i a c o m p a n y W i l i n g
ai,
hsi ol .esual.KiiMiicscincied In I In hillihal i s . , , , spin n il i
me and llllcllllg among Ihe lawniakeis
Nl W l O B K I API I he inn in ihe iiilluciice peddling in.il ol I-'
Ihe mdge said he was i elm lain lo excuse the
Several people were hired, and
pamphlets were pui up all over c a m pus. I hese advertisements can still
he lound on some classroom walls.
:ie\i lo ihe usual magazine s u b s e n p lon pamphlets. Persons involved in
li distribution ol these illegaladveriscincuts can be brought up o n
.'barges ol conspiracy with their
.•niploying lirm.
papei
,..,,M
|,
,-d 1119
Storaska started leciuiing i ; years
.Lfin and has both a book and a I V
special on i ape coming out soon
Ihe A.S.I', carried the advertisement lor two weeks in October and
then dropped it, bul Research
Assistance did not give up on the
Albany campus.
h e l v u ', il lis pie p
would he dmppeil
Bill ih. W i n h l s im.isuic. u l i u l i w
lie added lhal when a woman is
dealing wilh violence she should n u n
il inlu s e v She can deal w ilh se.\ hul
noi wilh violence, he added
1'rcscnlly. Butlalo Slate's publication is carrying the ad and n u m e r o u s
other papers, including the A . S . P . .
carried it lor a lew weeks, and then
alter some investigation, deemed it
illegal and dropped it from their
publication.
III.II
h e i w e e n Ihe l w , , can he l e a c h e d
II. eillli ill si.HI,laid b a n n i n g . m i l iiiaMial I ha I is "lillcili
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
In si\ months, his new book How
in \m \() h> a Uitpisi
aiulSurvive,
will he out as he begins a nationwide
publicity campaign, I hiswill include
and
Ins own television speei
I he A t t o r n e y General also stated
that his investigators had done some
undercover work, posing as j o b
applicants hoping to gel into one of
the illegal firms, His office has also
bought some ol (he catalogues and
p a p e r s , which c a m e with
full
hibhographics and were totally footnoted. Ihe presence of footnotes
showed thai the p a p e r s were not in
research l o r m . bul were in the form
ol a completed term paper, ready to
be turned in foe a grade.
i.'.d piompi n solliliuli ol impel. Inn. nl
v ine.isiii, Willi
and
PAGE TWO
l i e I n l o l l n w Ihe I i n H u t u
ed
Ik
Is w.n.Id
•'palcinlN o l l e n s o e " scs ,,
taken a,.i whole lacks sei mils In, i . m . lllslli p
...IMI
dealer.
Storaska did not wish to gel
gory. He was hi la n o u s . I he h u m o r
served to evpell the fright s u r r o u n ding ihe subject, li made hIN lecture
memorahle so il can be ol use. "I
want l o l e c t u i e to 5.000 nol 300. In a
lew hours I can guaianlee everyone
in the dorm will have heard parts ol
my lecture."
Ihe animation and
vivacily with which he spoke grubbed the audience and held them
through whal could have been a
long two hours.
I his was exposed by a U.S. Supreme
Court
ruling, which said
that
research paper companies are thinly
veiled term paper companies.
\ l It \ M ,N S. I \ P | I he Vsseinlil', .ippioved a lull M.ui.l.i
ilieugllien.il.' . i n k ' , laws against |
mapln
•' '
Volkswagen
stake, even alter submission, these
methods will save il. I he rapist will
h a d il quite natural for h a n d s to be
pill gently on his checks at which
point an opportunity will appear to
shilt ihe fingers and put out his eyes.
lie will nol object lo kindling o i his
g e n u a Is il lie is convinced ihcviclum
wants to. A kick in the genital area is
loo nsky.
II you gently lake one
testicle in youi hand and squash it. it
is gui aaniecd to hc one hundred pcrceni ctlective.
community. One firm. Research
Assistance. Inc., has been openly
solicited on campus, a s well as on the
majority
oi
c a m p u s e s in the
S.ll.N.Y. system. Oilers for a d v e r tisement have been received by a
great many ol the student newspaper
organizations on the campuses.
D e c l a i e d h i w m i l d i n n g i , m l H o u s e ulipeae l l i n . ' i i l
But thi lw
Saturday Service
Six Mechanics-Less waiting
Financing
Vico Insurance- Good rates
Leasing
Courtesy Bus
Largest parts dept. in the area
I v ci v w o m e n
h a s dillerent
capabilities.
Many would find il
meulailv impossible to serious!) inline l. lie it aitackcr. (I.spcciallv when
^ percent ol the time hc isa dale or
someone ihcy know.)
" R a p e is
probably one ol the 10 worst things
vou could evci want to happen to
vou. but il is not the worst." said
Sloiask.i. Rape put m perspective
and simply dclmcd is "'havingsexual
It is physically easy to slop rape.
II. at any time life is definitely al
paper companies by asserting that
they are for research purposes only.
in lli, Mid.I
s pe.ue .
l i e . l i s , " t o p,IW t h l o U g l K . o l l l l d e l l l l . i l W i l l i . H u l l s . Ill,
'II us.
COLON Hi MOTORS Inc. provides other services which make il
advantageous lor you to own one ol our cars.
one ,es,i.ni 0'
Storaska realizes that "one ol the
hardest things lo d o is to humiliate
vuuisell." But il il will save your life
who cares? If the woman lowers
heisell. ibe rapist may nol feci the
need lo. She should give reasons for
her unwillingness that point out
dehciencies in herself, l o b u v time.
leign a desire lo submit. I his will
liiuist his ego. put him oil his guard,
and reduce his animosity, I he rapist
could change Ins ni'nd. If hc doesn't
what has she lost? She has given
herscll the time and the opportunity
in n v something else I hat will work.
I HI instance, "doing something
wieid that will iurn him oil." I Ins
t.ikes imagination and may consist
oi anvllung liimi vomiting lo eating
gi.iss I h e n a t i i i e o l t h e a t t a c k c i will
d e l e i mi ne
vv h a t
vv ill
work,
so rivetones injuring htm phvsicallv is
ihe onlv auswe.
intercourse when you d o not wish to
be having sexual intercourse."
Storaska does not minimize the
crime. However, s o c i e t y e m p h a s i / e s
the horror ol t a p e and in effect encourages struggle at all costs, f o r
those who cannot use his incapacitating methods to prevent their rape
submission is better than death or
mutilation.
' i l l : , n : ' " :h'
1 a l l l l o l i e d S l a b , nil I i i a l l a e l l i u l i d l l
We would like to help ease some of these burdens in order to lighten
the problem by providing you with better gas mileage and more car
lor your money; which is inspiring.
iman in n MICH
One
• t a r . Iln:> want I
ape la
pukiiiial rupiM i
ssaultn g her.
i\ei the head." She is
"healing IKI U\I'I
use consciousness,
She
beginning Ui IUM.'
t
las 11led
ol ihe t u c k s lhal she
.mid
i
em he i l i m n
lied
>l ul a s k a '
leeluie.
1 inally
in
he giabs his hand and
s|). I.ill.
hrcasl, He thinks that
loi mteicDUise and
e oil his clothes. She,
ul ol live cai
i.iiivkD,
the
sell1 \\ii men lincei
• k m lee I III, 11 il I ill i.|.e.in leailei s and a w.n mug 1 llal "I lie .1.1 ••! m
• livel i
e' HI Ihe \llaulic allium, e
In i. |
ing and outbursts ol" " h o w d a r e you,
you filthy creep!" will not exactly
hide repulsion. You will confirm his
belief that you think you are above
him. Anybody with a bruised ego is
hurt and angry. The emotionally
disturbed rapist having less control
than the average person will put his
leehngs into action. What can be
done'.' Ihe opposite ol repulsion is
acceptance.
realize how Ihe conference and the
law effects the S U N Y A c a m p u s a n (J
Fred Storaska Discusses Rape-Another View
III. MI i k i , . i ii in.u need today ale e l l e c l n c in I luce mom lis nut - a IT
in hues
h\
During this critical period ol waiting in long gas lines, accomplishing the tasks to get through the day is not very inspiring.
We have the largest selection ol small and medium si/e,economical
cars in the area.
Area's oldest and largest authorized
• '
llu i tilings c a i l l e a , ihe boa id concluded its b i o a d c l I.u e pi.... .tnil, to ie.ii his I, .ix
Colonie Motors, Inc. Used-Car Dept.
Hotline, 374-2147
mipoi taut lu see the ata person with all Ihe
id ego piobletns people
lie wants lo commit rape
hecause he perceives his victim as
k e l m g Mip-e.noi lo him. lie wants,
Sioraska said, to "drag >ou oil ihe
pedestal he has placed vou o n . and
grade vou." Struggling, scream
It is
ickei
and lisled Moscow's major a r m s clienls a s Lgypi. S M l a . and II.HI
llesaid Washuiglnu had sold a n u s 1.1 J o r d a n and Saudi \1ah1a Hie II
, , „ , M l pphed Saudi \1.1h1a. .Ionian and Iraq and f i a n c e w a s .
el
s \ l ( , ( IN | \ P ) - Ihe bloodiest lighting in ihe eeuiial highland, MM,
WE WOULD LIKE TO GET TO KNOW YOU
"A rapist is a h u m a n being." li the
victim is aware ol this a n d t i e a t s h i m
as a person and nol a Icarsome ogre
she can prevent violence. Ihe lirsi
rule is nol lo antagonize t h e a t l a c k c r .
Reloic doing anything ask. " W h a t
happens,! ,, ,\ocsn-{
work. wjH u do
mysell a i u harm? Am I free to try
something else'.'" Screaming, struggling and the use nl ;i makeshift
weapon arc out, Once the\ have
been used, and in most eases they
will I.ul ihe rapist has been antagonized lo the point where he v\MI
most icadih wish to h a r m you. Ihe
onl\ cltcctive weapons every women
will have available ;il ihe lime ol an
attack aie hei imagination and her
\ v a , KKIC-II Delense Mimsiei Moshe Dayan odd p.iili.n,,. „,
M
U,„||,
257-2195
Colonic Motors, Inc.
2242 Central Avenue
Schenectady, Sew York
(5 IS) 372-6441
|lu|u
" T o Be or Not T o Be R a p e d " was
the lecture's title. Fred Storaska
suprised his predominantly female
audience wilh his light treatment ol
this subject, but hc made his points.
Storaska wants to save lives and he
calls lor a change in attitudes. He
thinks it is time to halt "scare tactics'*
and "put rape in perspective" so that
women can see that rape situations
arc not hopeless but can be dealt
with cllceli\ely. The lecture was not
concerned with laws and prosecution, ".lust getting you home is all 1
care a b o u t . " livery method must
work 100 percent ol the time to be included in his p r o g r a m .
Illegal Term Papers
nmiiniwtiJhim
pane one
and other state laws regarding term
dealing
Kith
all tin p o h c i
llu y'II tell
i " H u l U >ld
t Wol k
resell l e h
aboul
idded Sioraska neatly
plaid spoitcoai and
tie. noted lhat when a
black tell In
diesscd
i c r m pa pel IS u n l u w l u l .
in
I ULSDAY MARCH \9 l l ^4
m a t e r i a 1 l o i $2.75 a page.
l o i II,i p a n 1 n l ( h: il a w it says that a n )
ussibturicc i n t h e p r e p a r a t i n n n l a
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE THREE
University Police Encourage Bicycle Security
by Daniel Gaines
.lames R. Williams, the Director
of Security, noted in a recent
m e m o r a n d u m that the University
I'olice has been preparing lor the
coming bicycle season.
he registered with t h e University
I'olice Department; there is no
charge and it can be d o n e Monday
through l-riday front eight to four
and also Irom live to eleven evenings
Irom Tuesday t o Saturday.
The Department will test several
locking devices over the next Tew
weeks and will make available its
results as to the security they afford.
A number ol precautions can he
taken by the University community
il they arc interested in the safety of
then bicycles.
Owners should note the serial'
number ol their bicycles and keep
the number in a sale place. University Police cannot return a bicycle to
Us owner without positive identification: this is d o n e best by having the
serial nunlher.
Security recommendsthal bicycles
A bicycle should never by lcll unlocked or unattended; when locked a
ease-hardened chain and padlock
should he used. It is advisable to lock
the hieycle where there will be some
pedestrian traffic.
I he problem of bike thievery
could he reduced if faculty, students,
administrators a n d service personcl
would report the presence and
description ol persons they observe
carrying holt cutters to the campus
police (telephone is 457-7616).
during that m o n t h were d o w n a great
deal. All of F e b r u a r y ^ crimes were
properly related except for six: o n e
Assault, three Harassment incidents,
one Reckless lindangcrincnt. a n d
one Sexual Abuse case.The value of
stolen properly during February was
S.V15K.
February saw the quarterly send
out of parking noticcsdue to faculty,
stall and students. Williams said in
Also in the m e m o r a n d u m were the the m e m o r a n d u m that a p p r o x i m a t e crime statistics lor the month ol ly Kill faculty a n d staff m e m b e r s will
lehriinrv. I )ue primarily to the vaca- have the a m o u n t deducted from
tion, the figures lor c a m p u s crime . their paychecks; an average of thirty-
live dollars each. Several hundred
Students will have stops f placed o n
their records. Kines a r e payable in
the police building from 8:30 a.m. t o
4:30 p.m.. M o n d a y t h r o u g h Friday.
One thousand o n e hundred a n d
twenty-one
parking tickets were
given out during the month of
February, c o m p a r e d with 3015 in
February, 1973. No vehicles were
lowed: 111 were towed in(February
ol last year. Only three a u l o a c cidents were investigated by Security
this F e b r u a r y : nine were i n veslawiled during that month last
year.
SVNYA PIRG Wants Voluntary Line to Join NYPIRG
f « i QQ6e«mt?
SANSUI350*
00
W
4 4 WATT RMS
$|
AM-FMRECEIVER.
iiuiiiimetl Irani /iw.ei' (Hie
register lobbyists, but ]s already
engaged in a lull-swing bout w nh the
I egislature.
SM£ m ONE W£AT C£ALS AUCVER THE W4RBCW5E. guTTWS. S
THESODKt rflRP^ GREATER BUY5--CWEOF-VKINPS, PEMOfVSTSAt3RS,TWDE-/M&
AtfP OTHER 'SftClAlS','
\SPECIAL6?" VE6. LIKE E X T W SHAKERS
AE OfiUR£P .HAT WERE TCO 61 & R)PS1KIRC CAgJKlE'6. A N O CABiHErs
WAT yVEfig TCO &.& FOR. SHAKERS.
gOXES tflTff STEREO COMfbNENtr£
THAT GOT WET N "< 9NCW, &"EA<3%
WE SPlUEP COFFEE ^N, Cig. 'APE
PLAYERS -iffl- 'MOULpiiT P T 't^TJc
CPWXM85
&LCVE COAi^RTH.EljT.
AWpM0R£.
SfffRUOGD
AU-IU JKE-IJBW O J D ' T ! 0 ' J , A | ^
SACKED SV Ot/ft FAMOUS 9-POINT
I lie l l a i t l c v - I ' l l U i meeting wasa
disllc.lllcilillg setback lol the
students vv.hv did Mi llatlley not
c\pl.ini these problems al t h e lust
Meeiiug on IKcembei Mill'' Why
vvastlie decision to tianslci prolonged and lake almost eight w e e k s t o a n -
(*ucy-~ fr^ECT co) -•<£
I E SKX;£<X
4'6OUM06-GIW.
<3EN HOJJ VrtOUG1 €DNESWV *MTH
£i/EM GREATER. giJVS FROWV SOUNDS
GtfMr.
t^'OOAqi WATT RMS
2ElOUTI0Wl| | g £ R
lO"-ZHllHV
2£Ow
SfEAKEK
"fflirAfiLE
RECEIVED
S/STEM
S p c e i l i c a l l y . il currently is
processing an in-depth Legislative
I'rolite t'roicel and a political relonn
package. Hartley also realized, ol
course, ili.il most ol N Y l ' I I U i ' s
lunclions .ne non-polilical research
tasks. Hul even S I S ' ! \ 1'IIUi's
local nii»|ccts Mich as lood and gas
pi ice sinu-vs. housing iliscriiiiinalioil studies, and l a s inequity lind i n g s . -.nil ilu n o l eradicate
\ v, I ' l K t i ' s involvement in the
political pi,.cesses.
WKAGE
KLH MODEL 5 0
CABINETS
ln ih.it same private interview,
liovvcvci
Mi llatlley
ptlvalelv
levelled Ins IHVII opinions ol a
-,l \ \ \ I ' l k t i Ivul .isWd tli.it sikh
nil. .1 ni.il
I>s ttltlllli Id IIOIII pi nil
IK „n,I l!i.il a, .in ailiilinisti.itoi h>
uiusi appeal as.t Mippoiteiolllie.nlsli.il
.ind tell Ills views on
,niv stihievl shouldn't eoilllicl Willi
those ol His State I inveisilv \ s ,i
state .idillinislialol he lllllsl illlpk
ineill the Slate's policies and WLslies
\iee-l'iesideiii llaiilev. h o u e v e i .
is a uell-iespeeled nienihei ol the
1 niveisitv 1 nv noiiinenial Decisions
I iiiinniiiee .it \lhanv Stale, vvlinh
positions hnii .is an ellllcnehcd ad.oe.ile loi siiell oigani/.ilions as
-1'ioteel *i "in I iiviioniiieiit" t l ' M I
and llu T u h l k Inleiesl Keseaiell
tuotip."
1 ouis I . Bent'/i'l
In |he wake ol the issue.md beloic
an ilium.He decision would be
bioaikasl Mom the Slate I duealtoii
I
ess. SI M \ I ' l k d sludelllsap
pioaehed I'lesidelil Helie/el lot a
decl.uat
I pelsolial Mippolt
Helie/el deihlied the ollel Instead.
he indicated he would gladly submit
a detailed letter to Chancellor Dover
a ho in I ' l k t i . i l S U N Y A . Illslellls.il.
lie said, was based upon a "cuilllicl"
ol dunes as President. Ividcnily.
i li.incclloi Hovci already had contacted liene/ei and instructed him on
a "laet-rinding mission" about
I'lKt p's [iiogress on 1 his campus. I k
d i d not vkanl I b i s "Hussion"
tlieieloie. to be preiudicevl by
publiei/iiig his own v tews. I Ins call
IIOIII Hovel was SI \ i \ I ' l l U . ' s
lust iiiiollicial indication thai Us
piopos.il had penetrated the innei
sanellinis ol SI NY Celllial.
Aller-l-.go Spindler
I IK- (hiincclloi staled thai some
political nudges u e i e receded, hut
ihis v\a.s nothing unusual tor issues
ol iliis i \ p e .
One " n u d g e " came a leu weeks
.ii!o when Warren Anderson. Senate
\ l ; i | o n l \ I eadci o | the New York
Si.nc
V.ssemhl>. nsited I inest
llitvcj In ih.n iepoitedl\ leiiglh)
eonveivation, which a high S I N Y A
ollieial has conlii ined. the cenlial
issue discussed was NYl'lUCi ilscll.
\ p p , i i e i u l \ . Andeisnii had shown
inleiesl in Wl'MKCi and since he is
c m reutK icwew nig t h e Stale's
I ducalinn Budget. Ho\ei will h e s m el\ lisKiiiug putieivlly. Anderson
lohn H a n k y ' s c o u n i e i p a n in the niiglii wi \ well he e l a m o n n g loi his
k'llow
Nsscinhh nicinheis. w h o
s i \v, ( eniral
\d
nslialion is
sninc s,i\ a t e he coming incieasingK
ll.uiv
Spindlet
Viee-t hancelloi
alatiucd ovci NMMKCi's 1'iolile
On Hiismess and Finance. Spindlci
1'ioieci l l o w e \ e i . Spindlet c.uelulK
Hans.ids all business loi the State
noled
i hat the t h a n e e l l o i
I niveisiiv
Hill llequellllv. any
periodicalls
iccencs calls liom
matleis ol niajin public inipottaliee
go illicelh lo Hovel's desk and oe- " i n l e i e s u d " Icgislalois. again i n i p h cas
ally llu- table ol the lioaid ol
I nisiees llu- l'M((, decision will be
-olhei.illy" leleased lioni Spindlei's
olliee. bin il iseoliieclliicd thai u will
he ^mdilioiial on Hovel's sav-s,,
last
luesd.iv. on Match I - ,
lo.mik M.lighl. \ i l h i n
Malkill.
I ' a l i u k I lilt .in all inemheisol the
IMRli al M N i \ chaptci a n d
I'eiei Hhihin. ehaiiman ol die \ " l I'l k d si.in- Ho.nd. mei with \ tecl II.IIH.CHOI
ing ihai this was all very customary.
In any e \ e n l . Spindler said, all
arguments would he presented at the
Chancellor's
I xeeuiiv e Hoard
Meeting, scheduled l o r yesterday,
M n i u i a \ . March IN. 1974.
lor
Boyer, the "precedent."
" p r o Lit making," a n d "political
arguments" will he in one word premeditated.
I he I \ e c u l n e Hoard agenda will
include SU.MYA iMKCi. Chancellor
Ko\ei will he in attendance and o l licialk note Us presence l o r ihe lusl
tune I h s i a l h e i \er->ed slaiemenis lo
he given on NYl'IKCi. will appear
moie elahurale loi someone jus! being introduced to a " n e w " topic,
I he options opened to the
Chancellor are threelold. Hccan u n ilaterally approve the plan a n d g r a n t
SI i \ Y A N KG a spot o n the i l l . O r
he can s u i n m a n l j
dismiss the
p r o p o s a l and kill i h e group's
chances.
I his is nut unusual l o r him. llu verts urn mail) well-advised he I ore these
meetings. N Y l ' I K d hcing no exception. Ihe H c n c e t . Spindler. Anderson discussions, the legal m e m o r a n da, ihe political notations, the PIKCi
p c i u i o u s . a n d ihe c a m p a i g n
hieiaiiiic have all heen ihoioughU
eoivsideicd. I ike an> siiceesslul
hiueaiici.il he a l u a \ s does his
lh.iiiew.uk.
IE Buyer happens l o view t h e
IMRli issue as t o o tacky lo handle.
he can always order it returned l o
lohn Hartley's olliee. Once again, it
becomes Hartley's b a b \ . On Buyer's
s.n-so SIINY Central is iehe\ed ol'
the lesponsihilus
ol permitting
students the tight to lund a n
oiganiAiuun. Buyer's decision lo
decide tr/jMwill decide will have been
made
Spindler.
I he discission eonsisled ol ollelme .iigiiineiils on I he educational
aiulb.iskallv iioii-pohlieal n.ituie- ol
W I ' I K C i Spiiidkl appeared lo be
iMeiung diligenilv I hough abstaining It on! aitv pel solial ' u Ilia! ks
ahoiil die o i g a i n / a i i o n , he did indie.ile thai
the voliuilaiy lee
ines li.ilusiii was in,, e easiiv
"digeslahle" than the widely dis
puled
iiianda lot v l e l u u d a h l e
svsieni
vn nut m in lie quest ion same w hen
Ml Spindlci was asked o! theevleill
,,1 llu- I egislanve piessiue evened
on s i \ ^ ( eiitial ahoul M I ' l k d
OUfcflMJGf
I IKE &M£Sr SELECTION
Any student interested in applying
i Gu<«*nm> cew WICES
PANASONIC
JuM»MTOa?uSIENl«>ACHtAVjSaA9
5. I YEAR 4f£4l£P T0Al
fa- &0 tfAr E^HAWGi
Z *W/f IWS 17; my
8. CuSTWt CESSNA IMSTAu^riOW
SlaBEtyl TRACE .[NS
0& 84 5 US
^ S * * ^
6900
r£Ac-sANSUi.viARAwri.(ic«witt.Ot;M.'WAns.Ws.wwAa>./k^^icWS£>^.DJl„
1818 CENTRAL AVE. NEXT T O M MOHAWK DRIVE-IN
PACE FOUi
ALBANY STUDENT PRE
CHIEF of the
8TKA7 ftAVSACK
1APEU;'-< jfy
k Sounds Great, Inc.
MONthruFRL I0am-9pm
for the position of EDITOR-IN-
«.
.
456-3234
SAT l(W5:30 pm
TUESDAY. MAR< 'II
I
must submit a typewritten letter
of application to CC 326
DEADLINE: MARCH 22
'UbiSUAY. MARCH 19, 197 i
" A
i e i i 11 i c
mo v ie Marvelous!) C'ra/y"
- d e n e Shalit, NIK"
MOHAWK MALL
UullUtwn K d . S c h e n e c t a d y
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
2nd very, very
funny week!
STAR TWIN
M A D I S O N Ihemrc
HELD OVER!
10.10 M a d i s o n A v e . A l b a n y
l i c e I'aikiiiK
Mid C i t v S h o p C e n t e r
McnaiuJs
PAGE" FIVE
Proposed N.Y.S. Student Financial Aid Plans Compared
by Babs
Ranagan
criteria on financial need rather than
academic achievement.
S A S U Legislative Aide
This year's legislation governing
student financial aid could produce a
meaningful change > in both the
method and amount of money
awarded t o students attending
public and private institutions o f
higher education in New York State.
Presently, three new programs
have been proposed, all of which require additional stale expenditures
ranging from $28-million to $.16milliim for the 1974-1975 academic
year. Despite the impressive size o f
the requested allocations, the impact
on students attending schools in the
Stale University of New York might
nol he as financially desirable as
they would appeal.
TAP
I he Select Committee.on Higher
l:cl u c a l i o n .
choired .
by
Assemblyman I'elet .1. (."osliganlR.Seluuket). tias proposed the I union
Assistance Program ( I A l ' l thai
would require an additional S2Xmillion over existing priigrants.
Basically I he program is designed to
increase Irnaneial assistance to
sludc'Ms attending a private instiiuinin and to establish the award
v^«SSWS6K6SS«i»SaS«j^^
Although these goals arc commendable, the same program could
actually hurt middle-income SUNY
students, tinder I A P , a SUNY student
w h o receives a Regents
Scholarship and has a family income
ol SHOW) would be eligible for an
award ol only 5<IM). He/she would
have been eligible for $58(1 under the
e x i s t i n g p r o g r a m o f Regents
Scholarship and Scholar Incentive.
I'.'I'SlAticvv world record o l soils
•:•} sophomore ai Si OUd College,
•j-j Norlhlield. Minn
During a live
:•:• houi period. \arsvuld eventually
downed 275ollhepiscincdcllcaclcs.
Requires $28 million more than
little resemblance loits pievlcccss,
Ihe program, sponsoied hv Sen.,,,
Reduces amount available lo a
M u j o r i l ) l.eadei vVaiun \ l \ M l | a .
son and Senaloi Ronald H v,, .
receive S(i50 al the lower level and
'scholarship winner- $460 instead of
l o r d , chairman ol ihe Senm n,u|,
ShOO al the upper lever, in which case
$580.
I ducation C o i i i i i i i i u e . , iii|ili,i,i/i.,,
Phased in over four years.
Rl ( . I M S
Regents
Under the Regents proposal, the
Scholar Incentive awards would he
doubled this year, and increased l o a
ceding ol S1700 .u ihe end ol the
llucevcui phase-in. I ike IAP.there
is an avvaid dilleienti.il ol SJMIII
belvveen uppei anil lovvei ilisisnui
sludcills I hcrelore. awards vv(nIIJ
he sel .ii a maximum .'I Slonil l o i
linanciall assisiance pioposal han
current programs.
restructuring ol ihe adniiiiisii.u
PROPOSAL
ol
Requires $.!(>.8 million more lhan
present programs.
h
programs,
less iii.iviniiiiii aid lhan heshmen
" I d . win
and sophomores.-1 \ P also.
Regents Seholalship will he a Hal
s.'sll- | \ P also
more
ol
liguriug
paienlal income lcducIlon.slnl olhei
in.iiulv inanlheis in college- allows
less aw.ml lhan .11 present.
l o r i n a l . l o accomplish ilns L,,,,,1 ,p
\iHlerson proposal would , k.iu-u,.
Hon
\ pliUlsion new l o h o l h I vl'.niil
i l k kcgenis proposal ilia I could
possibly hull S I M students is Ihe
vh.nigcd inelhod ol computing
p.iu HI.il income loi lauiilics wheie
nunc Ihati uiicpcisoiiallcnds.ollcei
Pllasevl in ovel loui veals
college aid and I
would
| | ,,„
I,. ,1, ••,..,! ,,
slnileills
l ilk agency would handlcallSlale
i mil aid plogiains
llllkl
piOVISllllls
1;
i
liiHii sf.llll in SI.1)1111 il unending a
iuis.ii,
.Jiool
si I
I'll,,s
I
s'liu il .ilieudiiig
I
u | IWn
eenlive \ w . o d i,,-, o
puhlu
•s, hul.o iikeiiuve would increase
• no dele
ed on ihe icinaining
l.innly iikonn. allei il lluslsi-s ulr.nl
ed hv Iheliliillhei ol collegesllldellls
hi .in etloll l o i l u p l l i l l l i Ilk I edeial
method. Ihe new awalds would he
in.nle allei ihe paienlal income is
ledneed hv S ItlOtlloi i l k second --lii
deul .mil sjllllll loi esciy siiideni
Iheieallel IheSI M sludelil in tins
ReeenlP'"gl
iiinlel
I \ P and Regenis ploposals
Ih.
ndel Ilk esisliilg s i s k i n
I limieli hoih ihe lap,mil Regenis
pi,,ei.mis. when lullv implemented,
would
icipllli
S ' l Suillltoll
p i , - , m sspeiidlluies.
l ,01, is,
ovel
I \ P would
p h i - , in ,,,ei I,no Mai-, beginning
i. si sen's lieshnienaild would
s
• vvillv.il lvv.,1-1,
pell
, 1 . . . m l si. in
,1
siiii.uii.n ,i.in,I, lo icccivc less aid
|
', HI.in, ipaled sin,hi,i
. l . i u l i . i l so pal in.,: ii
who .lis lis, alp I,,,I |. : ,!
I,, , V, hkli,I III ih, ,1. I
l lie -.s aw.II,P.
Ills \ l l d c l qnuv.1 M i , i
..p..
,:[v.'!!.;'.L^l...,>>:,.i!il..;.2.:;-.:ixl.lsk'd'"
'!'^..^I.'.1.'I:'I^l.-!!-!'-.".-.-.'-X-l-i-.i^!-.-.-.-.-.-...
lielh
,
ii.il
conlcicncc
in
vVaslnni'ioii IH ..mil Iheni.nn topic,
as NSI Itoaul I haiiinan Willis
I dvv.ud.
I. was "NSI is ah,.in
I Women's Recreation Association, j
Ill,I M
II
a.1.1,1
10 s I. a i a i l . l i i i . ., i
and me
/.ili,„.
Ilk- delegates a!-.,
HI,, lines in sslmli I
aides l o o n sa
•• -i ,'
\M
iiieiiihus l., d
aspeels ,,l lohltsilie ,:, W
I h , ioiiveiiiii.il i ,, ,
pi.ill,,
,1 In pun,
I lis , olilelellee dcall ilmslli ssilh
||
jj
\\
j Deadline Wednesday,March 27 i
Nulionul Sludenl lobby works I n Washinglou on behalf of vludenls.
issiks alleilme siudents and on lob
V , .sill , , , i n , una' '
Hiilllde llee.nii-ss I,, p
hvnii;
.diiialloii
leilinnples
Mine
I
ei
Plcsnlciili.il lonlendeis .uldicssed
Ihevlelee.lies lonn Hill s,hu,,ls in -IS
s i . i l , . K i p Paul \ l . ( loskv l i t ( \ l
ami s,ns Hul,ill lliiuiphiev ( I I
MN i.md l.eoies M, I „,s, in 111 s l ) i
s i i , . „ i l i l k iiiipoiiauee ol laellcs
i-a.il.h
'
,,l evlllc;
n.il ,.,s| , .
s,„,,,ls. and •.,, in; H,
nieill ,.| I h . I S , , h , , ••
liieives high .01. » k
Ihlivp
s.i
al Ilk business -,
p
s ssill In , - , , o
line sin,kills
NEW at the Bookstore
sludenl
' I In
sin I, a l l , s i ,10,1,Hi
$12.50
1
1974 Guinness Book of World Records $6.95
m
Jaws, Benchley-
$15.00
The Romantic Rebellion, Clark - $13.95
Marx Brothers Scrapbook, Marx- $6.95
I Ik inUP o n . ,
,,,,,i
i on I din,in....
si
•
al
I'm;.I.
I,,an
Hi
< .
II,,,I
IH.IIHI.I
111,
al
Hi,,
I
NSI
oi II
mil
Is .Is I ..I
V I I O "
,1
'!'• '
sill,I, HI •
lu
P •
dill.
•an I, p.,.1.kin-, as ,o I ai
slamp.
VV ai in
i o l o i ed
wages an.I
go-, , HUH nl
a,IHHi H
, H i d . nl .
lidcnce about lite project.
llllelled as lo whelhci Hie slalc
had a hand in planning ihe project.
lams
savs
ihai
lioseiiioi
Koekelellei pn.bahlv piovidcd some
,,| ihe initial impcltis in 191.9. I hestate did nol ask loi tilliecspace; in
lack Hie initial idea was simply I'o
Istiild a model ii hotel II was only
altei consultants argued that jusi
replacing the 1 en l y c k without
building eoniplenienlaiy
ktc'ikcs
would not stem the decay in Ihe area
_ _ _
111.is,mi s
Campus Contraception
C l i n i c
Student
THURSDAY evenings at the
For Appointment call:
457-3717
Health
5©fVIC©
Mon. - Fri.
between 1 - 5 pm
FOR TELETHON
OR JUST LOOKING FOR A GOOD TIME
Colonial Quad Board Presents:
III.LICII.IN have been selected loi es
,h.II.iiiei
ol downtown
Albany"
nails l l n him hill c ( onliaiv lo die
Ivso cnlols-
l o laidil.uV l l a l l n How. 1 odge
will In made a two was slieet
d
N S I h.
.0,1
In Hie ssouls ol the o l h i i a l plan
hook. Ilk alchilecls llasea niallilale
loon I l k I I I I "lo ueale a pio|eil
lhal will mil becouic.lli island wiihin
an ssisiing I'otiiiiniiiilv noi tin n Us
l.ai k mi I I . hul lalhel siiveas an in
legl.ll pan ,il u " \eeoidinglv. Ihe
a i i h i l i i l s piovidcd loi pedestrian
iiil l a i k i s on all hmi sill intituling
slieels. ,uu\ On open pla/a space
ssn nullum is l a m s ' lough esoak ol ovel all costs. Ihe leal esk- is esnenielv valuable; in lack il
Hie•'Hill', cornei" ol Albany a
al esi.ue tei in describing I hehuh ol
cilv's husiness district.
ll look a while lo get tenants loi
ic pioieel. hut at this point, with the
ale taking ihe olliee space and ihe
amaila Ion occupying ihe hotel
id a l.oge pail ol ihe letail space,
• nils, sslnle nol a deinonslialiveolvial, evades an an ol q u i d eon-
•• i
•
i
.I
I he i s a, i i sue is hounded hv
Noiih Pe.nl Si.ile, I odge.and Pine
slieels
\ l l i l l , loilnei businesses
have been loin down, ihe lone
building |iii'siiills slanihng on the
site 1.1,1.is heme ihe \lh.oiv Savings
Hank Ungllial plans called loi Ihe
piiseisalHinol Ihe 'Sseai old bank
budding, and lis liansloi niallon illlo
a "lcl.nl I.nihil " I his pi,.veil
"llllleasihle" . m o l d i n g lo Pioieel
I liicetol K i i h a i d I aiiis.and Ihe old
l.mdii.aik will he lolll down
prominent officials, I torn
I ongressman Sam Stratum to local
•aeiivisi
I heresa Cooke entered
Idlers ol support lor the project al a
public heanngon May IH. 1972. Ms.
I ununited "ii lolltnvinfi [HlRe
even piuple buildings aiound the
a n H vs.., 1. .,.,
II.,ssi ,, ,
Many
I 111 pioieel I he btiddel
I \ Sssvei. who hlllll Ihe
I iiss.is mi Washingion
and Niinlll Swan in \lh.oiv
A party at Shahey's
-1.
WED. March 20
dun- aelualls ale led. vellovv. and
'
Hid, in a,
I.Hind .1 oi I ..III..
I
Ilk-l
will he
I sun
\ s , no,
I en I sik site
ssliuh il.imi
II
Resides rent or purchase price of
Hie nl 11 ico building, cost lo the slate
will include payments in lieu ol taxes
lo ihe city ol Albany. Such payments
.ne mandated in ihe U.lV.C. Act,and
aie computed by averaging ihe taxes
. paid by the lormer occupants of the
site in I lie three years privious to
1 . ! ) ( . ' . takeover. M l . l a r r i s esinnaies these payments al between
S225.0UU and $.100,000 per year.
ni.ins,ileiini while and ihailed buck.
,,.
lln
I o •.Kin ll.e decline ol dovsnlowii.
ilk Ness 'i,iik Sial Urban Dcvelopniiiii t oi piiiaiion is huildinga coinnieieial eolllples on a lolll block
ana including ihe sue ol Ihe old leu
I sik H o l d I hcploiccl. lobe called
Ilk " l e u I sik Pioieel". will include
a I Is itiiim Kamadii Inn. a paiking
.ilea I,,i nsil cms. sel anolhel slalc
..Ilns hilllding, and some shops
I,,ssn comes in mils
.01,1
Slildv piogiam
all..I
Urban
Development
Corporations in other states have
ipieslioucd Ihe wisdom of providing
so much parking space when the
ilawn ol the era ol mass transportation is being so eagerly awaited inlurhun planning circles. The Ten liyck
project
planners
felt
that
pragmatically., people could not, be
eniiccd downtown il forced to ridca
Designers model t i l I M I K)ck project. Vitw is h c i n t went. Bduw: Project aitc plan.
popid.n iiopiissi.Hi lhal Iheienlei ol
a l n l i l s , , ! a s l n i l i i i l I . . : )>
all,a
...
Ihe ah..vi- passage is l l o n i ihe
New N mk M oe I ih.m Developmelll \ s l . and .kosiiii.ssii Mhaus is
..us ol Ihe an,is ,i i c l u s lu In l a d .
die phenomenon ol popiilaiion and
husiness Ihglil has hccoiue so acute
HI ilns i.ipiial ens ih.n main o l hcials on ihe South Mall have
stopped including it among the
si.He's "hig si v" i Hies, si Inch these olhcials now call ihe "big live".
lo hkiid oilo ltm\ i Dinpli'lilcllil Ihe
llpp.Hln.1.
I..i an
Minl.nl
II .
Criticism of the project has
centered around the charge that "we
aren't moving last enough". In the
•vorks since 1969, the project will
inter the building stage .next year.
When il is completed, t h e " I00%corncr" will have been vacant for seven
years.
i n mi l.iiadcs tliiouglioiil ihe pio]eet
' " I ' . ' I
. 1 I I i-, llllg
FINAL WEEK of 2-for-l paperback sale.
ilo.s.l
I,sine Kdine ih, II.MIS. •:
inniJ
Watership Down, Adams - $2.25
In.I HI ,
si,i i d s
lllllllsliall
ALBANY blUDKNI PHrb!
.
sun, n, siiuelv. and Hi I',
sa
FACE SIX
.1
in in ,
which all,a I
GULAG ARCHIPELAGO, in Russian August, 1914, Solzhenitsyn - $1.75
that an office building was contemplated. The Legislature has
voted t o allow the Office of General
Services to contract for a long-term
lease or even l o buy the building
outright 1 for state use..'Ordinarily',
the O.G.S. can only lease buildings
for live year periods, with options
lor additional five-year leases.
"There
exist
in
many
municipalities
within
this
state...areas...which are or which are
becoming slum or blighted...because
of...deteriorated or deteriorating
e o n d i I i o n s ,
i n c I ud i n g . . . d i l a p i d a t e d . . . s t r u c tures..., inadeurjate
maintenance,
buildings abandoned...in whole or
substantial pail, obsolete...utilities,
poorly...designed street palleinsand
intersections. inaslei|tiate access to
aieas. Iha/aulousl liallie coneeslion lack ,,l suitable ollslreet
p.liking"
I ,, plan Ilk pioieel. Ihe I D.I
nl.mil,I
Ihe h i m ol d l i i e n
N.soii.ilis, designels ol ihe nevs
\|baii\
(iievllound
leiininak
National Student Lobbyists Set Platform
(( I'Sil he Yutonnl Sludenl Lobby i NsI i leeeiillv completed llslhrl -
Revitalizing Downtown Albany
and SI Olio i,,,
pus.n, p.,si sveinnl.il , ,,
avads
W.lls.
^ k l l k l 1 l " " 1 v - " s v " k l Hieon/ed
" ' • " l l K ' l ' " 1 ' vpneklv sulloealcd as
Sign up in Rm. 245 PEC.
I pi,, ; , m, ,„,,
polled lis Ness y oik si.,1
Kequues MO IIIIIIIIIII moie lhan
live cents lor every lishhcswallovvcd
and pav $5,110 l o i every goldlish
j
i ,„,„„,,'
In adiimn i,i ,,[
sonplils Ilk application ;
VNUI KSO.N I'ROPOS \ l
Hi'.Ill
I'icsciitly il inoielliaiionepcisi
:§:
ellects H.on Hie ivpciiciicc. iccciisd
FOR WOMEN
I III St'l
poi.ilk.n
Id
•
l , u , u ' s l l " " " ""•' H u n i a n e g
Soeielv. who lcll lhal the lish should
J
.ippkai
ill:
sullcied no
SOFTBALL INTRAMURALS
L;L , lni ]
comprehensive
Ihgliei I docalionSeivk,
sisiein
Ihe leal was ongin.illv pari ol a
hel where Aursvold would receive
J
cooidiuaii.iii ,,,
ineseul piogiam
ihe (.unless I W k ol World l<ccouls.:§:
\,u
hcttci
iiu.mi i.ii , ui i
student assistance, and
a l.inulv aliciid- college, ihe .iw.o.l-.
needed l o purchase .tilt) I ish.
Si.ik
sljile programs ssilh esislm,., l,,l a i l l
is and sclliols receive $200
Dilleicut
New York
Ten Eyck Project:
by Susan I.choff
middle income ($8-$2(l.()00) Regents
I he Regent's plan lurlher imitates
ihe I A P reduction ol the present
Regents Scholarship Avvaid Ironi
Ihe sliding scale ol S250-SHIOO lo a
Hal gram ol S250. Unlike Ihe I AP
proposal, under the new Regents
award schedule. SUNY students
eligible loi ihe combined Regents
I ollege Scholarship and Seholai Incentive would not receive less money
in loi,IIKI.il assistance, hul would
rcccivs increased .ml oi aid al picM I I I leveh
I he Hoard ol Regents have also
proposed a student financial aid
program thai might remedy the
award dilemma that exists under
I \ P . Although nearly identical in
philosophy
lo I A P . the S.lb.Xmillion Regents proposal would he
phased in dilleicnlly. It is designed
lo help students in private colleges,
bow e\ er nol at the expense ol SUN 1 !
•.indents.
Anderson
Ihe lasl and mosl rcccni M IU1CU
award would equal tuition, would
respectively.
ihe hel and chipped in Ihe 5>24.% ^
a
T A P PROPOSAL
the cost ol luilion il $650 and $800
| | throat
Aarsvuld.
private schools during 1974-75. By
ly. SUtNY students, whose maximum
Noting the importance ol ihe silun :-::
nun, luisvcvci. his luends cancelled j : |
Mallhevv
Unaneial Aid Proposals
receive SI5UU and $1700 respective-
:*;•: was established reeenih when ihe
:•:•: 22blh live guldlish slid down ihe
ol
Some Key Points To The Student
Ireshnicn and sophomores attending
l97d-77. these same students would
New Fish Swallow Record
:;•:•
juniors and seniors, and $120(1 l o r
require the smaller appropriation r „ ,
W74-7S.
Ihe Regenis
^
would phase-in over three vcan, ana
would apply to new and currcwli
enrolled college siudenis
•'
UKSDA { IvlAhi i l l "
Pine Slieel is to he csleiidcd hv Ihe
I uv ai Us own expense iliiougli lo
Noiih I'eail Slieel I he cslensiouol
Pine Slieel lias been illscusscd
Indole
Hi M i l a m ' s
llisloiv
100 veais ago anolhei bank in Ihe
same a n a llioughl eoiluecllllg Pine
wild
Ninth
Pearl would help
husiness. and skilled negotiating
with the ells
TUESDAY, MARCH 1'), 1974
All the pizza and beer you can eat and drink
ALL FOR $ 3 7 5
Tickets on sale in Colonial Quad Flagroom 4 - 6 Tue. and Wed.
Campus Center 10 - 2 Tue. and Wed.
Bus transportation if needed
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SEVEN
Ten Eyck Project Planners
Given Criticism on Financing
Continued
from
Cooke,
who
previous
spoke,
had
several
c r i t i c i s m s , w h i c h she based o n articles in t h e K n i c k e r b o c k e r
News,
a b o u t w h a t she alleged was a glut o f
office
space
suggested
in
the a r e a , a n d
that
residential
she
facilities
be built i n s t e a d o r a l o n g w i t h offices.
The o n l y o u t r i g h t o p p o n e n t
has
been Chester S m i t h , a n economist
and
president
called
Voice
of
of
an
organization
the
Taxpayers, a
s t a t e w i d e g r o u p S m i t h o p p o s e d ; the
p r o j e c t f o r f o u r reasons, the first bei n g that " t a x p a y e r s s t a t e w i d e w i l l be
h o l d i n g the bag o n this project if it
doesn't
pay
off, a n d m y basis for
t h a t . . . i s t h a t the C o u r t decision in
the Supreme Court
trict,
Students Running In The Raw Across The U.S.
page
Appellate
Also
hard
hit
architecture
buffs.
will
be
The
urban
(CPS)lt
Albany
as a f e w
sporadic
nude
Most c a m p u s o f f i c i a l s , h o w e v e r ,
"gross." S t u d e n t s a r c p r o u d
posure a n d is subject to a line f r o m
tolerance.
their
SI lo $40 and a m a x i m u m o f 40days
even b l o c k e d off a street f o r use as
a r c h i t e c t ' , H e n r y Ives C o b b . W i t h its
six
Corinthian
pillars
on the
h a n d a n d its crystal d o m e on
colleges
and
universities
across the c o u n t r y .
one
From
the
Florida
lo Alaska
where
below zero temperatures necessitate
o t h e r , the b u i l d i n g looks like a f a i r l y
culling
successful
siudents h a v e been t u r n i n g out
cross
between
classicism of t r a d i t i o n a l
the
municipal
the
droves
sport
lor
blue
nude
marathons
in
of
m e c h a n i s m ol
the
costs
is
wunl
at llic University of Wisconsin.
sneakers
There is at present a n u n m i s t a k a b l e
mil
s t a n d i n g us it docs timid the r u h h l c o f
Us f o r m e r
neighbors on the
100%
corner.
A l l o w : M a s t e r plan book p r i n t e d by U . D . C . shows view o r c e n t r a l m a l l area
on m o d e l . Below: Present condition o r project site.
Dis-
to a c k n o w l e d g e
record
would
a
be
p r e m a t u r e since the hid has p r o b a b l y
sense of d o o m about the b u i l d i n g ,
reached
its peak, however, the
while streaking past w o m e n ' s dorms.
siRMkal
across
the
laic
ctciiing
hcell a n i l i n e m i l
.ippcui.inccs
.is
Milks
h\
the
new
project
w o u l d he the old D e Witt C l i n t o n ,
a l t h o u g h I nrris believes the IX- W i n
w i l l not even be a r o u n d long e n o u g h
lo
sec its. c o m p e t i t i o n
Rumor
in.i
.Ml.l
h l i i . l i if-.
-nu
i,.
tllcckt
slit-.ik
| J
COlltlS.
O.IK
ItutU',
- I N . I and M i l l l l a t e l i u l o . s o m e t h i n g
- J l . ' l i p even
ihiotigh
M.uc
H I . . I I N m.iii-s i i u t l t
now o n its was to the a u c t i o n b l o c k .
l i e u - d i d l l i c s l l c i i k n i g l a d begin 1 . 1
,a
Siiiihtiii
Coloiado
iiiilii
in
\l
Ihc
\llit-ns
I nncisilt
slieakcis
w e i e dispensed hv
cas
I i.ili-i i n l \
ililtlalle'innon.
nicnihcl.s
si.itt- I imcTsttv
u .-.n i n i - . m i l s i u . i k c i s . a t o w h o t l i a l
has h i i i j j hcell a p a l l o l I I
,n,l
\iiiinal
.,
I ,,in
K.uicci
sis
and
h u e " o i l . n i l and . i l l . n "
and
11
naked
Icpollecll}
hcell
have
held III l l i c
(neck
is
that
I-
I IIIVCIMIV
(oloiado
( I I I
\le\ic..
tt n i l
pnhi.
,ie
,.|| again
as
and
said
allcsletl
tinnineiils
"all
lad." a
( i l e e k hie.
01} t u p l e *
i . n i i i t s l , u s h a t e disinissed s l i e a k i i i e
sin h
oil-
means n l
in
students
in
I'KO
ol l.coigla
and
sonic
h a t e dashed
and
piolcsl.uion
. l i s . i p p i , . t i n g campus police
"a
One
campus
against
and o i h c i w i s c . "
psttliologisl
light
In
si leak i lie as .in e \ I e l i s i o n n l c.u he I
sink-
statewide
police w u l i
sneaking
is a c t . i / e
Ulan
hnl
hill
I ediial
hums,
and
iiiuiates
al
ttiit-
Ihc
college
w.iulinn.
lulls"
ihc
side
iiiotie
iimsl
iitnig
sneaking
and
01n.lt i m l i t ' t l
'"v I"1
he was
nothing
hm
pcnilellliancs
pilsoll
that
in
llic
s y s t e m , [he ollicials
Iht-t
aie bullied
I hey
1ep1.11 i h i i l Ihcv l i n v c n o i d e a w h e r e
-'
wealing
lead
sett'le
Ic.lu.il
a i l s o n e l l l l a n d l e d b a l l t e n n i s shoes.
.tteakei
So
the
lad
grows
despite
cold
weather, fines, arrests and expulsion
University
sion, radio a n d newspaper coverage,
One
siiidcnls a r o u n d the c o u n t r y
woman
said
plans loi the "super s t r e a k " a n d " t h e
make
win Id's gieatest s t r e a k . "
\11tl il ilns were nol e n o u g h Ihc
l.iicsi
lepmicd
prank
is
nude
parachuting.
regents l o "1x111-11 a
Vcoldlllg
In
il ncecssatt
one
1 I'l
lo
report
s t l e a k e r s h a t e n o h o p e o l evei b e i n g
lined
lit
Ihc
I HI
c h e c k i n g i h c I I'l
Alter
further
r c p o n e d [he I HI
has 11.1 n l l l c i a l p . i h c t n i l s n e a k i n g .
Ilu-
Coloiado
legislature
piece 1.1 l e g i s l a t i o n , c a l l i n g s n e a k i n g
a pcinni
an " \
i n i c t l misSI \ \
A Streakers d o i n g their t h i n g .
R e m e m b e r l.ady C o d i v a ?
skiwsky
I n I c.\-
M . u 1011 is o n e o l the t o u g h e s t a n d
|i 1 is.ill's
idnnl
an
Sireaker's Society ( A S S ) .
into the path ol
a n d m i l the i l o o l M m e.iuy one
.mild
i n n last S . i l u i . l a , n i g h t w h e n
II h a p p e n e d
Mia.K-nK
nl
siiidcnls"
a m e i H l m e n l I n a n o l l i e i w i s e IcdloUS
in l i n l l l nl l l i c s e l c e n . d o w n l l i c o l h e l
Mann11
111 l l i c
claim
American
AS AN OFFICIAL MEMBERSHIP
BENEFIT OF
laced u p n i l side ol the stage, aeru
111 M i l l i o n . I I 1
the
p n l u e h a t e heen o l d e l c d l o l a k e pic
in p i i s o n s ' M i n e
I'eiilleilll.uv
'*( a i l i n h . i l
mi
in
tear
were
Streaking Behind Bars ?
i.iinpilscs
membership
at
slieakcts
as a i i i l i n i i t i c s a r e d c s p c i a t c l v
sees
impromptu,
spcclllalols
l . i c e l l u u s l v i n t r o d u c e d a "si I c a k i n g "
a
part
the C U campus
sneakers
ol
lol
most
al
\ si.He l e p i c s c n l a l o c m e e d Ihc
uiili.nu
I nlnitint.licit.
ol llic s l n t l c u l h o d } . "
as
ll
dash
"int., It, iikiil
,..\einps\\aiti.i'.iii
Indiana
sneaking
lleiiillhnl h o o d l o l aim,.si l l l t c a t s
c v p c i l s " has been
p s t i I n . H I isis
al
mamlain
the
pelled a n d I n lace |.ul lei ills ol up l o
I o I v sli i c l h l u s l o i icill I , t d \ ( m i l Ha
i , a i n p i i s as he i,iii l l l l o t i g l i the
lor
females.
A m o n g students there is little d
t'aiolina
lequire
heais i l i t
siic.ikt-i.
otuitunibei
Deuvei
A l l h o u g h the s t r e a k i n g m o v e m e n t
tin cots. S p u r r e d on by heavy televi-
some reason, mule streakers
tastlv
we're
oil d a t s
p.llllics,"
ink- ol llic Insi
lor
thing
Clllollcd .11 p u b l i c s c h o o l s I n he e x -
"si..p 1 aiiipant tutdiiv ."
1
You must have it taken this spring to be in 1975 Torch
i III.in sical .i p.in n l
in
Si.mil
m o d e l n day sit c a k i n g m u t c h .
May 7 5 grads
Have your senior portrait taken for the yearbook!
i
tt
llic
...inn
soughi
1
in
thousand
\l
depart m e m .
I'll he llterc. she said.
si,He h n . u d
i v . i h c . . p n i i o i i ol
December '74 grads
ils
police
v p o s u i c I n s t u d e n t s . " \ hill was n i -
c n c l c s as l o w ha I s c h o o l h e l d l l i c I ll si
\ s m i l l o l h e i mass s l i l d e i l l act it I-
CLASS OF 75
IMl't
lor the C U
i n . , c o l d . " H i n when 11 gels w a n n e r .
h i l l healed d c h a l c rages in c o l l e g i a t e
si
y
IllOlalllS
community
w o m e n haven'l joined in because it's
s t i c i k c l . . , I n i l l l i c u a / c al I lie I n
•an,hm
is even
I,- he k n o w n
"]Ull.l\'s
the
even
cgislaiiMtcaiiip'us r i l e s s u c h as t h e p a n t s r a i d .
lo
relations ollicci
exposure
presidents lo " u l i l i / e
lodiiced
Mich'
according
Ihc
g e l l i n g in on this."
said
n i c e " al l l i c i t d i s p o s a l l o s l o p "lewd
college
,ii i a i n p i i s l u s h , i t m i l t as l l i c I one
tl
materialize
is that the D e W i n
indecent
Mississippi t m . H i l l W a l k e r u r g e d
c.iicui us.
h.lsUlh.lll
sl.itmils,
plans
III
iliniiiiioiics.
.llfVllll.ltkcls.
pi i t n c
with
c o r d i n g l o llic dean ol students.
m i l l u v c been n u k i n g
hint
pl.it t-s
ty."
players were arrested and
I he i w o lace possible suspension acof
uneventful
the health or w e l f a r e of the universi-
At M e m p h i s State University two
lllllll
sunk-ins
pretty
" S t r e a k i n g is n o l a m a j o r threat to
charged
ill.n
the
to
iversity nl G e o r g i a ;ii Alliens w h e r e -
I lit . l . i s l
the p r o j e c t .
exposed
football
In ilk' h c e i n i u i i e p i a c t i l i o i i c i s
plan
children
streakers.
ciiiitpus
figures
their
reported high so liii was at the U n -
\n
fcit
country.
I'till! G i n s b e r g , the dean of students
attempt
I . c i s h i l n i - i ha n i h i l s
Hardest
the
proudest of is that we're not late i n
chief said that the parents w o u l d nol
Any
the
ol
in
filed.
" I I s t r e a k i n g is the most serious
going lo have
H e feels the
financing
unless a c o m p l a i n t w a s
spring."
streaking
makes
iversity in W a c o , T e x a s , put it, " F o r
p r o b l e m a h e a d , we're
U . D . C . can't a f f o r d t o renovate it.
squad
once Baylor is up w i t h o t h e r schools
a
longer wants the b u i l d i n g a n d the
l i c a k e i came l i o n , , w h o
01 w h c i e he vvenl.
YOU'VE GOT ^ g ^ *
The only buying plan in the
country that isn't
"just a way to save money1'
it's morel...
Appointments are available all this week
Purchase Power means l o w e r prices than
Make your appointments at the C.C. information desk
Sign up NOW to get a time slot convenient for you.
Portraits will be in natural color Dress is formal or informal
Place: C.C. 305
Sitting Fee: $2.50
If you have any questions contact Marsha Appel at 465 - 6007
OLIVIERI
I OK
I III
1)1 M O C ' R A l l C
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
fUESDAY, MAHCII I'1
N O M I N A
other discount
•
H O N
•
P..
r
Us
NTC
EiR
at A l
TUESDAY, MAHCII 19, 1974
specially negotiated service
HANY
cooperating
dealers
consumer protection
and
01
NEW YORK
WEDNESDAY MARCH 20
12:00 NOON
service
extras Irom
local
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
S.U.N.Y.
PAGE EIGHT
any
K-
> ( \ \ I > 1 D \ I I
before
alter you buy
CALL TOLL FREE
STATEWIDE
MAJOR
800 631-0970
til line ii oul ol oldei. cult 21?687 4flfl0 colled I
Itfiiicinhfi
S A S H Ciuiup No. is d28.
1
IN NYC, NASSAU, & WESTCHESTER
5
as
when
si reaker t e r r i t o r y . Officials said no
office a n d r e c o m m e n d
has not given an a d e q u a t e
explanation
school's streak
it
arrest w o u l d be m a d e for streaking
w o u l d siihniii a report to the dean's
disciplinary
termed
news. A s o n e student a t B a y o r U n -
action against streakers, t h e police
slu'akv'ts l i n t e
l o r the project.
police
l o r their schools.
tuily
U.D.C
campus
Tennessee
a t t e m p t i n g to set s t r e a k i n g "firsts"
nunc
hook
l e x a s a l A u s l i n has said he
UNC
of
n o u v e a u o n t h e other. T h e b a n k n o
oi
official
ty ol
and
,il
in the
t h e chief of police at the Universi-
At
sity
b u i l d i n g s on the one h a n d a n d art
h n i l.u.-lt m o r e a n d
no l.iniincinll
in jail if the fine is not p a i d .
streaking-
HUM i n n ! -
(hat
streaking
view the streaking craze w i t h amused
al
il.iikiicss
included
to
1'cxus l a w . as it falls under
liability! o f t h e Stale o f New
were
reaction
against
Chicago
York."
grounds
adverse
d i s o r d e r l y c o n d u c t for indecent ex-
respected
tingent
on
a l t h o u g h o n e student a t the U n i v e r -
racing has reached e p i d e m i c p r o p o r -
the
U . D . C . , the C o u r t
objected
any
public H o g g i n g . "
tions
by
ills- s p o i l slunidevl i h e i n s c l u ' . s in live
also
d e m e a n o r a n d shall be punished by
arrest t h e m . R e p o r t e d l y , streaking is
1899
f o u n d that U . D . C . Bonds a r e a c o n -
Smith
t u r c s o l c a m p u s streakers and then
Savings B a n k b u i l d i n g was b u i l t in
T h i r d D e p a r t m e n t , S m i t h ver-
sus C o m p t r o l l e r
began
events but lately s t r e a k i n g or
212-687-4880
APPLIANCES
CAMERAS
TV's
STEREOS
TYPEWRITERS
ETC
'funded by student association
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NINE
EPE,
Kwass,
N o t h i n g has c h a n g e d at a l l !
1CSI & ffOtiWD
CLASSJfill=G
Mat, Geeck.
783-9079 after 7 p.m. Al Pastore, 6 Rodez
Coronet—good
running
knowledgeable in above ground pool in-
or Friday—your convenience. 1-3 people.
Neissl skis, Salomon bindings, poles. Used
only 3 times. Call Peter, 457-8755,
201
for
Narcoleptics unite!
Ride
needed
to
Southern
signets
wmmmmmmmammmmmm
N o m o r e b a c k seats
Phonograph.
Plays
records
and
every
I n t e r e s t e d in C o m m u n i t y S e r v i c e ? S t o p in a t
Wed. 6 p.m. (Last bus leaves at 5.)HELP!BJ
Needed—5UNY
to Latham
C o n t a c t O f f i c e (LCB 3 0 ) f o r a list o f a g e n c i e s
783-1017 or 7-2190.
a n d job descriptions.
prices.
Happy 22nd Mar
Ice
So,
tKaetmmmmmnmmmuwntn
has f i n a l l y d e c i d e d to g i v e
434-4236.
Jewish c o m m u n e f o r m i n g for next semester.
AUTO Repair a n d g e n e r a l maintenance by
tion
Stereo
Ride
(CO-ed.) Interested? Send n a m e , address,
q u a l i f i e d s t u d e n t s . S A V E 1(3 o v e r g a s s t a -
Condition. $30. Call 7-4856.
c a l l a n d ask
7-4046,
Dan,
California.
wmmmmmsamm%*m*%3ttsas%3
g u i t a r lessons. C a l l
Portable Singer Sewing Machine. Excellent
Marc
day, March 22. Call Barry 7-87M.
a.m. Five minutes from campus. Call 869-
Upman
healer.
If y o u w a n t t o k n o w m y s , z e
J.D.T.
Sitter: 3 evenings, one child. Hours: 5p.m.-2
John
Johnson Hall.
well-intentioned
3 / 8 M s . J a n e E. A r k u s
Rich 489-1681.
Riders wanted to Philadelphia, leaving Fri-
condition—asking $300. Bob 785-7622.
o
d o it"
YOU ARE APES
9778.
Dodge
from
" a l w a y s s h o o t h i g h or d o y o u k n o w h o w i u
Summer. Stephen 7-5211.
1966
doctoring
Funky, M a l l a r d , Bob, Chris, Ron, C u r t , J.B.,
Call 457-5024.
Dr., Latham.
Wiener,
Greg, Etc.
But Bobo is the king of Apes.
New Tiger Athletic Shoes. Very low pricej.
All kinds running ond jogging shoes. Call
M e r c , G r e e k , Pick,
Rides Wanted: N.Y.C. Thursday after 3:00
stallation, High pay for foreman's position.
D o n ' t t a l k , k e e p s m i l i n g , a n d a c c e p t some
loving
aoKKMBmSWMMMMBIWI
Job Opportunity.
In Maureen I ) , d'ricss
GEM
RIDt/RIDIRS
WANIID
l i k e is t h e l e a s t , a n d l o V e a i n ' i
O n e t i m e ; is it p o s s i b l e ? I h o p e s o !
bedroom apartment. Call 7-3091.
Must be fully
Summer
ffCK § A l i
c h e c k . If
t h e most, w h a t d o I d o n o w ?
mmmmmmmmmmmmmtm
REWARD $15—for one who finds us a 5
Tune-ups:
$10-15.
Call
Lewanda —
Paul,
phone
Bite Boot!
number
to
Box
Western Ave., Albany
273-2131, evenings.
128-Alden,
295
Orowitr
let's g o c h o p some logs
Find one - , i l . . .
S80. Garrard SL55 Turntable
to my l o . o n t e wood chopper.
Dear Cathy a n d Debbie,
Bimbo-
Thanx lor letting me share your b e a u t i f u l
Typing: Experienced. 355-3733.
The W h a t ? B i m b o . .
Bombo!
O n e of t h e g r e a t s , a n d o g o l d e n b l a d e I
L o u n g e b a l l is not f o r y o u !
Happy
5120 apiece. Best offer. 457-4032.
t.-vur
19th
BARCLAY
term
SECRETARIAL A G E N C Y .
papers,
dissertations.
To t h e | o i - a l a i c h a m p s of H o l i d a y
Typing d o n e in my h o m e
Manor:
The w e a l t h m a y h a v e r u n o u t . b u t you're
not
Hand-made tunable conga. Cost SI 39 new.
is i l i ,
forgotten
yuu n- c o m i n g b a c k
Ihe Egyptian
WCIJMNC
WANIfL
PPPB3OC3OO0Oa0OI
3-speed
men's
typewriter.
bicycle.
Electric
portable
Reasonably priced. Phone e v e .
summer
roommates
sublet
wanted;
N e w kitchen, 4
own
room;
is a d u u b l t - U e e p m y
bug
,
Love, N a n c y o n d D e b b i e
SUNVA busline. Reasonable rent. C a l U 8 9 Dickman,
ttiMii
Roommates
associated
with
Krishna
Attractive
apart-
ment for September,
own bedroom; new
kitchen,
busline,
rent
Anyone
Wanted.
near SUNYA
457-4397.
b e d r o o m , luxury a p t . 8 m m . f r o m campus.
S100
Call
__
n i s h e d , f r o m J u n e till A u g u s t S 6 0 p e r m o n t h
on S
a
Lake Ave
fur-
Park
Middlebury
College.
termediate
in
VERMONT',?
Chinese,
Japanese,
.__..-
B e g i n n i n g , in-
French,
T h a n * f o r a GREAT
Sue
ALL STUDENT
three b e d r o o m
apt
two
One
year
Uppetclass
p r e f e r r e d . Reply
12222
or G r a d
H O W A R D SOMMERS tithe one a n d onlyj
blocks
students
&
SUMMER
M o i/.
number
22 s the magic
FLIGHTS
RAIL
PASSESw h o else?
B o . 5 4 8 EB S U N Y A l b a n y ,
Include p h o n e
EASTER
At l o s t , y o u i very o w n !
number1
TOURS
SIGHTSEEING
LOW L O W
PRICES
lingual
Write
Room
124,
Center,
Female
roommate
wanted
404-Hamillon. Albany
negotiable
Giod
Molly alter
6 p m
immediately
Ownbedroom
Rent
student p r e l e r r e d
Call
N o t o n l y t h e ugliest m a n , b u t i h e u g l i e s l
N E W YORK, N Y .
Streaker o n the Q u o d
37,3532
§UNYA Hciire§s
Rdcirt Club
Next Meeting:
Speaker:
Tom
Cunningham
Thursday,
March 21
Sports Editor,
8:30 pm
Albany
l i m e s Union
IX 1
All are invited to
GLOBAL TRAVEL SERVICE, 52(
FIFTH AVE.,
4 3 4 2 5 2 2 or 4 3 8 3 3 6 8
winch
peiMill
he
In
'2
I,,
I-
a
mini
ami
I Iu
I he
ie.il
nl
I ejiut.lt mil
ihe
lighted
and h n l s e s l l n c
a hall m i l e s
ailing
iuad
(ilcn
linusiiigunil
and
is Inealed
a
past
the
llnlll
in I'Jss
i u lire s k i n w i l l u p e n ,
llieiuseties.
seeniid
and
is i l l . i l
cluse
ihe
sauna,
leinpei.miles
evccedlllg
|-„„h
sv,ess
and
,\\\
Ihe
leaching
150
I I ,,,
ill
cleanse
i.ipidlv
i idle
,, alei .
Iwn
will
Ihe
cold
lumbinaliun
ivvn
sleep.'
s.us nne
s,.n,i
binned
weeks
duwu
balhei
a g o . ihe sauna
(
was
,,iisei|uciillv.
Ihe
il tins
siuilinei
small
piupcitv
In I'j7l) il w a s i c n i o d c l c d
c\-
1,11111) a n d a h u n k h e d
Ilium
••'--
''
mj.j,;f*~':::
t u t s Inn On patliiin ,1,, « a j |(liJl||f. I)i|i|iikill retreat.
i ,T is ii e n i i ' v e had twelve bonis n l
has been a l l o c a t e d I " lehuild
I al nlllnlise.
fr-
, . , u , n e s this budv heal su i l l . I I . "V n i l
iiniiiev
leusneK when lite inul partially
,iill.i|ive,l due In an cMiemeb Ileal V
siumlall II has a capucliv. nl 2(1 penpi, and has i h i e i l.nge innins. a li\ mi; in,mi \ u l i a liicplaee. a kucheii-
asked
i.ilises
Hie l u s i is d i a l Ihe
btealhtaklng
pnuliased m i l l Iheniigmal
l
pules
ell.lllgi
In ,neiii
pits.
(i 1
Siuee lis i i l l g l i i a l purchase in | O j 5
Im Slll.lltlll. D i p p i k i l l lias n,,w
appieei.ileil
In
a etiireivt
been
value
ul
s inn.mill. I his appreciation ivduc lo
the addition ul die new huildmgsand
•>1 n suppliiueiuaiv acreage.
I be camp was ublamed h u m luui
seji.n.ne l.uiduwnciv due Iu the
pel seven nie ul inaiiv students and
la. nil v ineinbei v at die tune who k i t
in.ii the college needed a let real.
I
I')s.s.ni(,7. die usage nl Dip- iv. ,,|,| logging camps m iirdet iu
inkill ave'aged ahiiul 311 peuple pel
u-iunve die nnibei
ludav. these
•vii ['In-- ihe occasional held hips ..nne nails aie niainlamed bv band,
made bv ihe lliulugv dcpailiiicnl
I he i.uel.ikeiv. ,,i huiiscpaienls.
Ilni -nice ihe coinplciioii ul the as Hiev pielei to he called are two
N.iiihwa,. deei casing diivmg lime, i m m n graduates ul SI'N't Alhanv.
and lbs aieesvibiluv ul d o l e Mniiii- Kick and Till Nelson Kick. 2'1.
l,mi ski nails l u i i l , III miles bum aands a luliv d'.V with icd hair.
i.iinpi. Dippikill hasavciagedabout
lieaid and niouvtaclte lie has been
liiou |ieisuns pei ic.ii
die catctakei lor sis yeaisand holds v
D i i v i u g i u t h e t a i n p l r u m Albany
. i l ' b D u i \imuspheric Sciences. Jill.
leipliies ahoiu
I
bonis
W i t h o u t il
i.ii.
Vlnnnd.iik
liuilwavs Hue
i .unpaiiv hiinisliesdailv senicelui
d n i p i k k e l ul appiosiinalelv
^ '
, n
I he Im
d a ball miles nl ii.ulv
at Dippikill vveie bla/ed and cut out
_>(,. ,s a
Social
Studies
( I n die m a d
lo D i p p i k i l l . a sign
nils die visum that 2< miles nl mu i slate «7 hetvveen Lake Cieorgeand
Dippikill was awarded both in l%6
Im ihe I Jepailineiil ol wtinosphcnc
,uul
SU,II„S , , i s l \ l
lie is cinienllv
involved in hndiiig the uses ul solai
Ingliwav I Ins is the prelude In the
naiiqiul splendui tli.it is Dippikill
n
studenlslundeigiud
and
|on7
tut
the
must
scenic
Dippikill Sauna
gin
handicapped.
Positions
in
10036 CALL:
.emevteis.
icccssuiy
Nu
To Be Rebuilt
e.\pciicii
Contact
I
I •'
Kailey. Oiiice id Smdeiti I
212
CC I U . 457-12%.
I.,,
^
Tonight at 9 PM.
uiip
Dippikill
In
I
Don McLean
a,
held m i
•
in,.i
pi
doM-iiuiig
islv passed.i m o t i o n
, I pi,II
\
an
e.iiiigcncv
Moiidav
,11
ianl.il.il
lh,
,
-a
,
,.,,. ,1 i n, I . I,,u I I
Iunalelv
lh
•
l,
,
ii ,l
,.
,,..1
p.
REMEMBER
.I,.
wall
Vi lute
Se, „ „
i,,
si,,p
II.,
lilllr.'
1,111 W i n
mi,.,
V,,,,i,linr
. I I , a , L,
lli.
accepted
veals
I liiecnu "I M ildiiil
ni.l
nil
has
i.onp I
« •- p a s s i d
',
i"
\ss!,
Vluihcs
I
aid. a
.,
Ma,km
s K|MI
\ - s , . , .. n u l l
. spiinli.i
II. i
I me
hum
In
saw
In N i l s , , I I . d u
islablis
in,! k n .
s.dvageabk
appimeil.
.
,
Nel
DINNER TOMORROW
,
,
,
could olilv
n.
lollsidci
III.
uesign
n ,,l die new sauna
on
I n n , die h i e d o o i
was opened,
hut
linn.,I
most
siiiek
iinpolTalll
..ui., ,,i in, i n , as "ilie absence ul
' pcoph
TUESDAY, MAHCH 1'J
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
die
new
i i u i l v loi suuiniei
eoiiiciTlin
Hi.
in
lb, ,
III,
liliuhl,
mv
. . , ' i d l l l g i., I ' m i l l l d i i l
slow
sni.ii.,
has heen i . i s i . a l l v
Hie
hop-
ing I m i n n i e saklv and elhciencv
FOOD FAST FOR TELETHON
TUESDAY, MAHCII l'>, !''••
,,p
laniiess
wevei
nnl
tundeil /'i
— — — — — — — i
I,, a l ,
involv.,
- v.nnp h
„ , I,
I- ., , , , n
s i , . , , I,,.,i
" ' " i pcoph
, , l I.-. K n h . i u l
i, l a m p
T.
'I " " . " s ,
'>
•, I . U K . S ,,l l h , l i i i w l u e l i i o n i
,
•IN.
M M H I t t t H I M
^•••••••••••cm —
Dippikill
sauna
'Heeling
WSUA Interviews
Radio 6 4 0 am
(
It,,.,,,I „ u .
attend
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
suhslilule
eneiev as a pnwci source. He has
hopes dial the nest building a! Dippikill will be lun bv eiihei sulai
encigv ui wind gusls.
I ive miles liuiii Dippikill isa 2(KI0
aeie pine loiest owned bv Syracuse
I invcisilv Schuul ul I mcsli v 111 Hie
imiue. Kick would like in arrange a
euuperalive eschangc piogram
heiueeii ihe twu univeisiiies. using
boili utilities.
icnehei and holds a Masters degree
u, seeoiulan education
I lining the week. Kick also woiks
h a n d i ea p p
—————————————————————g
PAGE TEN
pllvsinlupi-al
open t o begin s u m m e i and- m l
WRITE
language
( C
REWARD
free;
I he last nl the lodgings consists ol'
a small, isolated, primitive cabin lor
those win, piulei In rough il. Hunk
beds and a ivimd stuve are lite mil)
iiimcincnccs anil watei iiiusl he
diawii I null a neaibv stream.
l (lie nl lire ntnst piipulal lealines
al I iippikill is,in outdoor, veal I U I I iid sauna I he best nine in e \ pci ii-nec ihe sauna is in the Inw
leinpei.nines ul winter. V leap into
Hi, pond nl u's nut l i o / c n uverl.
i. In, h is ,,id\ l.s led h u m Ihe diiol.
i l u . i l l v all,i vi.mls piudnees an e-\Inlei aline I., hue 1 hi,nigh,ml line's
eiiiii i
being
I he i s i i e m e
Readers also needed lor visiia
• HOTELS ETC
OUR 6th RELIABLE YEAR AT ALBANY
career
questions
HI
needed It) help w i t h dnilv
SERVICES
u n d e r g r a d u a t e , or p l a n f o r a m u l t i -
Sunderland
1m
Pork j
Construction "I
'he
third
Iniikhng. a large New England pine
I ng Cabin, vvascompleted in l'17l at
a imal cost ol S25.1KK). It has room
itir 2(1 persons and boasts a wide
center lircplncc Im heal and light, a
wood stuve. a pitcher pump lor
water, a second Hour balcony lor
sleeping, and an outside porch. Huds
and s,|uuiels also make their temporarv homes around Ihe Log
I abin.
Salaried a t t e n d a n t - r u n mnia
EUROPE ' 74
(The O l d Ladyj
German,
M i d d l e b u r y , VT 0 5 7 5 3
return
lines
For r e m
Dep.nl
I aeihlii". include gas lights. Ileal.
Love l o y o u a l l ,
43B-80B7
f r o m busline A v a i l a b l e June I Lease terms
B e g i n a d v a n c e d d e g r e e w o r k as a n
Red D o w .
"19th'
on
intensive
Russian, S p a n i s h .
LOST
,Inline
Think
and advanced
iiiudiitg
«-i rolls <J'G
To a l l m y w o n d e r f u l S e n e c a f r i e n d s ,
M a l e G r a d u a t e Student needed lor large,
apartment
ui .1
h o w d o y o u p u t u p w i t h it ( m e )
Call Allyn. 45? 7969
convenient
h.id
Sciuccs
each
leiluecd
i ileuli.iiise.
test
Phone
buslme
Italian,
a p t . , tully
across f r o m W a s h
Righl off bus-l.ne
comfortable,
study
3 bedroom
capucliv
I lus is ihe mih building thai was
H i e h s l i l i a s a n e w h e a d . Let's h o p e it helps
Subleasing
. S U M M E R IN
linllilillg
u. - h .
D e l t a S o r o r i t y for a n o f f i c i a l s t r e a k i n g con-
vacations
lh.it
Dippikill
nllcvhall
Look o u l w l i ( - i ) M I
Suson
4591898.
instructors, part-time now, full-time d u r i n g
489-361 I
3I.IIK
D a n i e l { D a n n y B o y ] L m d e r m a n is b a c k !
wanted—own
A B C D r i v i n g S c h o o l invites a p p l i c a t i o n s f o i
d i r e c t o r for summer d a y c a m p in :ity
ond
T h e t u x e d o w a s w o r t h it — a l m o s t . Sorry
roommate
kitchen
us hiu d u e l , i . i i c -
Health
heen
iHiilges
Danny,
Responsible
A l b a n y G i r l s ' C l u b seeks g r o u p l e a d e r s a n d
negative
reasonable
con
438-0853.
il
'jolw.k/
I GB
W e l l all right!
JGDM
Call 489-1626.
sciousness ( B h a k t i - Y o g a ) p l e a s e c o n t a c t Ron
"I
I hie.
Ga.lsiein
building
.i
1.11-III s . j i i a u I eel. l he nee li pa nc v
lias
Hope you are
loo1
1 .is n i l \
il. .n,iip.inls
I I . M I S , I. still I I I , largest
f J II
nl
Sludilil
i d , i hi Hi, N V M a l e
"' ""
I Q I -1st- g u n a l o t 1
1 gut
yet?
mih
lis
k m
.1. in.niilcd
i
The Sieve
I'm so m a d a b o u t H a r r y
3
_
The H a r r y .
Do y o u r e m e m b e r t h e m e s s a g e
1626.
1, t
r.Viy M I I . v l i u l i a w UAI .O
may be
sober too l o n g
near
489-5359
m i
D o n ' t stay
i.ibl,
mem
t o A r t h u r S t e r n , w h e r e v e r ( a n d w h o e v e r j he
B i r t h d a y f o r ' h e next ' 0 0 y e a r s
I his
inl.ll n l U N , , , I
f e s , I'm t h e o n e w h o p u t t h o s e i n . Yes, I
H o p p y St. Patricks D a y o n d a l a t e H a p p y
bv
in,ni
HIIHKII,
pail
bv
is o w n e d
\ss
pievnuislv
S75. Bill 457-5024.
an
Attractive
Hi, i . u h
IIUIII.I
sinve. relrigeratnr. a hand pump lor
water and an nuthouse.
lliiugs
Broad
Sue H
II..us.
in,,si
pmig
H o w (u;y
and
less 11i.i11
t o It.
SBL ( b e t t e r k n o w n as L E R N A ) :
r e a l l y d i d it This t i m e , t o o . H a p p y l a s t w e e k .
482-8432.
Mil.
h'l
1,1,1 h i l l , , „ . ! t i l t hllllllll'S. I,.,Ills. .Ill
known
ugain
399-
B820. 8 9 9 - 2 5 5 3 after 6 p.m.
Call Judy after 6. 457-8958.
Bozo.
Theses,
Phone
Glad
leuted
.in.
M u d . HI
To l l i e bc".t i m p c r s o n a t o i u t d o y i
Sig,
u] M I L ee|lup-
Kiev
,|.|,
| V 1
\vMHialniii.
Dave
Coldspot refrigerator—2Vi cubic feet, S50.
upkeep
an
I IK < , K i ,
111.
L o v e y a , Sue
Doug W.-
v
,:.,
d a y nite.
might a d d !
Typing d o n e in m y h o m e . 8 6 9 - 2 4 7 4 .
S
W h y d i d w e g o 7 ( H a d a g o o d li ,e
i o n g s a n d f r i e n d s h i p . Y o u w e r e G R E A T Sun-
Typing Service, 439-5765.
Two Jeljien 4 stereo 3-way speakers. Retail
ami
SUeping
STL.USI
$20. 482-
1493.
I beie .lie Itun mam laeihlics Im
overnight euesis and nianv eainpsiu-s llinillglnuil the ptupcrlv. Kales
.iu- gciicrnllv S| mi-sr nil pel dnv
I Ins niimev helps in p;i> Im the
I
F u r n a t u r e a n d a p p l i a n c e s . Low rotes. J o h n
The W h o ?
Fisher 160-T FM Stereo Receiver. 40 watts.
Watet I Inns I m in the surrounding
•\diiondack mountains In form a
liirtv acre pond which istichinhuss
and excellent Im ice lishing in
winter, I he earelullv laid iniiuntain
trails provide such spmts ,is cross
couutrv skiing, inmininui climbing
and suovvshoeing
1 might add..
Kerwm, 457-5194; Run Sturn, 457-5201
S130. 489-6661.
Nestled deep in the calm Adirondack forests lies a preserved surrealistic beauty called Camp Dippikill. A scenic paradise. Dippikill
comprises K4(l sprawling acres til
nature available lor use by the
students, lacultv. stall, and alumni
nl S.U.N.'I. Mhanv
i leaning
crack
12203.
eight-track cartridge tapes. Connection for
•radio. 3 months old. Was S230, sacrifice
SA's Camp Dippikill: Get Away Retreat
H e r e a r e t h o s e l o c a l l i s t i n g s I t o l d y o u to
l u u i i the s . i u n n d u i i i i g . i lime
sauna
w II
II
be
use
( hanvd I n n u d e i g l a d u a l c
James
sieuieii. ( amp Ho,ml is composed
ul sllidellls. l a u i l l v
J
and
skill
AGE ELEVEN
The Dippikill Winter:how-Covered Hideaway
•
• •
1/ p a l
ZtSH
«
I
photos by david slawsky
'AGE TWELVE
i'j, n/-\
'AGE THIRTEEN
T
Assemblyman Antonio Olivieri a*
Application! for April 20 DAT
and May 4 MCA f a r e available in Un- candidate for the Democratic
iversity College. Deadlines for applica- Nomination for U. Governor of NY
will speak in CC 315, Wed. March 20
tion: DAT March 25 MCAT April 12.
at 12 noon. Sponsored by the Undergraduate Political Science Assoc.
Community
Service Students:
20 at 4 PM in the Humanities Lounge.
There will be a wine — coffee hour
following the talk, to meet and talk
with the speaker.
Summer Schedule of Classes is
available to students planning to attend summer school. The summer session bulletin will be available April B in
the Summer Session office AD 332.
Psychodrama
Workshops Ken
Byrne, Staff Member of Moreno kistitute Wed. March 20 LC 1 10 AM —
12 PM, 1:30 — 4 PM. Sponsored by
Dept. of Counseling and Personnel Ser-
** *
Peace Project wants to meet you.
Come visit us SS 375 Office Hrs. MonEvaluation sessions are going on now.
Medical Moral Seminar will be on day 11 — 2, Tues. 12 — 2, Wed. 12 —
Make sure you Attend on between now
and April 4 if you want to pass the some ethical dimensions in the Gay 2., Thurs. 9:30 — 11:30. We have a
Revolution Chopel Mouse, Thurs. Mar. weekly mtg. Thurs 3:30 SS 375.
course.
21 8 PM.
•* •
** *
Attention All Business Majors The
Outing Club Meeting Wed. 7:30 in
Professional Business Fraternity Delta CC 315. Caving, hiking, cycling trips.
Sigma Pi will present John A. Pallone to All welcome.
speak on The Electric and Gas Utility.
Questions are invited. Thurs. Mar. 'i 21
Sailing Club meeting on Wed. nites
3:30 BA 118.
at 7 PM in HU 111. We are having spring sailing on the weekends and
Computer Science Dept. Colhquia beginner sailing lessonsWed. and Sun.
Prof. C. L. Liu, Computer Science Dept. Come and join us.
Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, III. speaking
on A Combinatorial
Study of
Gay Alliance meets Tues. evenings
Scheduling Algorithms. March 21 LC at 8 in CC 315, Interested persons are
23, 2 pm.
encouraged to attend.
Students interested in obtaining
copies of statements describing theBA,
MA, or Doctor of Philosophy
programs in Political Science may
pick them up in Mohawk Tower 901 or
1010. Included with the BA statement is
information about an alternative to
Law School: A
Public Law grad
program.
Geology Club Members and Non
Members the Spring Field trip season
will soon be upon us. Come to our first
meeting and help us decide |ust what
the Geology Club will explore and
when it will all happen Wed March 20
7 PM ES 350. Be SUN; to be there!
The Pre law Society is forming a
committee to view legislation with the
Capital District Trial Lawyers Assoaa
Hon. If you ure inteiested call Sieve (7
5200)oi Rob(/
4301| tor luither
information
Do you speafe Chinese? Practice
speaking Mandarin with Chinese
speakeis and other students. Every
lues and Wed We meet on Indian
Quad m t'ie buck ol the dining room
(past the partition) al lunch-time Join
Current and future applicants to
professional health schools (medical,
dentul, veterinary, ott ) interested in
learning about US nrmed services
Scholarship
program
contact I*
Roonoy m Umv College [7
8335) ot
b Kul/ 1/
5376) Man March 18
1
The Match meeting of the Young
Republican Club will be held on Tues,
March 19 at 7 30 in CC 370. Members
are urged to attend and all interested
parlies are welcome. For more info call
Babette at 7 4741.
tonight March 19 at 7:30 in CC
Assembh Hall the SUNYA Women's
Lihetati >n Group is holding its first
genen spring meeting at which The
Women's Film will be shown. This film
cj " . on overall view ol the movement
to late Eveiyone is welcome.
Russian Club is sponsoring an informal pi esenlation of Slides of the Soviet
Union tonight March 19 at 7;30 PM in
IC 5 Refreshments will be served.
The Bahai Club will hold fireside
discussions on the Bahai Faith every
Wed m CC 333 ot 8 PM These
in i'i-lings ore opt'n to all in to res led
members ol the community Foi further
info cull Michael ul 465
8053 or Sandy at 436
1409
There will be an organizational
meeting ol students and faculty sup
porting Ramsey Clark's Campaign
loi Senator on lues March 19 at 7 PM
in HU 108
joooocooooocooononooooooi
interested folk
anoooia——————
Got a gripe? Bring it in to Grievance
Committee Office. Hours in CC 308
areMon3 — 4, Tues 10— 11,3:30 —
4:30, Wed. 10 - 11, 2— 4, Thurs3:30
— 4:30, Fri 1 — 3. Come in or fill it out
and drop it in the gripe box in the lobby of the Campus Center (across from
info desk).
Urgent Anyone interested in working for Telethon Operations committee on props, checking, or lighting,
please call Beth 482 — 4117 immediately!
Anyone interested in working on
Student Evaluation of teachers and
courses Contact Dave 7 — 5238.
The SUNYA Synchronized Swim
Club is hosting the Eastern Intercollegiate Synchronized Swimming
Conference Routine Competition at
the SUNYA Pool on Fri. March 22 and
Sat. March 23. Competition begins Fri
at 7 PM and Sat at 9:30 AM The public
is welcome and admission is free.
Need a friend? A friendly ear? A
place to rap? Call the 5300 Middle
Earth Switchboard with any problem.
It we can't help, we'll refer you to
someone who can. Give a call anytime.
•* *
Biology Club will hold elections for
all officers this Wed. March'20 at 8:15
PM in Bio 248. All inivted. All can vote
— come and run.
Tri Beta Meeting on Teacher
Evaluations. Thurs. 8 PM in Bio 248. All
Problems with University library
invited.
fn Allen Center
Colloquium
can be submitted in box in lobby or
brought to Nora, on Wed. from 2 — 4 Speaker -• Draper Hall, Thurs. March
2 1 3 PM Liberation of Women Form or
in CC 308.
Rendstion? Joan Schulz SUNYA
The ASP is accepting copy for Kick in English Dept , Cynthia Secor NLA ComIsraeli Dancing Every Thurs night
the ASP (our humor issue). Deadline mission on the Status of Women,
for contributions is March 20, 4 PM. Catherine Stimpson Barnard College 8:30 Pm to 10:30 PM, In the Dance
Please bring all material to CC 326. Women's 5tudies. Discussion will studio on the third floor of the gym.
follow.
Learn new dances all the time
beginners welcome.
Telethon 74 is coming March 22 —
Mr. Donald H. Reiman, a dis23.
linguished Shelley Scholar and editor,
International Folk Dancing. From6
- 8:30 PM Thursdays 3rd floor of the
Every Tues. there will be on Israeli and Fellow at the Pforzheimer Library,
Info Table in the CC Main lobby from 9 will give a talk on Editorial and gym. Come any time, a great study
Critical Probe/ms in Nineteenth Cen- break
Beginners welcome.
3 Sponsored by JSC
tury Poetry on Wed. afternoon, March _
What to do
Anyone who has a question or wants
action fiom the University
Senate
please contact Mitch Kassoff Senator
from Dutch Quad at Box 66. Thank
Women's Recreation Association is
sponsoring Softball Intramurals tor
Women. All interested persons or
teams should sign up in Rm 245 PEC.
The deadline for team entries is March
25
Applications lor Editor in Chief of
the ASP are available in CC 326,
Deadline foi applying March 22
TACO J's
577 NEW SCOTLAND AVE, ALBANY (Opp. St. P»t»r't Hotpital)
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MONDAY MIGHT DMWING 9TUDIO
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WITH INSTRUCTION
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IwGDNG^dY NIGHT DMWING
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me Am 3RD FLOOR POINTING STUDIO
DOTH WITH LN€ MODGLfl BOTH tt€€l
(uiulud by student kssooiiUtan
TUESDAY, M A B C ' l l I' 1
I' 1 ''' 1
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE FIFTEEN
I
i—
:
^—±-
editorial/comment
Q u o t e of t h e D a y
.
It d r a w s n o uccusatory conclusions. It deprives n o o n e ol a n ollicial l o r u m
letters
ill which t o respond. It contains n o r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . . . . It renders no m o r a l
o r social j u d g m e n t s . I h c report is a simple and straightforward c o m p i l a t i o n
ol information gathered by the grand jury and no m o r e . "
-federal Judge
John J. Sirivu on the seeret Rruttd jury
report.
ISearch For Tomorrow
Tactical Maneuver
subsequently and wrongly accepted as t r u e . I
mean no h a r m or malice to M s . Wilder. I
apologize if I have in any way offended her.
However. I feel moved to point out that t h e
tactics which Ms. Wilder employed in her d i s cussion of a relatively insignificant issue a r c
not at all unlike the tactics employed by such
men as Adolf Hitler. Joseph M c C a r t h y , a n d
Richard Nixon in their 'discussions' of a b solutely vital issues.
Dave Wainwright
(Dutch parking lot)
I o the Editor:
It is n o w a l m o s t c e r t a i n t h a t t h e A d m i n s t r a t i o n will, in t a c t , a p p o i n t R i c h a r d K e n a n a c t i o n , will, w i t h o u t a d o u b t , b e t h e m o s t d i s a s t r o u s a d m i n i s t r a t i v e a p p o i n t m e n t
t o b e m a d e a t t h i s U n i v e r s i t y in y e a r s .
T h e H i s t o r y D e p a r t m e n t h a s written letters of s u p p o r t for their p r o m o t e d
Chairman,
and
have
condemned
criticisms
of
Kendall's
Depart-
views
and
q u a l i f i c a t i o n s in a c a d e m i a . b u t t h e y c a n n o t d i s e o u t t h i s s a l i e n t f a c t o r t h a t f a r t o o
m a n y of t h e c o n c e r n e d f a c u l t y , a n d a n e v e n g r e a t e r p r o p o r t i o n of t h e c o n c e r n e d
s t u d e n t s , d o not a p p r o v e of R i c h a r d Kendall.
1 hey d i d n o t like h i m w h e n h e w a s
C h a i r m a n o i h i s D e p a r t m e n t , a n d t h e y will like h i m t h a t m u c h less w h e n he is
promoted to Dean.
I he S e a r c h C o m m i t t e e c o u l d n o t . a l t e r t h e i r careful d e l i b e r a t i o n s o n e a c h c a n d i d a t e , a r r i v e at a n a c c e p t a b l e n o m i n e e for t h e p o s t .
m i t l c e did it i n m o s t t o r e a c h s u c h a d e c i s i o n .
at n o t h i n g .
In t h e o r y , t h e S e a r c h C o i t i -
I'hej h a d all t h e facts. Net they a r r i v e d
II t-lxecut'nc V i c e - P r e s i d e n t S i r o l k i n n o w a p p o i n t s K e n d a l l , he will he
s a y i n g t h a i h e knew m o r e a b o u t t h e m a n t h a n t h e S e a r c h I o m m i t t e e , w h i c h l i a s e x actly been o u r p o s i t i o n l o r m o n t h s .
A Mlal l a e l o i
m u s t he c o n s i d e r e d w h e n a n y o n e is o b s e r v i n g lite c u r r e n t issue.
P r e s i d e n t H e n e / e t . s i n c e h i s a n n o u n c e d r e t i r e m e n t , is m a r k i n g t i m e . A s i s c u s i o m a r v
w u l i any d r a s t i c c h a n g e in t h e b u r e a u c r a c y , n is p r o b a b l e t h a t t h e e n t i r e
e c h e l o n A d m i n i s t r a t i o n will l e a \ e i m m e d i a t e l y I n f l o w i n g U e n e / e t ' s d e p a r t u r e .
we a r e l a c e d w i t h a sil n a t i o n w h e r e u p o n a
ting a permanent
upper
1 has
l a m e d u c k a d m i n i s t r a t i o n is a p p o i n -
D e a n t o a p o s i t i o n t h a i c o u l d mil he lilled hy a duly
appointed
C o m m i t t e e ol t h e S e n a t e . S i r o l k i n will, in a l l p r o b a b i l i t y be l e a v i n g , hut K e n d a l l , his
p e c u l i a r v i e w s ol a c a d e m i e s not w i t h s t a n d i n g , will he h e r e pel m a n e n t l y .
1 ,ii t o o m a n y ol t h e lacully o p p o s e h i m a n d . m o r e i m p o r t a n t l y , l-.ir l o o m a n y ol t h e
s t u d e n t s o p p o s e h i m . Liven a lew ol t h e A d m i n i s t r a t o r s a r e n ' t l o o p l e a s e d a b o u t his
imminent appointment.
I he c a u s e ol h i g h e r a c a d e m i c s h a v e , loi a l l i n t e n t s a n d p u r -
p o s e d , been completely eliminated from a d m i n i s t r a t i v e d i s c u s s i o n s .
I h e i r s ntnsl be a
h i g h e r g o a l t h a n t h e m e r e p u i s u i l ol e x c e l l e n c e in e d u e a l i o n ; il s o . we w o u l d like t o
k n o w its n a t u r e .
W o u l d P e n e / e l like t o see a R i c h a r d K e n d a l l as t h e living t u b u l e t o his I mil veai
reign'.'
II s o . we w o u l d like l o k n o w w h y .
perpetuation
will r e s u l t in t h e
ol s e l l - s e r v i n g a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , t h e n we a r e s u r e t h a t this
w o u l d he i n t e r e s t e d ,
academically
II his a p p o i n t m e n t
University
H u t il Ihc e x c u s e is t h a t a K e n d a l l - r u n D i v i s i o n w o u l d
t h a t t h e " K e n d a l l or n o t h i n g " a l m o s p h e r e w a s p r e s e n t b e l o r c t h e C o m m i t t e e e v e r
What's On TAP?
convened.
resignation
ol live P r e s i d e n t , a n d t h e n a t u r e of t h e t o p n o n - r e c o m m e n d e d c a n d i d a t e , t h e S e n a t e
vvuuld he w e l l - a d v i s e d t o c o n d u c t a n i n v e s t i g a t i o n i n t o t h e o p e r a t i o n ol t h e S e a r c h
Shy ( . l i n n vim Nnslil/S>5St:rK:WSsS:WS:WS:::::W
C o m m i t t e e , a n d t o d e t e r m i n e w h a l il a n y t h i n g c o u l d he d o n e t o p r e v e n t K e n d a l l ' s a p pointment.
Errata
I he \ S P w o u l d like l o a p o l o g i z e l o J o h n C h o w l o r t h e lack ol a p h o t o c r e d i t o n
I h c I r o n i p a g e p i c t u r e in I r i d a y ' s e d i t i o n .
I h c C o l l e g i u m ol l i i d a y . M a r c h
Iheerroi was completely uninlentional.
15. w a s w r i t t e n hy M i c h a e l
K i i i i l i n a n i n s t e a d ol
William Kaul man as slated.
EDITOR IN C i m r
I—>
A
ALBANY
STUDENT
PRESS
A N N E. HI NKiat
BAKKV
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR
BINM.IT
IJAVl!) t.l.HNtH
Niws EDITOR
', Al.BAl i.li. l i i s n i l , \ i s i s \
ASSOCIATE N I W S EDITORS
CITY EDITOR
. ,,.
EDITORIAL PACE EDITOR
..,.'
ARTS EDITOR
:
Si\M. V M i l l l.H
K i s i s IIANIIL!
PREVIEW EDITOR
Il l » |)A\M()N1
SroRTs EDITOR
Urn. i; M A O G I N
ASSOCIATE S r a i i s EDITOR
KbN AHDUINI
ADVERTISING MANAGER
I ,
. . M m
ASSOCIATE ADVERTISING MANAGER
I.IN11A UlSMONO
IT Assiiiii) ADVERTISING MANAGER
l i s ZUCKEHMAS
TECHNICAL EDITOR
( M N I B L CiiAia
•
M A T T Mi.Ybu. M u IIAI.L ROSI.NIKAIIII
ASSOCIATE TECHNICAL EDITORS
JbKKY A l HHh< I I I
•IJSINE&S MANAGER
WbNDV AsilfcK
GRAIFITI EDITOR
ADVIRTISING PRODUCTION
ClIliKlb. Alll.HR, ClNDV BbNNb.II, CiAHV SUSSMAIs
ROB MAGNIEN, DAVID SIIAHIRH
PHOioGRArHV E D I T O R S
O i l ! OFPICfS ARE LOCATED IN CAMPUS C'lIN rB» 326 ANI1 334 AND ol;K PHONES AKt 457-2190 AND 457-2194.
WE
ARE PARTIAI.LV I U N D U D 8 V THE S T U D E N T ASSOCIATION
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I ailniiiiisli.il.us win. eta
.,.,, I, i.ui-. .,,,,1 . , , , I l k . , k m
-si
i"1
i, ,,, p i c a I. l u l l i g i in,,Is
Xels
p.u
K,„l,l,ll.i
a
lilluiiil an,I
ile.l
I nun emplv
si
seals ai llieu iiislilulioiis la
I.m a D o n
ASSOCIATE ARTS EDITOR
:lass.
4) Mr. Halper left out a few crucial facts.
hirst, why is it that as a representative t o t h e
University Senate - a n i m p o r t a n t body which
has met on the average of twice a m o n t h each
school m o n t h this year—you, M r . Halper,
have attended N O M O R E T H A N T H R E E
M l i l i l IN(iS'.' Is (hi., your way of serving your
constituents'? Is this your way of learning the
issues'.'
On a related mailer, alter you resigned from
Central Council very early this year why didn't
you ever come lo any of the meetings'? They
are o p e n . Any student may speak, l u e e m s t o
me thai if you eared so much you would have
allended one or two of these weekly meetings
at leasl. ( M a y b e then you would also k n o w
why wc didn't send EricLonschienout of office.
You would have known the facts.) If you are
elected President, can I be reasonably sure
that you would attend meetings? Dave C o y n e
resigned from Council early in Ihe y e a r a s well
hut he has attended, participated and contributed at every meeting since!
I guess I know why you run for the presidency on a noii-plaiiiirin
of "honesty." Simply,
since vnu never cninc to any meetings y o u
don't knuw what Ihe teal issues are and should
be!
si I n the best nl my knowledge. Dave
I uyne has not staled or indicated a desire to
inn lui the presidency. I wish he would r u n .
ilinugh. lie is highly competent and imaginative, has g u a i insigln into student
inaileis and is univ ei sally respected, bur these
leasons. I would hope thai he could he persuaded tn nut. Huwevei. slander and shaded
I.ids ill \ X I ' lellels lo the edllol such as
m i i i s . Mi llalpci
don't help. And lurther.
Ihev help lu cloud leal issues.
I heie a i e a couple ol good candidates lor
s V piesnleiit I led dial von ,h, noi make that
si
I oi s i u u e u n e w hu | i l u p u i l . l o h e a s t u d e n t
,,I,ovale
VOIII l e e , m l is a d i s g i a c e .
1 ew I-idler
Kousin Ken's Kampus Klips
have been
s t r a n g e , l o say t h e l e a s t . M a n y r e p o r t s h a v e c o m e o u t ol t h e C o m m i t t e e t o I h e e l l e c t
In light ol t h e d e v e l o p m e n t s c o n c e r n i n g t h e D e a n s h i p , t h e a n n o u n c e d
Mr. Halper raised a question a b o u t
ed ucaling people and why Dave Coyne started
all ol ibis so late in the year. T h e answer is simple. I he idea came lo Dave Coyne lute in the
year. Obviously. Ihc concept must come
hclorc the fuel. O n e must also question why
Mr Halper never did think of or establish
such a potentially valuable organization
hiinseH'.' Dave Coyne comes up with an innnvalive idea which Wayne Halper never
came u p with and Wayne Halper has the %all
lu chide him with coming up with the idea so
line'.' I low can s o m e o n e attack a n o t h e r person
lui allegedly being a ".Inhnny-eome-lately"
when he hiinsell is a ".luhnny-never-comc-atall""
Castles Burning
bean
h e l l e r D i v i s i o n , t h e n n o o n e will be t o o l e d hy Ihc r h e t o r i c .
I he p r o c e e d i n g s o l t h e S e a r c h C o m m i t t e e in r e g a r d s l o t h i s m a l l e i
honest, forthright a n d direct people it has been
my pleasure to know. He never hesitates l o s a y
what he feels and he d o e s so tactfully a n d with
In reply lo Nancy Wilder's letter in
Tuesday's A S P (3-5-74) concerning Ihe issue
of segregated parking I have several remarks
In the f.ditor:
some of which deal with that issue and more of
I a m writing this in response In a c o m m e n t
which deal with the letter itself. Ms. Wilder
made in ihe edilorial in Tuesday's A S P conclaims to be a part-time instructor in Ihc
cerning the recommendation ol M o r t o n
\ s tor Dave Coyne's short career as Council
l-nglish Department. Yet, the many holes and
Kuplon tn be the new Dean ol Arts and reporter lo the A S P . ii should be noted that
flaws in her "argument" lead one to either
Sciences: " M m tun is an anachronism of times Dave Coyne's article was die most iaclmil. acsuspect that she is an impostor, or t o recomw hen students ate goldfish mid were mure cim- curate' and objective article written in the A S P
mend that she spend the rest of her time in the
eerned with 'rush' lunelions than
effective abnui C uuncil this year, r ' u r t h e r m o r e . it was
I nghsh Department auditing a Ireshman
governance ul iheu institutions loi higher nut M i . Coyne's choice not lu write the C o u n composition course. I don't mean In he 111- learning." I dn not know the candidate incil ailicles Ironi the beginning ol the year.
siilling, Ms. Wilder, but a n argument as poorvolved, so I cannot debate the accuracy of lire I diluis assign reporters to sluries. (Since you
ly presented as was yours simply begs lor
cdtloiial However, I resent the implication in seem lu dunk dial reporting on Council
rebuttal. Its specilie Haws are: h y m n eunteiiI lie statement above thai sni u n t i e s u ml frater- iiiceluigs in the ASP is an option open lo
lion inipliealinii Ihat residenl students' cars
nities aie .in,nhi,iiiiMns ion] the g o l d h s b - everyone, why didn't you write an article or
are rarely used "ears ol resident students
I'.mngeia
two. Mi. Halper'.' Also w hat is wrung vviih the
who haven't mnved them Ini days. ,,t even
(neck oigain/ations aie composed ul in- "detail" nl the article that Dave Coyne wrote'.'
weeks" is lllisuhslanlialeil: hnw nianv calx
dividuals o| d u ei s e h a e k g i o u n d s a n d inlcrests. Detail is line as lung as il is accurate as il
alen'l mnved'.' O n e ' A lew'.1 Sonic'.' Many''
Mosi nl I hem are intelligent, articulate, in- was I
Musi'.', and how tie i n n know hnw otten these
inlved people
(neck nlgalli/atlulls play
Since Mi llalpci correctly appreciates
eais are used'.'(Pel haps this explains Ihe hast v
seveial i n k s on ihis campus Ihe must o b - ihieeluess. dnec'l I'll bepiep.u alum ul xiini lellei
\ u u \ c been spen
nous
,-. sou.il l a i n always hearing people
ll I a m not iitnnnix bu S A President or
ding all yum lice nine watching lite parking
• iv Hi.il ill,i, is no l l n n g l o d o a i Albany Stale, Vue President, \iicl I was nor requested to
luls.'l. 2) >nil seem lu helleve thai ill,ae is a
l u e i i hi, ..ll. n ,,n alternative lu llns silua- n i n e this lellei bv anvuiie I Particularly nut
positive eulielallon between where a lesidenl
I ion l i n , ks al.,. pa i I m p a l e in seveial service hi Have ( oviie I
student pai ks his nil ami tile deglee lu w hu h
I
, , i s ihioughoiii ihe year: s p o n s o n n e
!l I don't believe in i h e l o n e . And Mr.
he
possesses
eeil.iiii
pi
aim
hi
Iiuohilis i.using money loi charities. llalpci's "campaign pl.illoim" ol "Honesty
ih.uaelellslies. speeilieallv sellislim .s ami
" oi king I,,, I, lelhoii. pailieipating in II,,1,
.nul Xo Moie Hiillslui" is ihe epitome ol
la/mess: Ihopeyou'll p a i d . m a bllel dep.illuu'
,1 ii Xuie I I lev a Is,, lake pail ill val inusaspe, Is hill I slu, an,l il id I d l e s iclV ll IV Iv lailll ill die inImm Ihe loimal allillytle lone ol this lellei.
"I n l n i . l s i l v a n i l c u i m n u m l y lite. Ill mv
lelhgenee ul ihe \lbanv siudcnl Win don'i
Ms Wihlei. bin I must say dial dial is
. , , , , n l ) a l o n e i n hav c h a d p e o p l e VV Ol k I lip loi ion talk to Ihe leal issues. All llalpci ' Is n
hiillslui
gianied. vnui siatcinenl niosi hi., Is W s l y ihe \ S I ' , and student government
beeause von dun l know llieill '
stems Ironi emolloiialism lalhei than a ,1, , p
w hav, also had members ol Miskenia and
l| I lavnl Covin has been one ol die most
luuled. lune-lesled n u n n laun dial usulenl
so'
1 amlis I ach year we have gtils worksliuleills win, p.uk elnsi lo ih, puihulu ale
uk' at Ihe I upilol as pages tlhe lusl leniale >;
"sellish and la/v" hill il's still hiillslui t |
pages in the Slate Senalel We have winked on ;:
yum slatemeiil dial the p.u king sink, was
.Ul ihe iii.iini puliiieal campaigns. We were :;t
"lllsl one mole sictuiy hu illduleliee and
also I he I n si all-gill team tn play I eaglle I suit, i
greed" is a U s l h o u k , sample ol , iiiulai
hall \ml I'm sine each (ireek u i g a i u / a l i n n :f
leasolimg s u a e ll was a u , l , , n loi sliuleills
m u l d piudiice sinnlai lists ol Iheu ae- «
wlln aie sellish and la/v. il onlv billows that ll loinphsliuieiils
j :
was a u c i o n hn indolence and greed Doesn't
i i-.iii''.
lei ll the a u l h o i ol Voin :$
. .
,, SSerealive Iruth In k e n \Nas
it'
t i n . I I I . I ! h.r
allended a uish tunc I ion. It •:•:
In h a s , , , , he leallv has no nghi lo e, itiei/e ?!
' > K h>'^ " ' K ^ ' k ' " - ' " Hall. D u t c h , threw a
M u s e I ll t e e
Maws
iinsiihslanlialeil
d a l l a s t h e p e r m a n e n t D e a n l o r t h e D i v i s i o n of B e h a v i o r a l a n d S o c i a l ' S c i c n c e s . S u c h
ment
Go Fish
much attention paid t o bringing in others t o be
involved'.' I his is not the way cliques preserve
and sustain themselves.
XV i , ,
w Hi h a s b e e n u p l a n d .11
|, . , , , | , i
in.ai. • aim,,si as k m as llnu inilnin is using
I i, i n . , , 1 I M ' in uldel In alllael sludeiils
,i„l Hill
eieime b.nk In ilk p i n a l e seilol
,i,„,
, uln.liii
ul,I h , p h a s e d ,
Mi, Mi,,,I p l a n n o w b e i n g d i . i w l i
Sen.
tuliald
XI.,11.,,,I.
Senate
I,,
sisluig
legenls
llighei
sihol.nslup
ICI state and k d e i a l p i o g i a m s
nil,, ., llighei I dm.ill,,n Ass,si.nice I o i p o i a
I Ins w o u l d
leiliucljn
i l . a l ,1,1.,IP.
ml
I, ol Uk l.lllk a n d III,
,1
1,1,. 1 ' i . a u . i
Ma.,
Imslalois
u p bv
I , l n . i n , , n I o i i i i n i l l e e e II.III m . i i i . w u i i l d i o n
si .tea.i w
.,1 III, ,. s p , u s , o l l l i , • g . u u i i o i
. H i , a n s Hi.,I XI XV .1 II n o w h a v , l o
I Ik Id,-.ills pioposal i.aim,,si esaellv like
I VI' ililteong nnlv ill lilt
. m i l h i M a l i , , 1 m VV a . , , I , u l . . , is
I" n . i h i ! a s K m k l a n . I In I so i l u s e l v
I XV X l e . u i w h i l i I l k k g l s l . l l l l i e is
'"
Ii
liagllieulali,
"siliei n n i l n u n
lnulailipl
I M
1
.dltli.ligh
w h o h.iv,
i
in.iv
I W
bi
line
i M a U l n i u
linn
doesn't
lllsl
dlleUlv
a pel Hid
ew allslelll
alleel
Ihe
gei ol
al leasl
llidellllile l o n l n i u a l i o u ol Ihe |
l o w l h " peinul
Ms Wildei's si.Hiding nil such shakes
gioiind inav lesiili as much lioin the lack ol
anv liiiuei giuunil. as liuiu hei po.u laellesol
.ilguiuenl \ s I see ll. Illeie is iclV lulle il anv
i.ilui Ie.isumug lu sllppol I seglegaled pal king
\l the same lime I l e a h / e thai l l n u ale m a m
wlln would lelllle llns eunleiiliun some ol
whom h a l e pievinllsli staled lllell liewpuinls
III Ihe \ S I ' Ii, thosi people I would,illel Iwo
l.ieeks II he has. and d e e d e d dial (Ireek hie P''">
' ' " " " '" " K , r d " " " k ' S C " , a " S u n t l a V
,v,
,
, „ „ . tins i s h i s p r e i o g a l i v e : (ireek g " ^ 1 " UK | 1 ; ' " > ' s l , 1 , m c w ; i s U m ' m a n d h e
hie ,s iletuuielv mil In, eve,vune.llovvever.lie g 1 " " k ™ u h l u l s " " " ' ^ ' « « -">J arms...and
soil has „ „ nghl to e,,.,c,/e lllose individuals g * h " s " ' ' " B l o l "B> l c " c , 1 C r w t l 0 ' S h c c " P B r '
^ ( i c i p a l i n g with his IcmutcstudentMtficrclusscs
aim li.i\c Inuml iheu hie nl SU.N^ \ mu
>::;IIRI LS. shall wc sa>, marking them on the
iik'.iiuiigtul hci'iiuse nl ilien membership in a £
l i U V k .WLi.llll/.illi'll.
(ilorhi Unen/ii
g
lints nil ti> J i m . .Mm. Jell. Ci;ir\. Dan. Brian
:•:•;,mil Vlnic who look time Inun iheu reeenl
.•:;siK'.ik in ship m ihe I Hitch Quad dining m o m
-j- .
J
I T i p p e d
I
, . | j
I I
U p
M
' | ,MI u n t i n g . m e p h
P " P ; u ' l ; l ^ c ' " •' L*m»kic...Ci»n saul it lasted
& i e i i i ..C'apilal
ol C a n a d a
is mostly
:*jj \nn'i u a n . . S u i w e s a n l I owei w ill he slaying
a m l>nuli iie\i \ e a i A eerlain quad c o -
lo a lellei u , m e n In | M ' » ' « » <
**>>
lil,kl
^ - 1 'n*>\mg il o v e . t o
Wdvih II.IIIKI I u x ' i u ' im ,mlu u, ,e P K i„
,lnx M u
Hu eu.umls i h , i I -pen, m a m
luniis \u.ikutt! I.M ihe S u u k i u \ssueiain
n
.". „!,..!( M,.iK,l.,mlSr.i.iMln,\c ( u.iiKl I l e d
ni.M.iniiNheuo.kduneHusNeaiwuuldgnln
ilu lui.ntK .1 Mi llalpei u e u elected
I S l ' l U ' l l " l , I C t'1'1 u ' l m - h u t P i i i l , s w c r t l l i x
S
1
^ ' P k an en.e luedness. reports ;1 pre-med
S K l l l l , L ' n l l l u n i l o l o n i a l . . . Kob and Jawie a i e
| h l l t ' k ' 1 ^ " " I he> druppcU d i m n U» thcciiy lot
| ' ^ ^ v k c i u l \ \ elcunve back. K & j .
g
S3EBXB
l u s l lei me eoiiecl llie "Uicls" in Mi
lltip, i - i-, tu i Mi llalpci i h a i g e s U . w d
li.nnes ol ieleieneel.il e \
une llns issue I l i nviic vMili IHHI.LI "one ami llie s a m e " as ihe
II, vy pnliiu.il pai is the I inied Snuleiii
llieiliMilhilhonol p.mei willuii lite I mveisl
I
i Wi as Mi llalpci should kntiu. D a w
11 hei w een
s l u d e n l s ' anil
l.u alls
ailmuiisli.ilion'. 2] I lie lael dial tins lampiis is t in. Me ,I.Ited no positions dining the disciiv
In,me' lui Ihe lesidenl sludenls ,,| Ub.uii
si,HI >i| i In- piupuscd ( onsiiiiitain (which was
Slate ltins, those u hu come here lu win k ul .mu udetl seveial iiinesi Hut iheu again. Mi
si luh ate nul in a completely p.u,die I sit nation llalpci iiiigln noi have known this as Ins m
In those win. h i e hele
I best h a n k s ul u-i.-si .nul desiie woic thin and he lelt lite
leieienee limy induce some piupuncnts ul ineeliug allei a scam hall h u m .
seglegaled p.u king lo i lew the Issue dltleienl
\ s in win niui.iluuis \ M I C sent hi those
Iv And Ihev m.iv mil
nivohed in sludeni go\ei ninenl. I
t |n-ad\
:-:| Blue denim |cnns aie going lo be higon earng p n s [hi-, s p u n g va\s Hewie, oui si\les exSinn
W.ix ihal . l e i u . Pre/, ol Dutch Q u a d i^boaid pumping heei lasi Sal inie'' (iood wrisl
| a c l u m . lei. Hush Hush. What 4 plus 1
In conclusion, my motivation loi wining
llns lellei was iwo-lold. a desiie lu pieselll
smile
Slid
inkai
XI \ \ budget iisell ,1 m u l d hi a h
slalemenls. invalid p.uallels. and elieill.u
ICitsoning aie lelegaled lo a seeond.uy level
ol tllipol lance in ihe h u e ul une lllatul Haw
Ms Wildci uevei mice deals dueetly with ihe
issue al hand, dial issue being n llrlher or not
/,,///,I/M; lnl\ i/iuu/.//,.' ii'en'.e<i/i'./"la „,'i '//,//
liooi i tin till i. \lutt. mill tinninitlliiyi
\utik-nt\.
Xo ,in,i Iv sis ,,l llie aiguinenls lui and ur
agaulsl seglegaled [Xiiking is piesenled Ms
Wil.lei nevei says VV IIV she thinks slu should
l e n i i e special [laiking pnvilcgcs. She is euiileni in base hei stance mi ihe derogatory.
sieicuiipctl. lathei iminaluie [inline which
she paints ul ilie lesidenl sludeiils al Albauv
Stale (win, have e.il s nil e.impusi
d i s c u s s i o n ol I h e s e g l e g a l e d
paiklllg
issue: a n d . mole importantly, lo pnlill up
some ol the illogical, uncle.n, and iiieuiiecl
I 111 n king which, in inv npinion. eoinpiises l.u
lull much ul urn day lu dav Unionise l o o
many stalcmenls. ton many aiguinenls. arc
given a elusory suilace csainuialnni .oui aie
PAGE SEVENTEEN
g i e s i d c t u s . vvho go h\ the names ol Peggs and
$ji 'i.nie. ,ue nulled bct-ausea eerlain columnists
Sdidu'l
pnni
pari
[wo ol his I lorida
g s t o r ) ' N^ill llie hus line he changed to go
g u o i th nevi \ e a i ' I ' t o h a b h not, says e \ e r \ o n e
j&asked
fe
Si
iSaCES?
What icsideilt ol IM Wesieru was seen near
ilimk thai Ihe .inswci is . d m . n i s . II one wishes & llie
Was Hub D\lan al ihe I n e n d s parly I hursd a \ nighi'.' N o . he wasn't., Jim Irom Schuyler
leli a load at Suiter's Mill l n d a > night. His
e n ' s luu i passengers had lo walk hack l o c a m pus .iliei .1 \ sped awa>. stranding them
\ssociales tell me I m n g s l o n tower
lenialcs arc still h c a \ \ on the oral contraception. Seems " l ' \ e gol a headache" works quite
well loi them.. Who was caught caressing a n
uiuleiagcd cabbage in ihe S.A. office d u r i n g
an \.!<.(.". meeting.' W e won't name names hut
he is an ollicial al W'SUA.AVill Marcus C ,
ihe c n g r u u s i , take up this columnists request
lor an inicrvicw? I )rop me a line, s a \ s k . W . lo
MX...
W hal ol ihe rumor that Ihc C a m p u s C'cnle
will he lurncd upside down lor the summer
semester*.' Not loo much. I just made it u p
loot
siill the unit ol measure ii
1 S A...Reports that Nixon will devalue it U;
ten inches, making him ihe lallesl president ir
h i s t o i d .ue unfounded...(.Jiiiups ol culnsts
who inhale the vapors ol h u n t i n g erushe
^\t:.n.\ leaves ,ne proliferating on campus.,
C o m m e n t s to the ellect that lony Iron
Kvckniaii is iguoianl aie pure lubrication
Ihal means he's, I o n \ . . (uilled cheese loi
lunch in ihe dorm dining halls e v e r y g
Wednesday
"lee cream will remain cold
repoiis dair'j higwig Kulus Cuerva. Due to
encigv ciIMS. studies were made a b o u t
developing a product that wouldn't need
iclrigeialion. heeding eov\s llei shev hais wil
cause them to produce chocolate milk say
stupid person liarj I
saiulalion depol gelling Ins ashes
Kudos to Jell S. on undistinguished check
g hauled'.. I he stale q u a d dining room is still
ing award. Jell can be seen in action checking
1,11 sled nit 11 ihe is I hose u h o showed up dis | u u d e i the Mag room.,. Which Heverwyckian is
meal cards I uesday upd 1 hursday dinners o r
w u i n e d a b o u t lelescopes,',,. Is n true that the
aisscd how lo gei i hose who didn't show u p l o
Dulch. .Caslles'iHurninghcauty lip. l o keep a
$ Miami buses leallv went lo l'tuiipe?..,.Cream
t
t. ,|| U | p.u m ip.Ue. I his is s i a n d a i d opci.iclean complexion, avoid having a n elephaiv
nuii loi new gioups Also. Iheic was an A M ' S m vnui eollee.' Noi recently, says one member
step on your lace.
( enlial
Council
Irom hei lower
.uhciliseiuciil loi ihe ineeling and all were in- | o l
' Id next, lime, that's Ken, hrolher
jKtJm in... H.H. and llellv Hoop are ptlll...
\iled In addition, il USI lepicseuts whal Mi
SSSi:ft::::yftS::j:.-%¥::::
%:yftWSft%::¥:::%W
11alpei calls n i " S A clique." why then wussu
h,-.i.ni a u o i g a m / a t i u n , one needs a c o r c u i in
ALBANY LifUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974
M^W^aM"'11'w"''j*'»w*^
our form,\but we can allow it to be determined
by the particular rhythm of tribal consciousness which creates our perception—
created us.
As our bodies do not grow and unfold from
choice and decision, neither do our minds.
Disharmonious and destructive acts arise
automatically from disharmonious conditions. Through the Old Ways,wearcin Harmony with all circumstances—the Correct and
Harmonious course of action is always to be
found in us if we are in touch with ourselves.
columns
Oh, Great Spirit whose voice I hear in the
winds.
Whose breath gives life to the world,
hear me ...
1 come to you as one of your many children.
I am small and weak.
1 need your strength and your wisdom.
May I walk in beauty.
Make my eyes ever behold the red and purple
sunset.
Make mv hands respect the things you have
made.
And my ears .sharp to your voice.
Make me wise so that I may know the things
you have taught your children,
I he lessons you have written in every leal and
rock.
Make me strong.
Not to he superior to my brothers, but to light
my greatest enemyMysell....
Make me ever ready to come to you with
straight eyes
So when lite lades as the lading sunset
My spirit may come to you without shame...
Chict Yellow Lark
wookige
All ol existence Hows through us, and so we
know the Sacredness of all being. It is
knowledge that cannot.be articulated that is
what we are. It is Sacredness that cannot be
grasped or defined, absolute in itself, with no
meaning beyond itself.
Everything is at the center of the universe.
YOU are the center, the locus ol 'the Earth who
Hows through you physically as well as
spiritual!): the air. the water, the li\ ing beings
who leed you. unite your existence,
Everything is defined in relation to you.
Ihc (iiiNit Spun is neilhci inside nor outside us. 1 he Old Ways arc neither externally
imposed, nor internal!), created, but are a particular tribal rhythm which keeps us of the
llowmg circles ol lite, I.ike the air moving
I loin the wind one who follows the Old Wayshas great power w hi eh he oi she does not eontain or originate.
In Hal Mulmutl
( I a ken Irom an article hv Crayle High I'ine)
...we open ourselves like the air, and the
world Hows through us like the wind. I he
world is pari ol usas'the wind is part oflhcair.
We have no boundaries we are all we experience, know, I eel all ol which interacts
with everything, making usot the entire earth.
We need not determine to seek to determine
NuiMtulivc Americans as spiritually disharmonious as most ol them are also can
only act within the laws ol the Great Spirit.
I ten to pave our Mother or to make their
building*, they must adhere to the "laws ol
nature" in a certain manner il they follow
litem in another manner, their buildings will
lollow these laws by tailing.
No one can depart from the Great Spirit,
hut if one acts ^"without reverence and
awareness, one becomes a spiritual (and
perhaps physical) casualty of the disharmony
created as walking oil a dill docs not violate
the Wa\ hut mav lead lo death.
Most non-native Americans are caught up
in processes they don't understand, cannot accomodate to, and which are destroying them
spiritually' and physically. They refuse to
realize that it is only an illusion to try to control what totally contains them.
Our entire existence is of reverence. Our
rituals renew the sacred harmony within us.
Our every act eating, sleeping, breathing,
making love is ceremony reaffirming our
dependence on Mother Earth and our kinship
Willi her every child. Unlike Christians, who
dichotomize the spiritual and physical, put
religion in its compartment, and call the
physical world evil and a mere preparation for
a world to come, we recognize the "spiritual"
and the "physical'* as one without
Westerners' dichotomies between God and
human-kind, we arc close and intimate and
warm with Mother Earth and the (treat Spirit,
Unlike Christ tan heliel. which claims that our
species is both inheicniK evil and ihedivinelv
ordained ruler ol Earth, we know thai, heme
ill out sacred Mother Eaith, we are sacred.
lo walk in the Old Ways is to live in the
sacred manner, [o si and upright, lo walk
straight, lo icspeci oui brothers and sisters ol
dilleienl Nations and dillereut species, Il is
open to ourselves like air, like skv, in order to
know the mountains, the waters., the wind, the
lights ol the skv, the plants, and the lourlegged. six-legged, no-legged, and winged
he nigs. It is lo kill in the sacred manner, to
know love, sorrow, anger, jov in the sacred
manner, and to die in the sacred manner.
Vl\ leathers
sailing
on the hrcc/e
\LTOSS lite Earth
everywhere
making my voice heard
1 will prove
alone
the power ol mv spun...
You'd hate
our program
• IF You just couldn't make a tough decision; people yawn openly while you're speaking; and even
small children frequently correct you. Everybody
can't be an effective leader -you were horn to be a
grunt.
• IF you think it would ben drag to have to open an
envelope each month during your junior and
senior year and cash the contents lor $100; or it
the thought of a possible two-year scholarship
covering tuition, books, and all lab fees leaves
you blah.
• IF you're not really sure you dig competing for an
executive position in any one of 47 fields after
graduation (probably including the one you're
preparing yoursell for right now) and you just
know you can do better than $10,000 per year to
start. Why should any thinking person bother to
broaden his employment options with the
economy in such great shape?
• IF you've already picked out a cute little house in
your hometown, near mother, and you're going
to marry your eighth grade sweetie and live there
forever and ever. Your idea of getting involved is
picketing old man Moody's gas pump.
• IF adventure bores you; foreigners make you
edgy; you don't care what's going on in other
countries or in other states; and besides, dad can
afford to send you anywhere a commissioned officer can go.
• BUI if you're cool, like us, you'll find out more
about ROTC. How, for instance, you could
choose a career as an officer or participate strictly
part time. Or, how you would have a better shot
at graduate school. Find out why Siena College
program is the biggest in the Northeast United
States. Siena, a member of the Hudson- Mohawk
PAGE EIGHTEEN
1
1
Consortium- - - which means no extra tuition
costs to SUNY students. Siena College Campus,
Loudonville, N.Y. (just 10 minutes from SUNY
on Route 9 North. (518) 785-0501. Call, or come
in to Building Q2 and talk. Ask now about the
summer sessions and catch-up program for next
year's juniors
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974
TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NttTEVM
pHie rue tsr
•ftiliZ BCNIFIT Of THf
Kool and the Gang Disappointing In Gym
by K . M .
Daniels
, I just don't know how we did it
again you all! It seems that we are the
first group of our size that 1 have ever
seen that has either: forgot how to
party or to have partied ourselves
out before we even started. We are
one of the few groups of people who
would dare to "beer at being charged a "fin" to get in and who would
turn'1 right around and want to get
out again.
E x a m i n a t i o n o f this F r i d a y s K o o l
and
the
Gang
Manhattans)
reasons
concert
will
(with
bear
the
" W h a t is a m a n , W h a t is a w o m a n ? " .
a p p e a r e d p l a y i n g at t h e start " J u n g l e
master o f rccyclical b r e a t h i n g a n d
had
I
B o o g i e " , a sad m i s t a k e because d u r -
held a l i n e f o u n d a t i o n passage w h i l e
the g a n g j a m m e d o u t .
certain
started
late,
Unr
think
that
is rather p l a y e d
out,
i n g the
mellow
with
younger
rendered a piece w i t h a barely a u d i -
b a n d t o the stage m a n y p e o p l e h a d
got off.
Manhattans!
arrived
a l r e a d y began t o "peak o u t " .
The M a n h a t t a n s , a very establish-
live u p t o t h e q u a l i t y o f t h e i r past
members of the
audience
charts the
band
ble h o r n section.
particularly
bad lighting
what
TO PRMTItf
A l t e r a b r i e f respite K o o l a n d the
p e r f o r m a n c e s . T h e M a n h a t t a n s can
Gang
they
g r o u p refreshed a l t e r a d a y o f r e l a x a -
d i d n ' t d o t o o m u c h of t h a t . T h e y d i d
was
It really wasn't so fantastic idea t o .
to
come
onstage.
The
free o f chairs
because o v e r the a c c u m u l a t i v e noise
o f the dancers s h u f f l i n g t h e i r feet, the
was g o i n g d o w n
many
onstage so
resulting
|Jf£ THf
'
A MINI/Tf/WKf
fiUHHIHG AMUM WITH
YOUR CUTHES ON!)
Ihe
this
,
MOP SIIIFf!}
l&HOBrrr. N
STAfAKff!./
fiMICAWl
Albany
past
"Midnight
Train
to
hit " T h e r e ' s no
Me
Y o u " . But one o f the liver
to
" K o o l a n d the G a n g " the o r i g i n a l
please the sea o f black faces in the
K o o l a n d the G a n g success w a s t e m -
gym.
wanted
We
waited
ticipation,
very
hard
hopefully
recalling t h e
in a n -
songs
we
poed a lot slower t h a n the recorded
.Unfortunately.
chance
lifeless. " W i l d a n d P e a c e f u l " was the
from
p r e m i e r bright
due
to
I did
receive
not
much
get
Koechlin and M a u r i c e K a v c l . D o n ' t
w o n d e r i n g what
w i t h his Barry W h i l e i m a g e . i l guess
time h a d not had a sound check a n d
the b a n d finally
here.
l i t e m p r i o r l o Ihe start of the concert.
y o u h a d to he there to pick u p t h a t
in the g y m that surely was to spell
I he horns were supreme w h i l e the
But e x a m i n a t i o n o f the events a n d
t i m e because t h e sound e q u i p m e n t
last o n e . ) It w a s b a d . ( B a d =awl'ul)
disaster. W h i l e t h e M a n h a t l a n s w e r e
b a c k g r o u n d r y t h m n s p l a y e d listless-
Ihe
was late a r r i v i n g . T h e c r o w d g r o w -
Another
onstage we had a hard t i m e hearing
ly in the b a c k g r o u n d h i g h l i g h t i n g the
p r o d u c t i o n leaves me to w o n d e r o n l y
ing a n x i o u s , t i r e d , and " h i g h e r " was
Barry's
t h e m also. I hey had no sound check
line h o r n section. S p i k e
if a n y o n e else could have d o n e any
p a r t y i n g lor a p a r t but m a n y needed
T a l k i n g is a n art in its place, n o w was
severe
dissapoinlment
(112) penchant
lor
is
talking.
worked
out
introduces
to
my
lengthy interview
unsuccesslul
and s o u n d e d lousy so h o w possibly
us l o ihe t u n e hut R o n a l d exploits it
better
r a t h e r the t i m e l o r singing. B a r r y H2
could
l o its fullest w i t h his fine s o p r a n o s a x
overwhelming
dings t o "get o f f . ( I f a r e c o r d p l a y e r
is still g e t t i n g o f f o n t h e q u e s t i o n
better r we a s k e d . T h e g r o u p soon
excursions.
ditions.
Koul
ami
tin- Uunx
be a n y
Ronald
is a n incredible
) —
job
promotion
lacing
the
Stiulcntsiil ilicStiilcl
same
con-
ni\ciMt\ ul
\ l h a n > .in.- n i M l a l I " s i i h i m t » . n k
I niu'iMt}
I I H M - I M I V ..I S c « " i . . i k , n M b . i m in
lliv
|,il nil \ l t t \ l l l h i l i i m l i i b i . - l l c l c l l l l l h c
\ u (i.tlletv l i i u i i \ p n l l "
lull
I'l'l
-..im-su-i i ,
in
Spiiilg
l l m s c M i s h i n ; t o s u b m i t must b i -
IT.I
, „ L , | | , 0 I I u r n ks l o the U n n c r s i l N A r t
elieihle I n M i h i m l t w n
ml
llltluy.
J1)
Match
or
i i i i l i n l i t i n b i l l not
\ l o n i l . i \ . A p t il I. b e t w e e n the l i m n s
u l ' i ' . i n i i i n t l 4 p in W o r k n u t n e e e p l e d
t i l -t
Ji.nim;,,
lime
such
nil event
,i|Vii I " . i l l sliiilcnls
i
in
nlei.
h.ts heel,
111 I i i t v c i s i h
>. M a i i l w i t i i c i s h . i c h . p . u
tlllil
SnlI'OIIs
uuikMii.illinali.i
(,.illei\
l i u n t a l l,. |i,uiiiiiie. seulpture. pi nils.
|„.
l (
Milkuuskl.
c e i t l illle.s.
leuelty.
, , s M nihl,tecs. ,iiul \ n l e u
„,„t,s
of
i|u
eslnhll
l n . i n . i l l Ihe e t i l i n s
In
I '.| ,,eaileltlit v e i l
/ n,,,
lilt
ll
the
\pnl
(allien
eshihilimi
I\
I m
m i s . i n . u . n l . i h l e m the \ t l
-\ptil 5
..n
Wednesil.n.
lo
\
K o o l and
Hunk
KcMCUs
I'llhhc I iht.uv
luesilav.
Ihe
.11
\lh.tll
liuilici
mini malum,
please
Ail d a l l e u
4S7-
' !" >
this
u i l l u.lllllltie linl.n
Maicll
I'),
accmiltne
M i l i u m Wilshnie
t.i
\lls.
anil llu* tiaii)*, at rest l o r I h r n u n u m .
Ihelllellllsiil thel Ihi.m
I'luin.inr.
w i l l be l l e k l e u c h I l i e s d . n
tl.lh
llnmiph
lh
picstiletll nl
.'I
I "lie,
A : N o we been here all d a y , relaxing. W e c a m e up l r u m Jersey C i t y today
but
the e q u i p m e n t
just
didn't
arrive q u i t e the time we had h o p e d .
K . l i . Q: Ronald.
H o w l o n g have
"Kool a n d ihe G a n g . "
but
down
A:
Not
South.
to
I uiope.
D o w n Ui t h e I s l a n d s .
I he
Islands are b e a u t i f u l .
K.D.
O:
Kool
is t h i s b a s i c a l l y a
vciv
IlKsd.n
Q: W h a t m o t i v a t e s y o u as the music
ol the gang.'
Lyrically
I
learned
out
ol
si
desire, s o m e t h i n g we were
longing
Maryland with I aiih
lor,
heart
I
regular p i o i u o t n i n t h i n g , b u t yes we
believe every i n d i v i d u a l seeks heaven
d o a l o t o l colleges. W e a r e a l w a y s
in
every
individuals
Wnui&Hre.a
in bis hie. O r they believe there is a
g l a d t o be h e r e a l the c o l l e g e s so we
heaven
can exchange w i s d o m . ; Y
altei
this
lilt,
whatever
. heaven might be. heaven is t r y i n g to
a n ' see,
because the c o l l e g e s a n d the u n i v e r -
vein
K . D . U : H a v e y o u l o u u d a m body
lJ: W i l l i w h o m d i d > o u play
Jersey then? •
\
played
We
wc
i.iilu'i
also
when
played
hack
1 v IU-I .
in
then
O
ihe
clubs,
c o m p a n y . a n d we w ill h a v e o n i o w n
W e were
McCoy
Washington.
Saunders,
and
Leon
l a b e l i n t h e ueel c o u p l e o l
<,nm;
AV. fids,
t i n g these . u l s o u i
will he n a m e d
a n d Ihe o l h e i
W h o c o n c e i v e d the idea
Oncol
gimip
the n a m e so t h a t ' s w h v
Ihe
name
1 ithei
Humanities.
taught
are
little hu bellei than k
l o accomplish this while we a r e alive.
K.O.
Q:
lJy
any
chance
does
success l u l t i l l a n y ol your c h i l d h o o d
A:
Ronalds
K I). 0
K o o l . d o y o u have any
N o . 1 w a n t e d l o build struc-
you
ahotil two m o n t h s
in a j a r
and
lor the m a r k e t in
W e are covering
w a t c h ( h e m b u i l d . M u s i c is o n e ol
b o t h areas K n' H a n d J a z z
the most n a t u r a l sciences I k n o w . I
tune. Moth m a r k e t s .
c o u l d t a l k all night it we got to start
K.D.
inis '
Q: H o w d o you leel a b o u t
t a l k i n g a b o u t the u n i v e r s e ' n i l u n f o r -
Ihe p r o d u c t i o n
t u n a t e l y t i n * is not the right pjacc.j
and Peaceful " a l b u m . M a n y seem to
PAGE TWENTY
and
album.
• he put
I
did
the
the
K D lj:
W a s il h a u l to get it d o w n
heen q u i t e happy with the results?
tracks y o u know and we should have
s o m e t h i n g ready
them
yotiugei
tugethei
the
as well as y o u d i d . Y o u must
tures. I was a l w a y s scientific in m y
put
nn
on
o l r e c o r d i n g , just laying d o w n a lew
c h i l d h o o d , 1 used to play w i t h ants-,
know
music
biolheis
dialogue.
plans l o i a new a l b u m ' . '
A : feign 1 n o w w e a re in the process
taniasies'.'
two
Hell the
w o r k o n the " W i l d
have
A. N o ii wasn't very hard t o ^ a p lurc.
actually
it
was
quite
spon-
t a n e o u s like most o l t h e things we
t\ I,
\
K . U . (J
I hesitate o n
A. (, '\
iiiiiMi d u e c l o i w r o t e the.song. I here
Konald
l.<hiu>n
is t i n
l i k e l o c o m e i n a n d see w h a l s being
Brothei
\
Well wc arc t h i n k i n g a b o u l changing
o n c e " is s o m e t h i n g that we
oli.
ihcginups
h«iu>tn>\\
W e like
new
01
the
l/iinitintius
,i
(t.'s
extremes.
You
Bandar
1.1t}i is listed as o p u s 176; a r c there
His w o r k s
more w o r k s by this strange recluse
which wc hould hear?
o| aluiosi a m period.
the a m o u n t ol eclecticism e x h i b i t e d
I xpression of
J u d g i n g by
e m o t i o n must b c c a i e l u l l s c o n t r o l l e d
in this w o r k . I w o u l d guess n o t . but
in m o s i passages, but c a n he u n l e a s h -
one can never tell.
ed in w i l i l
makes a nice t e x t b o o k
hen/\
al t h e r i g h t
mo-
A t a n y r a l e , it
fororchestral
ment
I h e i c is M I met I v m g a l m o s t e x -
ell eels, a n d is d e f i n i t e l y the highlight
tra
m u s i c a l in i h e d e t e r m i n a t i o n
ol
o l these c h i n a v c s ; h o w can o n e p s y c h o a n a l y z e a piece o l
the
year
lor
the
eonlrhassoon
palyer.
music'
Khupsmh
h'spaxtude
K . i \ e l c l o s e d the f i r s t h a l l .
S o m e p e o p l e c a n . a n d 1 ih K rails is
one o|
She is o n e o l t h c g i e a t
technical
accomplish incuts
cical lhc\
a i e o v c i s h a d o w c d b\
imagination.
arc
One
the c o m p o s e r ' s lirst
woiks
pianists o l all tunc, a person whose
by
Il is n o l
in m \
rate
view, the first
section
b e i n g p i o h . i c l c d t o the p o i n t o l n e a r
so
uaicos-is
her
n
doesn't
I he c o l o r l u l o r c h e s t r a -
e a i l \ s a w s it. h u t in the end it
"Ccni-s i o lack s u b s t a n c e .
plays M u A i i i
And I ili K i a u s plays
Mo/yi.l
than anyone.
bellei
And WIU-K did you lind
MH\
bellei
hoivonS!
(smile)
K.I).(J:
M I | I I | | \||
M
i
,,,
\
<>h n o l
local w o i k
yet.
I hey
aie
N Y., N . J . . y o u
K I) (J
doing
w b e u ' p e o p l e a c c e p t e d y o u so w a r m
l\
\
l.u i
\ call
we <\<.K by
mallei
" i n g i u l a i isl goes in a n d
even
Wcdncsdns
ilubs
we also h a v e a
night
in
am
|,m,s
ihe
lunetioiliny
k ilcscnhes hei Itleas tt lie u l
|
, l I K nl,.elan. p l n l i i M i p h e i
it
com mint \
-iiih-
lines
unnia tched
in
(licit
Mr.
tion, lo
this
I \periment
was t h e B a c h
ol
the
lkunilenlmr\>
I l e g y i d e c i d e d , in the m -
teK'st^ol
miisicology
and
innova-
use t h e o r i g i n a l s c o r i n g o l
liciich horn (hunting horn)
listener's experience.
ol p i c c o l o t r u m p e t .
|<| \ |
,., . I , . , , , ,
| \t|
,t„
i.i,.H
•ii i p i e l a l i
t,,,,
luu
II.in,.
piesiilelili.il
|
.,. ,|
p, .,
an
|
I I
•
Mil
„,|,,,|
, i, , | n | , ,| | , „
i
till
,,ui„
—
—
stipli.u
,.i
||U
|,„
,„
| | „ |
I. , . , . ,
\„,,eul
In.I
\
San
,, .,. « , , ! I n
brother,
are in a n d o u t . w e a i e l o o k i n g
be g o o d seeing
h i m get out there on his o w n n o w ! . '
Y e a h , he is a m b i t i o u s ,
High
School
in
Newaik
g o t l u g c i h c i . in I h e
a m i he is in the A (>.'.\
that's
w h e r e it's a l !
loi
K D
a n d as a
ncighhoihood
K o o l , l a m s t i i e t l i a l y o i i will
c i q o v y o u r s e l f bete on stage and thai
you
will
be vciy
warmly
icceived
tonight
K . D . Q: H o w d o t h e y look solar'.'
A: . V e r y
g o o d ! In tact, p l a y i n g
ilieinml
In
an
l.ilcul m i l c m i c h u h
i h.ii n i e i l t h e \ l b a n \ S w n p h u m
iliuiiu
lulius
uianccs
o|
Mo/,nl
H e g \ i . whose
instead
I hecxpcnemnl
points
ol
O
ail
SI \ 1
U u i m
\ l \
bmik
all
I ibtaiv
levt.Usau
piesetlled Itee ul
inn
the
ureal,
compensation
and
the
horn
seemed
was
too
oltcu
c o v e t e d Up bv t h e V i o l i n . A l s o , w l i v
not use a n a l t o i c e o i d e r a n d go a l l
even u i i h
ihe uav Willi t h e o i i g m a l i n s l i u m e n -
.1 red-need
o i c h e s l t a . he
had
itiimi
I he h o r n
leslnies a m o r e peaceable k i n g d o m .
past
i h n . u i m s HI ilicsoltci luiiip.issagcs
i l l l M i
.k m u l e s
ASO's
c\
\ 1 itplish
t h e u t m o s t c a r e is t a k e n .
perlor-
llu
M < s I", \ i l h t i i K i l l ' . I I - I C I I I
I iki
into
h a v e i . i n k e d as
the
W h e n t h e t r u m p e t is
used. 11 d r o w n s o u t e v e r y t h i n g unless
seasons, gave a h u e e l l o r t ; t h o u g h .
iiouhlc
contiolling
I Ins is ih-l ,1 new
p i , ut l l u
Klaus
o n e o l Ms h n c s i pel I m i n . i n c c s . C ' o i l -
high
place
Madame
flowed
l
,,ul
l l h u l i n l
V'tk
addition.
.pin,-.' - i M . - u l i i l l I ' m l e s s , , I I d u a l d
I kp.
I i.unl . u
New
|
U M
In
I
pmal
II
(„,
n l I uenl ( m \ eininciil
d.'ltehtlul
din.in
tih.il
h s tidl
Ihe
l u i u i . l m e lalfieis in then
|u
\si
\ p n l 'I
Im
Id I n I mus
Imal
I m u e . i i h \ c n s . n i d p u i s Ihe
i, n , M . , 1 ,
I,,,. |
I , t i l l s In
,,.,i
|, v
ul
tiled: balance
KKuill
k pi,ni,lcs,i lnliun,ill/cd ui
uiu
,...
I
I S I I 1)1 ( I I W t . i
lb, I
\pnl
t lucl
KLM.IUII
Mulclltliu
,„,.,„„,.„,,.,
•
—
—
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dcudctl
pasl
conccito
uind
pl.mue
was l i g h t .
ivithout
U'l
problem
iui|Mo\ciikut
peilonu.ones
was
magniliceiil
the
l a i i o n ' W i l l i the i c i o i d e i o n i h c o i i l M.U a m i I he o b o e , the v i o l i n a n d the
b u t it
hoi n
o\ei
!hc
i
It
I he s m i l e
c
Knoll
riN'\ ing. studied, hul
pieicntionsness
m
that
onlci.
the
balance
p i o d l c n i c o u l d be suceesslullv
ovei-
V i u l , I m a l l v . l u s t l i o i n I'ctei
desci ves a b i o n / e
oak
leal
p a l m I - > J . l e u c i n e t o I h is in l l u
pi,tie
l i e d i d an e s c e p l i o n a l
lusl
|ob
. h.u i'e a n d . , | n n l u all
—
—
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{
j
T€L€THOM 74
AL PALEY
Friday 8 pm - Saturday 8 pm
the U S A ' s No. I Goldsmith
Campus Center Ballroom
featuring:
DGTTV G G O R G G
JOHN C I M I h O
STB
4+Q
JOHM SIMPSOn
LORRV MMD THG
niiD HGCTOR
nil sim
|
Kool
please
l h . i n k you very much and
il
vou
In ol hers
want
in
to talk to Ihe
ly, so we put t h e m l o g e l h e i on the
there on tape behind us now is their
oilier
scene
new single.
a r o u n d a n d gel i n t o i h e h e a d .
Ihe
baud,
go
UESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974
(currently working on an important commission
for the Smithsonian Institute)
will speak and give demonstrations
(slide lecture and workshop)
^hD OTHERS". .
u l l i c e M I N e w a r k a n d w c have s o m e
v o u k n o w wc w e n t l o _V the
A:
mil
\\(,l
ni.nl
hat I I K l u r e vou " m a d e i t . "
school and then lo I i i H u l i i
Il must
h.ur
\ m k S l a l . I ) , p.li l . l , n l
I ah,u
h\ l l . t l l l l a h I l l l t e h
in i l e i n p k d n . go back i n l o l h e c l n h s
public
Q:
I'll
,1 I'
I Kt ) M
know.
K.M.I al h o n i e d o y o u c v e i
laleni
Well one ol i h e m , the g u i t a r i s t
K.D.
|\I.M,I,
\ u l a l ' s best sellel HI
tiilllilenl.
vull t h s u l s s
m i l l«
m Ihe V «
things.
\ n d a i e thc> l o u r i n g now'.'
V
it. we like things to come out n a t u r a l -
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
is c M j i i i M t e . m u s i c a l
l a i l i i i g t h r o u g h the a n w i t h
p i i . l c s s . i i n l . n e h e i i | i i | ! > ,il S I N't A
l»in
one thcie s c o u t i n g . D i l t e i c n i g i o u p s
do. W e d o n ' t put too m u c h w o r k into
W h a t we try to project is w h a t
time
I he
Mouth
Her
can
them'.'
i n the g i n u p is my y o u n g e i
Hi.
Dunlin
K e e p o n inov i n g ; we g o l l o keep o n
months.
a i u l we w i l l he p u t -
I.'
U.iiistuik
al il as l a i as b e i n g " k e e p n n -
iuo\ m g on l o bellei
m a l l e i o l l a d . we h a v e a p r o d u c t i o n
loi " H e a v e n at n i n i - T
\
that
died
I b o n u s l o m e n t i o n a lew
K D
home town
-V Yes. we have t w o g r o u p s as a
he
with
I > i one
I'ha i OL
wun
John
the
1.1// c o l l e e - l n u i s e s
playing
around
w i n n i g h t be h e l p i n g a l o n g ' '
lot
Memorial
new
sities is ,i place o l k n o w ledge a n d we
all i m m e d i a t e l y work t o w a r d s ; to try
I wo
I wo
.ne t a l k i n g about h u m p i n g on up i n
be o b t a i n e d . S o o u r title " H e A v e n a l '
should
s\suuis
Bunipin".
V u i u i p i u ' . " as l a i as d a n c i n g , h u l we
and
in
M e d i a S o u n d in
on
good sound.
we are going h i \ l l a n t a
Mon-
I cssei at
"Keep
been using• l o i the last y e a r . I l is very
toltuue
lech.
Jell
piuuikil
2d.
he u u i M i l e i c i l m i
,|
ui.l an assessinetil u l p i i h l i i u p
A.
we were a j a / / > act. W e w e r e in the
hack in
w a r r a n t a hearing. I he Lex
greatest
, thai '
I'vmf/uf!
( l a n g " w a s o u r beginning b e l o r c that
K.I)
w e ' l l be g o i n g I n a c o n c e r t
V
ami
look
o u t t h e r e , il we can just l i n d it. I hen
day
about i l . " ^ " " U m d
Wild
\ u d w h a t ' s the n a m e o l
N . V (city |. I hat's I lie s t u d i o w e have
la//
happy
(J: K o o l w h o mastered the
sound on
o
the
l o I ' o t s d a m . w h e r c v e i t h a t is. its way
K.D.
K.D.
N, cs. t h a i p r o d u c t i o n isa " ' K o o l
KM
we waul
a n d the d a n g " p r o j e c t and we w e r e
a b r o a d lecenlh'.'
A : N o l r e a l l y , h u l we a r e g o i n g l o
A; A b o u t nine years n o w .
A:
little discussion.
college l o u r ' '
you*neen p l a y i n g h o r n . '
man
Hunk t h a t was y o u r best e l l o i l since
be
\|.n,|,
\ v « <i.uk s t a l e < l l l i c e u l I ' l a n
I i n nils ,,| I I I , I it.l.,1 \
i
Personally, t h o u g h , we c o u l d have a
mil
On
• v iuns.
|,,
. m u s 111,,, t.i i
\pnl
tutu
IN,I, ipltel N i e h l l h l . a p h l l l l i c i u n i t
( . i m j , .mil Ihe M a n h i i l l a n s nnslaj>c.
A
the
l a d e d l o i the very s a m e reason it w a s
the
Mil
been
even
c o n t a i n Mibtelly u n m a t c h e d in music
one ol i h c n i
Noon Book Reviews Continue
Daniels
guvs
hung
Mo/art
M I M U . I I . o n e listens i n heal how she
An Interview w/ Kool, Sake & Ronald
\uu
p r o m i s i n g m o m e n t s , not enough to
Ihe
h e j i u i l u n i ; .11 7 HI p in
c a l l Ihe I m u a s i l v
tiatlcn
illelltllii|l .lie u n i t e d in Initic h i i i . h
Have
was
ing to it. A c t u a l l y the piece has m a n y
Mo/art.
can
musical
lihinn
(J.
— Log,
listen h> I i h l o h c a i il she c a n p l a \
I " IJ:-l.l |i i n .11 I I ,
K.I).
haven't.
though y o u ' d never k n o w it by listen-
M u s i c H a l l discovered a rare
I hete « i l l h e l t n o p e n i t i j ! receptlim
iitiisl he p i e p . n e i l h u c s l u l i i
lh.
\ l l s t i u l e n l s i c e i s i c i L i I ,it Ihe S t a l e
the s l u m . O n Ihe o p p o s i t e p u R f , a
photos
people
I ro\
h e m e e l l ') m i l l -I p i l l
All
i „ , u , i , „ | must |,, 1 U - been e s e c u l a l
siibnuueil
n u i s l he p i c k e d u p I r i l l i l ) .
|ih..|ni;i.i|ills, iinillimeili.i. l i l l l l . emt-
s e i l l p l i u . V M I I S C I U .is i i i i t . l s l u s e l e c t
n j i b l . an a t t r a c t i v e couple wails for
series ol
most
inspired by K i p l i n g ' s Jungle B o o k ,
musicians i o (hen knees.
l l i t m i e l i \ l . i \ S. I"J74. l i t i s H i l l he I he
l o ihe l e d ul this paj"e, K n n l g r a n t s
ol the A . S . I ' ,
Koechlin
people in the Palace I heater a n d the
pluasine
an i n l i ' m e M
be loo upset il y o u ' v e never heard o f
was h a p p e n i n g in
His piece, Li's Bandar
that
and
unfavorable
W o r l d W a r 1 era. Charles
N e w Y o r k or B o s t o n , thousands o f
I here is s o m e t h i n g a b o u l
Call For Entries
with
Ebony
Affairs
Weekend
1974
ble l o r the l o n g d e l a y l o n i g h i d i d y o u
further
call the piece a success hut e n o u g h to
t h e acts a f t e r they p e r f o r m e d
recor-
guys just a r r i v e in town?
no
a
system until a l t e r the stated show
spot o f the show a n d
\HeARTSj
~IOVT,l(
response
stage was set w i t h only a s m a l l p.a.
d i d n ' t "get
w a n t e d t o hear in our m i n d s .
ex-
the post
happiness is often
mance ol
version a n d in c o m p a r i s o n seemed
final
that
t h a n one's o w n b a c k y a r d . Instead of
m u s i c a l experience: a perfect p e r f o r -
great
was the
orchestra's
spent weeks in O z t r y i n g to l i n d
sion was reached.
their
the
t h e balance of the p r o g r a m was
exclusive)
as
to
given to t w o I r c n c h composers o f
porary
o f " W h e n we get
K r a u s ' face
proved
o u t s i d e and a w a y before a c o n c l u -
such
I.ili
Dorothy
t o the start of t h e s h o w sec enclosed
JW?
many
But r e m e m b e r still t h a t as o f this
W h a t is responsi-
what
sing a lew oldies a n d a few c o n t e m -
drove
over"
K. U. Q: Spike:
Symphony
weekend
e v e n i n g that
version
a n d the u n -
M£Y.WAI7
POOR FMsrttnreti
eventful
tunes
(Jang
-
LCO UP SO YOU,
tion (granted me an interview prior
h a n d was lost in the s h u f f l e .
the
W/IY„.Wrf «5WTH£
AOHHST s>
in a most severe h a n d i c a p
M a n h a t t a n s just
by k . M .
on
ami
were b e c o m i n g just a bit edgy.| T h e
pre-concert
by Andy Pulley
l o Kool
without
traditional
!
I i m a g i n e d stared i n t o space
t h a n ninety m i n u t e s late, a n d people
the
( f t ' l t SAY THIS FOR I T - I T S S BY'Jll
employed
b r e a k f r o m t h e circuit a n d get t h e i r
leave the g y m f l o o r
-
cellence.
THEf UJED<
act together.
Of HHCN THt
WIATHCR WOULD
S p e c i a l note must be t a k e n o f the
act. A t n o times c o u l d m a n y o f us see
take
Symphony Sparkles
|IW««2
™L* A Mm*
testimony
!N5l>IRfI> „ „ . . ^*^NM
should
rHMMH.HWfti.,Ti«iie'i JS
uai
lW( rtwnt
in the show for w h a t is a very visual
Manhattans
sing, a n d t h a t
is a fact, but
first f e w
TO ALBANY,air
DOOWlflNP
a
The
ed g r o u p m o r e u n f o r t u n a t e l y did not
Georgia", and
more
waiting).
p r o b a b l y r e l a t i n g w h y m a n y o f the
married",
evening
while
d e r s t a n d a b l y . i t h e n by t h e t i m e the
original
why. j
Ihe
w a s b r o u g h t a l o n g we c o u l d have
a dance
[HMMM.„U)OKSASIFTK
\insmess op IXPOSOM is
Ftwuir, WDMtf coLiimsTl Seine owe FOR MI '
;F« rue ww<M%"
\ntiB fHWf/lESS
kXPoSCR OF
and throw a pie at:
BG/IWILSOh
M^L HODGGV
(^TflTG QU/1D DIMIMG JUDY f OHDO
R O O M s:upeRMKOR) cjc\^£ GGRBGR
PGTGR HoLGV
L0f1OGIh|
m c
i JIN CROFT
m\> Q ™ ^ ,
MIKSDAY, MAI-K 'II
I 1 ', I
, / ]
Wednesday,
March 20
in Fine Arts Km. 228
I
9:00 - 12:00 noon
and 1:30 - 5:00 pm
S/nuiMiml
In
An
Council in amjiowium
AI.MANY STUDENT PRESS
|
with University Speakers Forum.
I
<*J
PAGE TWENTY-ONE
Five Basketball Players Graduate in May
hog-calling music." Zipping along
by
Warming Up A Chilly House
riobWtdtngtr
on mandolin. Crofts hammed it yp.
He went from stomping hillbilly, to
Rockettc. and then into a mock-
How do you convert a fieldhouse
Mick
with 6,300 occupied seats into a cozy
living room? (Hint: Not by carpeting
and John
'The
of
expan-
hummingbird,"
also the only bird I know o final can
personable air
of
the per-
concert
at
fieldhouse
the
seem
drafty
more
Strange Interlude
he added with a
of (iod...and lifts us to the next plane
RPI
like
backwards,"
smile. "It is significant to the prophet
formers made the March 10th soldout
song
fragile and has great wisdom. It is
said,"\ydl- you talked us into it."
lly
The
a
Crofts said before the concert, "is
walked hack on stage and happily
Kord Colcy.
is
siveness.
that proceeded the on-going thunder
concert featuring Seals and Crofts
along with England Dan
mingbird"
England Dan knew it. This lightning
the hockey rink). Answer: Have a
During
a
intermission,
a
bellied man whose navel peeked out
talented mends..
from the bottom ol his short T-shirt
A & M Records' England Dan and
John
Ford
Coley,
an "acoustic-
oriented d'utH opened the evening
with a lew light and lively songs
(perfect
lor
an
audience
voracious'music appetite)
Dan strummed a
with
a
England
12 strinj
guitar
while Coley alternated between banjo, guitar and piano.
.lohn
Ford Colcy com-
One camera Hash out of
pany, which nccccssitatcd the hasty
arrival and expedient services ol'E-Z
harrage of clicks and bulbs subsided
Exterminating
alter
1 was
by
surprise.
Hut the initial
the first song. Meanwhile, a
mildly distressed as the spray dis-
yellow
placed much ol the cold fieldhouse
Crolts appeared to be streaking (in
air
heam coming from behind
to
the traditional sense) from his head
breathing. Shortly. I was informed
and body like sunlight breaking past
thai the mist was only a spotlight
a cloud
softener
silhouetted
which
grown
made
would
accustomed
ol
water
enhance
and
the
oil,
visual
and
outlining the mildly
ligure
with
a
golden
lone.
sounded very similar to that of Seals'
and
Crofts'.
England
After
Dan
the first song,
casually
revealed
himself to be none other than the
brother
of
Jim
mance. Aware of the facts (and with
a
well- lubricated
respiratory
and
heautilul" and the hoy who wanted
Crofts' nine member back-up
with
a 'boyish''
grin,"we
all
visions
"ol
a
maiden
so
to he a man beloi'c hewoiiUlexpress
hand went on s,tage.
his love lor her. Jim Seals closed his
eyes (was he the boy'.') while Dash
In order to take the edge o i l this
he added
the duo searched lor their own personal
Seals. He wasn't
enlightenment,
SiaKundC rolls and the "Big Band"
Crolts gazed over the heads ol the
audience,
Sound
ride
miles away
from
ho).
New York.
"I'm
A
Rambler,"
"Mud
'n
Stone." and " I ' m The I'ilot." were
spirited and upbeat in nature, contrasting with an outstanding mood
piece. "What
I'm
soljl piano work
intensity
steadily
in
an anguished outcry
ol
Irustralion,
guitar
Doing." Colcy's
with
built
England
appropriately
Dan's
supportive.
" I he Prisoner" had less dynamic and
more
traditional
tolk
ment, stressing lyrics
accompanithe imprison-
ment ol llaha'u'llah. who was one ol
the main forces in the Baha'i faith,
I his l:nth is the key to Seal's and
t r o l l s ' lives us well as their music.
new
enlarged
Says
back in school and to be playing. It's
were some
llvehe." I obeboiiesl. I think I could
always been a dream of mine to play
reaction he
on cach,MicjL;essi\e Seals an"d'|t£u!(ls
I he
Icatuicd
Dash
earliest
mil)
on
Jim
S&C
sound
on guitar
mandolin.
"We
and
like
simplicity." Dash Ciolls said in an
iniemcw.
a I hum.
lie
Mill
picks an carl)
I town fit nm- as his la vo rite.
Mass was added, and soon the accumulation ol instruments became a
ualuial tiling. ( u r i e i i l l ) . in conccrl
hack-up comes in [he h u m ol bass.
diiinis. piano, congas, and a low
man hoi a section, I he mil)
tit i m p
not
lepieseuleil
studio
is
horn
peiluinicd
their
" Unburn
new
several
album
Child"
the
course
the
classics
were
which Seals sa\s is "a pro-life song"
rat he i
than
"Windllower"
an
with
anli-ahoriion.
Seals'
soltly
spoken woids--|heu beaut) captures
ever)
young dreamer that ventures
ucai ihein." and "King ol Nothing."
an eas) iambic song, the kind that
\ o u wag ) o i n head to when keeping
time. While ihe trumpets represent
Ihe king. t h e " h a a p " o l ihciiomhone
is a lemindci just what he isknigol.
games where I was bounced around
have helped in a lot of situations this
varsity college ball, and (hat has
It lot. hui there were many limes
year, even Ihough I thought
Doc's
come true. But afte/ a while, that
hasn't lost his touch since he won a
was iusl a player
all
mines. II I had played for a school
when I could maneuver more outside
choices were often very timely. There
thrill wears off whin you see that
lexas State Kiddle Championship at
whenever lie lull up to it. Me had a
like Uiockpoil (which heal Albany
againsi
were
there are other things which still
great career here and it was just un-
in the I ( A C
li'oni there."
fortunate that it both slarted and
would
the age of nine. And he didn't forget
the "do-si-dos" either.
I he audience lound it look no clluri in clap hands n> "Black Hunjo".
song, did not Millei ho the lack id
a hliicgiass s l \ l a l snug. Surprising!)
Mnngs
enough, Co lev's picking IrcqucnlK
stienglh til Seals' and ( rolls' \oeals.
gave
which, ihioiigliniii
his
banjo
a
dulcmicr-I>pc
1 he
song
"uses" on
the
the entire even-
sound. It was the knuinl sung that
ing, weic as smooth and cusp as on
guarantees a demand lor an encore.
,in)
ol
then
alhutns
refers
to
played
the
Ihrec
"Hum
il
lact
that
games
his
note and the
lesiiamed
wall
change ol pace hlues-ni// excursion,
Merrit also felt that the mode of
have
he savs. "the set-up offense would
that I elton could have been un even
play could have been speeded up at
tmscll
inio
worked
ihe
Dvroii
hackeiiurl
and
mure.
give us llie opportunity lo score, but
I'coplc lalkahuui B\ run going tu Ihe
Ibis year we bad a lot ol guys, like
(i a t v
ill.inks
Sauers.
leboiiiiihng, loi Ins si/e. was nisi a
CV
ollellstve
a wide-
game. He
alw .iv s m.ide us hold hack.
lop ol a lock-boogie heal. "Summer
ed 10 |oin them al the Holiday Inn,
lake .1 lot out " I linn pIlvMcalK. Io
Hree/e." however, was a disappoint-
where ihev were staying, lor further
bailie Inugel. Ileaviel Unwinds llll-
much." Johnson adds. "He gives you
ment,
discussion.
dei Hi, bo,mis. game allei game. I he
Ins u.isie plan and [hen il is up in the
across
a
bit
too
^U-
"Reggie's
laith. An imitation was also
coming
0 N\
adds.
treatment Irom AldridgcStevens on
llibnle I,. Ins L'u.il e l l o l l . Il had Io
retaining very little ol the
May
Never I'ass I his Wav Again"
made up lor it. 1 he song's dynamic
contrasts worked well, and the rock
break had a good t'ufi to it as well. In
this ease ihe live version wins out
over ihe
recorded version. Crolts
said tlicv
were "obligated" to do
a
Irving
pan
over
bni Seals calls "absurd" and
which can help stagnate the rock industry. I he"lueside"gaiheringalier
ihe concert is an attempt on his and
Crolts' part to avoid the "star" image
our
plaveis' i.ilenls
eoine
he's plaved
as well as anv
vnnica
been capable ol plaving v
einii.il. because, altel all. il vnli'ie
Ivpe ol
pleasant listening experience llian an
exciting lock combo and. when il is
dime
well. "Summer
rellects. this
Breeze" besi
II became a highit (and
I n , ,ipi mi
siniek
because,
savs
the mood ol
Crolts,
leineinheis
lime, I here's the security ol having
so, i l l ,
I.all again, so m.ivhe I gist
tinIn I I
I In seiolid h.ill I plaved
spoke with Mick .lugger oi
I ltou John about anything'.' Seals
h.lldel Ih.in I evei have, .mil I Med Io
and ( r o l l s
are establishing a very
he Loiisisieiiilv
dilleienl
kind
audience
game
( raler Hurry Johnson.
s o in c o n e
l o
e o m c
h o m e
In...everybody's looking lor security
in Ihe world. I think people are atto
a
warm
leehng
lhan
counted
is coming
that
because
point
ul
be
was
ineligible
,111 iiisulliili.nl
aveiagc
Mtei
glade
having gone
lluuugh haul pie-scasnil p indices in
picparution
would
loi
have
an clinic
seemed
Ihe
mci
crowd
got
excited though.
.i siile ol Seals and d o l l s not
heard on reconl
I oi
lltcii
Imalc.
Seals ami I Volts had everyone on
hoth, to what ( tolls called "sonic
DON'T GO
ON A DIET
UNTIL
YOU READ
THIS BOOK.
I
salislied
Iicshntaii season beloic il was dis-
Ihe
last
Pic lure
Show
vc.u. il
piniishllleul
i-iioiigli loi Millet Io be sal down lot
llul llie nesl
ilnee games he'd illegally pi,mil the
sluing
guess
wilh
I
game allei
was
le.isonahlv
I lie lesiills
We put
lin'elliet ,i i e.il line lealll. e. in side ling
HI, si.ni t '-l.i, and ihe lacl lh.il we
wen
.1 ,IIting two Iiesliinen. anil I
Hum
l.uk
nl
a i,.,llv
loluisoii.
accoidmg
also eotittihuied
llie
plivsieal
iei|iiuod
..I
lo
despite a
"I
...uldii'l
team
with
pio.ielies
Ins
philosophically
non-sLuting
however.
eaieer
"When
1
, k n
" ' " ' ' ' l l u , " d l " ' ( : " - sl l " '
ve.us. v , H I have t o H u n k I h a l v o n re
capable .a
moving up wah Ihein.
Ihev iveie ntv poets and ihev elleoiiiaeeil 1.1 siav Willi Ihe lealll
nine when lliele was a haul acl In
lollmv "
a center.
\ el
ei.nipl.iin
al
all
IK,he
gii.iuls
uleis
\>.i\^
lo
ihe
Ilnee
VVelelious.
Rossi, and lohn ynallliicelll
.ih..in ..in iluiiceuicciUcr. Opposing
eenteis
leave ihe iliiui wide open Ibis year.
ul
si/e
rarely
ve.ll.
I hal did
wliu
gi,i.In.nod
legaidless
last
line
Huh
nil
Hi'Mie Smith (pictured above) was Ihe Danes leading
| ( | B O l M ) I M THIS YKAR '
heiiei ballplavoi. because bis luy-.illy
,,,
im,e||
i|iiesiion
He was an intelligent
pbvei bolh on llie eourl. when he
In this lacl. "Inlhcsccond half,"says
M e n u , "we didn't set up Doc's
did plav. and oil.and he would often
pailerued ollcnse. We ran, made up
be able in piunl out (lungs lo me in
ihe delicti and won." Merrit Icll that
summons vvheie I was oveiluuking
he could have been used more in
soiuctlung in inn game plan. You'd
such an ollcnse bin thai Ihe coach
novel be in tumble il von coached a
olten was iinreceptive to new ideas.
loam
wilh
inon
as
dedicated
as
I elion llvehe."
"Vve can always win 17 in IS games
hole." ho savs. "because wconly play
live ot sis lough leanisaycar. Docks
bul he's only gone to a national lourliailleul once in Ivvcnly veins. I felt
.imply decided that he should MI out
agonies
" Miei a win." llvehe savs.
thai il ihe leaiii changed its pattern
I lie
"when
evetvbodv
ol
l cnlulllltlg
g.lilies
siiplioiiioic season
nl
Ins
in
a
loam's
eeslaeies
stalls
and
coll-
gi.illilaltng oaeh olllel. It's a llinny
I IK unlinks eli-
ding was ihe lailuu ol Ml
known as a big winner in the area,
Millet
lieie
with
Ictkils
mis,,I
volt
wukh
as llie wolds gel
k, lings
\ on ean'l
even talk Willi ihe ol hers because vou
upon his
1
Mi muni llusv will I
have plaved loi ,i ieaiiilh.il was)
enough lot .11, M I | \ ,
lion
loiiiiiaiueltll bnl
I luu
! interested in folk singers,country singers,acoustic
am
I b.iMi.illi
wlioiil
gteul
like
this
no
luu I
days heie at
nonetheless,
game.
sigiiilieautlv
been
Ihev have
unproved llieu games,
I'm mil sonv
I.il
Ihe loin
and
then
own
initiatives,
lllell
ve.us I plaved heie because I kepi in)
uani- have Iheieluie achieved levels
game m good shape wilh Hie pine
,,l sueuss w l i u h base lellccled these
liees alone
ahiluies
I'd even-
I l a i i v . and
like In thank
Reggie loi en-
couraging me lo hang on. because I
ill
love llie game, and seeing I hose guvs
ihe
don't
liiisii.uioii
ol
mil
playing
mwll "
vt'hal is mine important
' hcv have shown llieaie.i. ihehoanl
llaiuhl
, low,Is wcie
Menu also knows aboul
non-playing.
g
He spenl
I.I
months
dining H)7I 72 successfully treating
ins U'.ns heie got along belli I lli.nl
is that
Ihcse men have hiokcn ground here.
ol
< >v, mil loi .1
\s a leant. III. plavcisdt
baskelb.ill
have,
siieccsslul in iiianv ways
Myion.
I p, nl In i. .is
iln
lasi
Mbanv
welen'l le.illv a pail ol winning llie
"llul
d
i
I he vimug men who have finished
then
pel liuin so well was enough to ease
I ntsie.s.
.nul
the
Aluniiu
YsstU'iation I hat character can exist
in alhlelics in any ooloi
Sauerssays.
"I tcspeel ihein all as individuals
•tin i it hoi loams I .an leiiteuibei he
a lieu,in addiction allei voluntarily
ingon
eiilci ing Ihe Hope Mouse ol Albany,
create
Sutlers
vnuiigei and oldei lellows. us wcllas
I h e o i i h thing I n-ullv missed
hole was J I games, and thai happen
lech,
ed Io be sell-iighleoiis and penalize
soineiino loi iheit
uusi.ii.es"
I he in.mi Hung tli.il second le.iui
Kinek
News
\ll-Sl.ii
Reggie S
h
tegiets aboul Ins \e.ns heie was his
position " | ' i | hue Ihe lulwald posl
icmeniheis
Menu's
eil because the .iiliiiuusli..Hondo id-
Albany's
llllll." s.l\s Slllllll. "Il I wile sis II
TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974
have been more
bolh i hu nigh llie guidance ol Sauers
Li Invil.i-
telling how I would h.iu don,
\l
176 Quail St.
could
leehng when soiueone eollTes up lo
v Slate
inuld have dune." Iicsnvs.'il l i o i i l d
Il.nh 7;.lllY|tlll
plav. il
siieccsslul."
v.ui io sav how gieal you played.and
always had il
11 . M M "
the Siena
sli.ue
lint,
limn
lo
w ho loves 11. plav. and w ho w a ills lo
Indus
music aired over the campus community.
points
game, as does Smith, as a Icslimcnt
ehokeil oil in his in..nib
r n ANK'S
Living llooin
lie
and llic learn was wilhoul
lllell
llMrw Si'ii.ll.iril:
ViCiillim,IWI>li..(ol»ni.lnSirai.
Mhai.v.
"OFFENSIVE
lull seat, and since lie hadn't, il was
n " i i I .or, ol III, I
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS|
liesliinan
should have technically sal out one
II seeilleil Iti.lt
I n .1- Ill, p i . m i l ; w. ill
CC 320 or Cali 457-7317. Ask for Ken
the
endowiilenls
s. in. is savsol Ins (i- 1. I 711 pound lug
man.
mi
Millet, lohlison. and Smith. Ile.ip-
because Ihev loll 1 could play viirsitv
ball Hui uh.it call I sav'.' I came ill ii
was h.ippv Io i.inliihiile lo It."
s.iiKis.
ling
s o i l , nul plaving has lo hull a man
belole
: Anyone interested in doing Live Radio? WSUA is
If interested come to
I elloll H u h has been a snhslilule
Miller
veal
llli.s, ,11. luilslulli i ,
j guitarists of any nature who want to have their
suh-
slilules lo Ihe lllllesl oppol lllllllv."
" I l bun me.
lime you
"it
people al lite
lull
Ins lasi ilnee ve.us heie. allot slur-
rocketed ihe popularity ol Seals and
(rolls)
he
miL'lit be nioie lelovaill. because l i l o
Siniili
Crolts. Besides, when was the last
ol
lo
plavuig. voii'ie h.ippv. I he opinions
I Ilk, I,, sli.uil and Willi Doe's
iclaiionship.
need
ol ih,iso ih.II didn't plav loo much
and I began Io wondel il il leallv was
peiloinei
I don't ihuik that a
Ihe
Clue ,iu\ w.iv ' I k new he was wlong
' l o o i u o l e to the songs ol Seals and
Seals and ( mils are more ol a
leels
ami I'm glad Reggie pioved ntv piunl
live
find
losses on Doe's couching ibis year.
Km then again
enlightening
ma)
to decide Ihe utlt-
I le.illv could nul blame any
slatlet
Baha'i
he
does so
sc.isnn 'vMiv plav Siiinh 'lie's novel
hc.uiug I In u'lii.uk.ilso
be an
mils
eoai II I..I.I me .tl [he begllllllllg ol ihe
il someone is not interested m the
io
coach
inn leel lli.il Doeal I illlesused
signilicanl aspects of their lite. I \en
laith.
llie
I In )i k
Ills seiolid hall "
and to talk about one ol the most
"Huh) Jean and Millie Lee." "il not
get
I he "big rock star" image is one
Mhal
"Hut
seiolid hall ..I till-, ve.ll howevel. I
l o i u . o d I've evei had heie.
instead. But the excellent joh on "We
alvoiil him well I , ..ul. I pel I
PAGE TWENTY-TWO
Mike
(Johnson)
terested in hearing about the U a h ' j
ten
Mill n l U N , , I , , hll|' ill HO n u l l MLMil
I
Id
tain
Coming Next Week
Information News
10AM - 4 PM
:
( I i e v e t I I.
gave us ihe chance In liv
id
call)
Says Sutlers. " I certainly wished
could
open, i mining slvle ol
" I he (.ale" is ihel uglish translation
the
Harry also regrets, however, not
S.iuets
back
stand in your way of playing."
running mine. " I n previous years."
hole in doleusivc skill and judgment.
be
having
pla\s his ivpe ol game and it works
minutes later to speak with those in-
would
instances where
helped out."
and
then leet. slonipiug and clapping, oi
ihe name ol one ol
Doc
Idling the house (Bring back the light
Crolts
just
some experience in there could have
show!) and "Standing On A Moun-
uah
called" I he Gale" was appreciable as a
more.
score
oul well. I guess, bul I thought be
Siniili
mid-season. Ibis lime colicci mug I lie
An unrecorded instrumental
retained
and
who could have opened up some
this fine
veal ihe issue came up once tunic .11
incelv
album
have
centers
games loi us. I left that Doc never
on
was
guilai
the new
tournament) I feci I
bigger
(Stipi uuiiwic/i. and
"Desert I'eople." a Irce-llow pick-up
w illi
horn
more
Ihe "official" part of the concert
lite tesl nl llic season
opening
did
ended unluckily."
something Ihnl is'anii-'oi negative,"
\|so
then
who
used
however,
I op" got strong electric guitar
.successfully.
imaginative
ended
Girl" was
responded
played both loi ward and guard and
OKhcstial Mimgs section
"Humiiiiitghnd."
"There
loi ihe improvements he lias made
tracted
the
says,
audience was reminded that Seals
represented: "Diamond
including
cut.
I had
accompanied with starry strobe light
songs
title
I.).
therefore
philosophy
I hey
(I..
puis, and he can't even dribble."
OI
heads-
supporting
growing number ol musicians heard
to get more offensive
Roosevelt
rebounds, but I never succeeded. Me
it is probably impossible to
A n Afterward
group Uu then concerts relied s the
album,
ping ability
al
play fiddle any faster. He evidently
fiddle
Ihe S&C Hit Parade
we'll
motorcycles together."
Ibis
and
Johnson
I expected sparks to lly from his
breeze and substituting March winds
On " I h e Hoy Down Hie Road,"
system). I breathed easier as Seals'
boasting; he was just being honest.
startling
Marry was our leader on defense."
year
with jazz i n -
the basis of their
hurried
aspect ol Seals' and Crofts' perforl-or some reason, their harmonies
I.os Angeles (.1 yearsland my senior
always wanted him to use his jum-
electric with wah wah mandolin and
many
badly
had
square dance. On the encore number
Miller
seemed to have caught Jim Seals
I
years ago. I was happy to just be
Photographer's Delight
plain'about some unexpected com-
Company?
In looking back Merrit says, "Two
given first shot at starting positions
song followed in which Crofls went
with a grey-white mist. Did England
Dan and
however, as the freshman tulcnt was
'hiickhone of our team, and this year.
Sauers
began spraying the stage and ceiling
Warming Up A Chilly House
hurl us this season. Defense is the
pier al guard. In high school, both in
road games, it would really hurt us. I
evidently wow wowed the audience.
round-
neighborly gathering to enjoy some
hut lit six-two. I'd have felt a lot hap-
when lie was flirt, as he often was in
flected flute playing. An unidentified
on
of existance."
Lint/,
page
who must have stepped right out of a
I his musical interpretation featured
Jeff
the real
the hall and watch him score, but
Crofts on piano, Seals on isax and
sideman
But'
center of attention was fiddler Seals,
prophet-wisemen of the Baha'i faith
to whom the disciples would travel.
stage "star."
Continued from fallowing
TUESDAY, MAK< 'II I'.i 1 171
sixth
ull-tlnie
liitnici
llic
coach
school,
telling him "Harold
al
Ihe scniois p.ulioiilai ly helped lo
a
closeness
between
Ihe
Mrnoine
between the blacks andwhiles. Ihe
Menu
biggest benclii probably was to my
will ncvei he able In cm il wilh you."
lanidy.
I veil Saiieis admits that he luinsell
chalice pievuuisly in assoeiale with
vvlucli
had
not
had
Ihe
"ncvei expected
llaiold 1. help us
black people. Ihe warm icliilionslup
here, hui alter all he's been through,
which has since developed between
he has euine back In aid us trcmen-
my wile, children and these men will
ilouslv."
be benclicial for litem always."
leading
J
ACiE TWENTY THREE
sports
Apr '
PRESS
Tuesday. Mnrch 19, 197-1
/
Young Cagers Face More Rebuilding
by Bruce R. Maggin
"I have to be satisfied with the 17-8
record," said Doc Sauers as he
reflected on the just-completed
basketball season. This is really an
understatement, as Sauers took
three returning ball players and
molded them with three freshmen to
come up with a very successful combination.
Left with no returning guards Doc
put his faith in freshmen Ed Johnson. Gary Trcvett and Mike
Supronowitz and it paid off. Their
inexperience plagued the Danes
throughout the early going but all
three matured as the season
progressed.
The Cagers really turned their
season around after theirdouhle loss
road trip, leaving the team at 7-6.
Albany won their next seven in a row
including the unforgettable game
against Siena.
The team, though, was hurt by inconsistent play, as Albany often had
Itot and cold stretches. The Danes at
limes were undisciplined and took
too many poor shots. Albany was.
best at the rulining game as the fresh-'
ment guards seemed more accustomed to it.
The key to the team's success has
to he attributed to Byron Miller.
Hyron led the Danes in scoring and
became Albany's seventh thousand
point man. Miller was the man the
team looked to in the clutch. The
Danes seemed to rely on Miller too
much. When Byron couldn't spark
the club, the team often fell flat. His
inconsistent play on the road also
hurt. But when Byron was at the lop
of his game there was nobody with a
better shooting touch. In many Harry came around. He was the
games he brought the Danes back team's defensive leader and he
into contention with his hot brought his shooting percentage up
shooting. In the Siena game Miller to a respectable level.
I'ele Koola will be a key player as
provided the last minute heroics as
his shot with 14 seconds won the far as next year's team is concerned.
game. Miller will be a hard man for He will probably inherit Johnson's
center position. I'ele played well in
.Doc Sauers to replace.
•' Senior co-captain Reggie Smith spurts bin was hampered by his first
bad himself another line year as he semester layoff. He will give the
also closed out his varsity career. Danes a strong inside man: Koola inReggie was the team's leading offen- troduced a beautiful hook shot
sive rchounderand Sauers fell Smith against Brockport. He's a very unplayed as close to his potential as selfish ballplayer and his style of
pins should til in very well next
possible.
scar.
Harry Johnson is really a true rags
Gary Irevcll made the most
to riches story as he never played
high school ball. But in his three progress ol the trio of freshmen
years on the varsity squad, he cer- guards as he started the season on
tainly made a substantial contribu- the bench and he gradually worked
tion. Alter an itsvlul start shooling- his was nun the starling lineup, lie
wi.se at the beginning ol the year. became the Danes' floor leader and
led the team in assists.
Fd Johnson started the season like
a bouse on lire as his shots Iriim the
kes svere going in. Gradually the opposing learns ssiscd up and Johnson
lust ssasn'l thai explosive. He had
mans good games hul he also had
Swimmers -Improvement
by Rob (ieier
Jim Herrick drove us home
swimmers,
through the sleet-covered AdironAssislnnlCoach.lohn Quinnwasa
dacks after the SUNYAC's at 'major laclor inthcimproscment. He
Potsdam. 1 sat in the car with took time oil Irom his studies al
friends, fellow team members, a
Albany law School to help run morteam I had lo cover as an ASP
mug and alternoon practices, as well
reporter and tried lo analyze the as travel lo a majority ol Ihe meets.
progress Ihe team made. Hell asleep. Quiiin kept I en Van Ryu and Ken
1 lie dual meet record was lour
Weher going when Hies wauled to
ssal's and scscn losses; ihe same as quil tbeii extremely long, distance
last season. Al least Iwo ol these
ssoikouis. As a loimei
Mllosses could base been turned into
Vnierican swimniei be had ihe
wmsil iheleamhadadiser. I wiecas
knowledge and experience necessary
many ponds svere scored in the
lo inspire much ol the learn through
SUNYAC championships, lor a
Hauling and competition.
seventh as opposed lo lasl sear's
Disuig Coach Jim llerrickdid not
lentil place finish. I hirtccn ol scscnbase much lo ssoik ssilh. hul he did
icen school records were broken.
help Kurt I.mnvcrich learn lo disc
I bese statistics show the improvemail osei previous years. I.en Van
Ryu and l.es Purely are llle only
graduating seniors. I ssodiscrs base
applied lo Albans, and il accepted
will go nut loi the team. Willi ihe
prcscnl team members improving.
and nesscomers adding more depth,
nexl scar's learn should lurlhcr the
improvement m Albans swimming.
Ihe team's stars and legends
played an important rule in Ihe miprosemenl. Ihe coaches and
swimmers thai were not high point
scorers also deserve mention
Brian Kellythe
wasteam's
head coach.
He
coordinated
aciisiucs.
planning practice schedules and
meets, and working Willi individual
ssell enough to complete mans ol ihe
reqiiiied and optional discs
neeessais bo competition,
Cciiain ssviinmeis were hardly
mentioned throughout Ihe seat hut
deseise iccogiiitioii.
I Ins was l.es Puret/'s final year in
swimming Vlci three seals as the
team's nuinhei one bicaslsliokci be
decided in us his band al the short
distance liecstylc.
I Ills was sophomore I oin Staple's
lasl seal swimming also, A sore
shouldei
loin Iroiiispriuling lo picvciiled
Ins hesi capabilities,
lie
managed lo lake many second and
lluid places despite this impairment,
Jell Rosen swam butterfly. I.M..
and distance events. His tunes
• — ~ — — — — — |
An ai|iiuman In a previous meet.
dropped cnusiderahls ,il ihe
SINN \( championships. In addilion to bis swimming Jell and lus
mascot, a hlllc monkey named Dewici. weie gical fioosis in learn
inoiale
\s .i distance swimmer. Russell
Itossci siascd in the shadow ol Van
Ryu and Wehei. He impiosed Ins
times substantially and should star!
ssiiiiniiu points fin ncsl seal's leant,
kin
McVnnnrn and Kuis
Rolliikk did uoi see mucb eonipciilion because Ibcs lies ei :swum toinpctniscls heloic ibis sen. Mies
began lo impiose u.waul the end ol
file season and should add depth lo
next seal's leant.
separation relegated him lo Ihe
bench. Because ol the rapid progress
ol the Ircshmcn. Sauers didn't want
lo rotate lour guards. Kapner sat till
Ihe I.CAC"s. When he did play. Rich
showed that he is a very intelligent
ballplayer and thai more than makes
up lor his lack ol offense. Willi Ed
Johnson moving to forward next
year. Kapner should sec substantial
action.
Because Miller. Johnson and
Smith are all lorwards. Iheii loss will
hurt I hat much more. Ld Johnson
and I'ele Koola look like good bets
lo fill iwo ol those spots. Bob Audi
and Warren Miller, both on Ibis
scar's lugllls successful junior sarsiis. ssill probably haltle lorn
Mm plus lot the final starting posiIIOII Miller lias a long ssas to go as
be still lacks quickness. Doc Sauers
is seis impressed ssilb Audi and
compares bun quite lasorab!) Willi
Reggie Smith when he ssas a
Ircsbinan. Mm plus is a b'5" tiunslei
student, who sat out Ibis sear
because ol eligibility All three ol
mans pool games, lie learned a
great deal in Ins rookie seal and fid
should make more progress nexl
scar. Johnson started the lirM game
ot the scar at lorssard and he could
be a slarlei on the Ironilinc next
season.
these loissards should see a great
deal ul action,
l >n the reel lining side .15 potential
basketball piospecls huseapplicd lo
Slbans, including Icin, Marblcx. a
lop piuspecl Irom Albans High. It
will lake a really line plasei mil ol
ibis huueli to make the sarsity.
Mike Siipmnowii/ bad a sen inMhaus ibis sear gol UNCI an miconsistent rookie seal as he wuslnirt
poilaiil hurdle alter the graduation
bs an calls season injurs, lie per- ol all ol lis guards. Sauers will base
tornicd best al the running game but unequally lough situation lo lace
bad dilficulls selling up. Ile'sagreat
next seal as be must replace his
shooting tliic.it bin Sauers leels bis is bole Irom line. I he prospects look
dclcnsc "has a long way lo go."
good loi aiiotbci successlul season
Rich Kapner gase the team some next se.u ami perhaps esen an
much needed experience al guard in M \ \ bid I be talent is definitely
the carls going bin a shoulder llieic.
Reactions to Careers
Vary Among Hoopsters
by Vinnle R e *
In doing a profile oil the live
graduating members ol ibis year's
Albany Stale sarsiis basketball
learn, one can not help but feel that,
in a sense. SUN Y A has completed
ihe racial gamut. Byron Miller.
Reggie Smith. Hans Johnson.
l-ebon llyehe. and Harold Menu
arc mil only the first black men in recent memory to complete Ihcii cage
careers here; they arc the first allblack group ol non-ieiuiinng cage
siais al a school whose sole conlacl
with a non-while, al one lone, eonsisled ol leaching loi a box ol eonveiled nee.
Vet.iiilookingclosei.oncrcalizes
Ihe incquilies which slill csisi Ibis
ycai's icam duplicaled lasl season's
17-K nunk. attended and losl ihe
same post-season loinnainciu. and
played overall, a more exciting
hiand ol ball As Hairy Johnson
noles. hossesci. "the school didn'l
gise us ihe Ian support which n did
| lls l vum
"One part ictilat lime stands out ill
ins mind. We had beaten Bullulo
State and I icdonia one weekend.
and then delealed Siena in a gical
' game the nexl All ol these teams
sveic seis highly icgardcd. Yet al the
uexi game seisiis Oiiconia. Ibe gym
bcie \s.isn't esen ball filled. I bey
sseic lankcd among Ihe loin ol lisc
lop college teams in ibeslalc.and sse
»<ie also come loi Doc's (coach
Kicbaid "Doc" Sauers) Jlllhh caieci
sunns lasl seal, a big game like
Ibis would liasedrassna bugeeiowd.
and I cnn'i help lectinc lliul n vsasa
lack "' "bile hues oui Iheic which
made the diUcicnec."
I as| season ilnce ol the slaiting
lis,' plaseis wci c w bile, bin this yeai
'be ligiue dioppeil to one, the lowest
inliool while lo black in ihesclu.ol's
basketball luMois I lr.it may base
caused some beaiiacbes loi ihe
Miiinui Wou.unui. hul. according
locoachSaueis.il ine.iiu little as l.u
as be was c.nieciued "ludnidii.il
pctsonabls dillcicuccs." he says,
"sseic ibe tails allowances dial I csei
bad i" make in dealing with my
leant I've plased and coached ihe
black ballplasci all ins hie. and I've
learned Ihal all sou niusi do is treat
each individual, while ni black, with
equal lespccl
"Some people sas ihal die black
ballplasci niiislplay aeeilamly peol
iiinuing basketball, which is mil ihe
lype ol hall weplay here. Idisagree: I
led ins plaseis base all blended ssell
niio inn siylc ol plus "
fii.liMdu.il abilities and leeliugs
ilil lei .iiuoiig Ibe lisc pet lormcis. ycl
on one point Ibes eolieul Ml would
base |iiclciied lo play a mole wideopen ispe ol ball in ihcii veals bcic
fision
Millei. co-captain and
lucuibci ol ihe Kiuck Vsss-l-nion
SI.II \ien Vll-Si.u basketball lusi
leuiu. lelt ili.il "pels
My. that's the
one Hung about Ihe piog
i lime
winch boiheied me M.ishc oui
iccoid would base been the same,
Inn ibe games would base been a hell
ol ., Imnmi, cii|os.ihlc. both In, ihe
plaseis and Ihe Inns I leel that llle
.uls.iniages in HI
ig oulweign ihe
disadvantages answas Iheie wcie
nisi too nuns learns tU.it. once dies
knew
leuse. would lock
noil up "
s.meis k-li. bovesei. dial ihe
-lossci. pattern Ispe ollcusc bun
Willci less th;
s ,
s players
"When we wcic.sei up. u ssasensie.
loi Hsion lo maiieusci one on-one
.ig.inisi his man. ami fins was Ins
most cllciiivcwcapou."s.issSaucis
"I niusi adniil. ihough." ihe coach
adds, "ihal I don'l think I helped
liyion develop as much as I base
mans oihei players. He was an
emotional ispe ol ballplasci When
chaigcd up. you insi bad lo gel bun
slawsky
Telethon begins this afternoon at
four o'clock vvilh auctions, pies,
singing, dancing, and jokes in the
Campus
(enter
Ballroom,
ihe number lo call for a donation is
459-1537.
ly ol New York at Albany
l-HILJAY. MAHCH 22. ltf/4
A Year's Planning Comes
Down To 24 Hours Tonight
by Natic) Albauph
I he tusk ul producing a show like
tonight's 24-hour I clclhon is both
exhilarating and staggering. Cochairmen David T aitet and Lori
Cierher. as well as all the other people
involved m ihe benefit tor the
W ild wood School lor the
l>e\elopnieniall\ Handicapped,bad
;i lormidable vseek aheadol them last
\ | i) n il;i\ w u h las l m i mite
cancellations in the script, hanlic
telephone calls, and
dav-long
bake sales m the Campus (.'enter.
lallet sa\s ihev are shooting lor
SI.S.OOl) this your* in an eflort to surpass lasl \ ear's record ol $12,500.
With llle estimated SJ.51H1 horn the
lood lasts on all quads Wedne.sdav
night, lallet sees $20,000 as a notso-unrealistie goal. "Just remind
everyone lo hung money," laughs
David.
Work started last May loi this
spring's lelethon. How did lallet
and (ierher get the chairmanships'.'
I hey looked al each other dining ihe
interview and smiled pseudo-ruelully
at each other and said simultaneously. "We were lorccd into it."
Between letters and phone calls
over the summer lo various companies,, they managed to collect
pri/es lor the show: everything Irom
a night's stay at the Water lied Suite
ol the Myall House to housewares.
I hey called celebrities in an
attempt to get a big name here. Mike
Douglas taped ihe promos lor the
show, hut "We just I mind oui today
tall) Mary lyler Moore can't couicj
Betty Cieorge (as in Moo), Irom
Channel 13 WAS I news locally, has
.nlcd tn hostess the show loi a
leu limns Iridav night In addition,
lelethon people well auction oil a
dale with her.
One ol ihe big tall-lhroughs in
planning the show was MacDonald's, lallet and (ierher asked
MacDonald's lo send Ronald MaeDonald to Alhan\ Ini the children's
hour Saturday morning. Ihev
accepted, volunteering lo supplv
lood loi all Ihe lelethon vvoikers.
lallet and derhei went ahead and
wrote the promotional tapes including Ronald MaeDonald's name.
Ihe da\ alter the tapes were
released. MaeDonald's Chicago olhce called Albany and said as ol the
next day Ronald Mae Donald would
be making no more appearances.
Ihe tapes had been distributed, so
MaeDonald's was receiving la-tad vert ise ment lor doing nothing.
I hey also hacked out ol the oiler lo
supply lood.
One ol the conditions under
which ihes had agreed lo come was
that no oihei lasl lood chain be contacted, advertised or presented on
I clclhon. I clclhon members lound
ihe whole attitude id MaeDonald's
very upsetting.
Ken Wax. a Central Council
member, summed up the incident
saying " I bis hamburglary is an outrage. I bat MaeDonald's Corporation, as organization that has sold
enough ol us products to serveevery
person horn since the
creation
I hamburgeis. 2 I lench | - n c s and a
large Coke, proud ol its community
service, is unable lo muster up a couple ol hundred hamburgers and a
........-..I.-,I I.. Iitivirss t h e s h i m U n a
The MC's keep the show moving
clown tor such a worthy
cause, .isab*—*
.
sitidlv peltv and commercially
loohsh."
Ibe script writing was amolher
knee lasl minute problem. I.aeh
houi
ol
lelethon was suhdiuded
into live minute time blocks, and
n.'i l.uim-rs had lo be scheduled.
I ast minute changes will occur
during the how. in all probability,
\s lallet s id "Right now we're gonig oui ol ur minds getting people
arranged."
Ihe mothers ol children in the
W iklwood home have been very
helplul. the co-chairman said. I hey
supply cakes lor the Campus Center
bake sales and moral support lor the
workers. I a I lei linds the pa rent's appreciation one ol ihe main satisfactions ol working on the show. I he
main reason he works is because "I
leel a lot lor the kids."
Ihe money from the hake sales,
savs lallet. is used lor paying oil
bills. He looked at Ion and they
came up with a lisl ol expenses:
phone, postage, posters, and butlone. I hey were
surprised lo
lind they had to pav. lor a janitor to
clean up alter the show, and lo pay to
keep the Campus Center open all
night.
I he Committee chairmen are vital
to pulling the show logether. Mary
Lindsay and (i;nl Blaustein headed
oil-campus publicity, while Barbara
I'olmerand headed publicity uncanipus
I be Personnel Committee, essential lor hghlmg. piops. and checking
in performers during tonight's 24
hour show, is headed b\ Barbara
I'tinner and Man lean I \ons
Many singers are featured tonight.
slawsky
Telethon Begins Tonight
Students at State University of New York at Albany will conduct Telethon
'74, their seventh annual 24-hour lund-raisingevent, this weekend, beginning
at 8 p.m. l-riday (Mar. 22). The theme for this year's presentation is "Let's Be
Friends," and proceeds will go to The Wildwood School for
developmcntally-handicappcd children.
ITte continuous entertainment marathon will eminate from the university's
Campus Center Ballroom. Included will be folk songs, show tunes, satirical
skits, humorous monologues, dance routines, and international talent. The
entire program is open lo Ihe community.
Television talk-show host and entertainer Mike Douglas has taped promotion spots for theevent and among the special guests during the weekend will
he WASTs wealherwoman Betty George and her dog, Moo. They are
scheduled for around midnight on Friday and a date with Betty will be auctioned oil.
Ifolh WASTIChannel I3)and WTEN channellO) will televise portions of
lelethon '74. lor the first lime the videotape packaged by the university's
I educational Communication Center will be in color. Both stations will
leature a 45-minute segment from I a.m. to 1:45 a.m. and WAST also will
show a two-hour program videotaped in the ballroom Friday evening. That
program, which will begin al noon on Saturday, will be all-new material and
will not repeat anything from the earlier segment.
" h c s - I I H lu- lace" nn d "die
Since colli i-si" conic undci
ssoist
Hal
Malmud's .oui Debbie Kolbcluld's
(iimmicks t oinmiilcc.
On Saturday morning there will be several hours ol entertainment and
pn/es lor children, including a puppet show, games, and a story hour. A
sanely ol gills Irom supportive area businessmen will he offered during the
weekend, among them a walerbed suite stay al the Hyatt House in Albany.
lovce I icdlei and Icnv I olev
went Irom stoic lo stoic in the
Albany area soliciting pro/es undei
Ihe name ot the Solicitations Committee
Co-chan men lor 1 clclhon '74, ihe largest student-run venture ol its kind in
Ibe nation, arc Fori (ierher Irom Oceansidc and David laffelt of Yonkers,
both juniors. "We're expecting great things," they say. "Il would besatislying
lo the committee and certainly most beneficial to the children at Wildwood lo
exceed last year's total (SI 2,300)... Uul the key is support and we're counting
on everyone's personal involvement litis weekend."
Karen ( hboll and Michael Klein,
Out it men ol the lalent Committee,
spent bonis with then committee
listening and sortingihroughall the
piopie who auditioned lor the
show.
I he Wildwood School works on an 'individual basis with approximately
50 children of elementary school age. Il acts as a stepping stone with the purpose of the children's being able to return lo public school life and
curriculum.
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Fa&e Fire Alarms Council Amends Election Law
Causing Problems
by Carole Zingman
I wo S U N Y A students have heen
charge ol reckless endangerment is
issued appearance lickcls as a result
made il a lire department responds
ol the lalse lire a l a r m which w a s t o the lalse alarm,
pulled in Montauk Hall on Indian
It was noted that there were sixlyUuad on Kchruary 28. it was live incidents ol false reporting
reported h\ campus police assistant
(including those related to b o m b
director J i m C'onnallv last week.
threats! in W72; s e v c n u - l o u r a r c on
I he charge pending against the record lor 1974. h o r no o b v i o u s
pan is ol lalsely reporting an acci- reason, m o r e olthe.se incidents occur
dent.
in the lull than in the spring.
I he case has been adjourned until
I he danger inherent ill these kinds
March 21. and the students, whose "I incidents is that in r e s p o n d i n g t o a
names a r e withheld, will a p p e a r in lalse alarm, police o i l i i e m c n m a y he
Ihc (iiiiklerland town court, as well delayed in responding to a real
;is being rclerred to the Student emergency. I his delay, caused by
p u l h n y a lire alarm box when there is
Judicial Hoard.
While pulling the alarm is a no l i K " i h\ lalseK r e p o r t i n g a n incicriminal u l l i m e ol misdemeunor dent, v nl mean p m p e r t j d a m a g e
loss ol lile.
d e g r e e , an additional criminal • H U |
•
•
"Malicious lal.se alarms cost the
taxpayers ol New York Slate more
than S2 million a year and arc
becoming an increasing threat to the
salely ol all liremen." Dr. Sal J.
I'ic/ioso. State Commissioner lor
Local Government reported
Commissioner Pre/ioso said that
a substantial percentage ol lire
alarms in the state's five largest cities
New York. Buffalo, Rochester,
Yonkers and Syracuse
are
malicious lalse alarms. He added
that the number of malicious false
al.ntis appears to be increasing
despite lucalatu-mpts io |ne\eiil U K in
I IK piuhlein is not eonlmed to
die Lngei cities even lluuigh ihe\
i l . i g e ..I such lalse
I 1.11 L'
Di I'I
»«^ft»r. p . a wufflj jonenca'irffCrTr ' l o n e
ADAEBM AV^
" . 3 t AtsC tL-:M
3se;.
•
•
Diliei measures which the Stale
Commissioner for Local Government
r e c o m m e n d e d to reduce
malicious lalse lire alarms included;
Year-round programs in which
school children \isit lire stations to
strp.plein.em classroom instruction
on lire prevent ton. with c m p h a s i s o n
i he daiigcis to the community and to
liremen in lalseK reporting lues.
Reporting h\ lire departments
to iheii local newspapers, radio and
tele vision si alum sol lalse lire alarms
wnli appeals In hie ollicials lo the
piihlic in the iK'ighhoilioods inu i h e d lo phone llie nearest In J stain HI wuli dcsciipiions ol individuals
who iua\ have sounded the alarm.
Council member Rich G o r d o n
suggested that accuracy was needed
and the use ol voting machines
would lacihlaie achievement ol the
highest degree ol accuracy. He
argued thai with the balloting
system, there is more possibility for a
li\cd election lo occur, since ballots
could he easiK lost and obtained bv
people who might want lo sway the
election.
SA Vice-I'rcsidcnl Harrv Davis.in
aiiswei lo Gordon, reminded the
council lhai the balloting paper is
non-diiphcahlc am* that machines
can be tampered \ il I'l jusi as easily.
h a liirnbaum. council member
l i o m Minimi Quad and chairman ol
live I lection Reloim Committee
stated thai the balloting system was
bene] since il would allow lor
liicaiei si ud e nl paiiicipation. I he
most important objective of a quires that a student may n o t vote in
democratic election. Birnbaum feels the general spring election for fall
that long lines lor machines may
representatives if he will g r a d u a t e
result in lower voter t u r n - o u t .
before t h e beginning of the fall
Mitch Zoler said that more
semester, with the exception of
st udents could v ote if m o r e machines graduating seniors who may vote for
were available and then placed on
e v e n quad, instead of just in the
An entire amendment
which
c a m p u s center.
would have limited campaign spenAnother issue became the locus ' ding was stricken from the hill along
lor length) debate when Council, with a section requiring candidates
upon a motion by chairman Eric lor University Senate and Central
I onschein. voted to strike out an en- Council lo attend at least one
tire amendment which would have meeting t o he eligible to r u n .
required students lo vole only from
I'rior to the business of the electhe living areas in which they tion reform bill, a motion was raised
currentl> reside. Birnbaum stated concerning the impeachment of
that this would increase student par- several Council members. A motion
ticipation and permit each candidate lor impeachment may be brought
to become better acquainted with against any member who h a s 3 o r
their constituency, their needs a n d more unexcused absences. The mothe quad's needs.
tion was postponed indefinitely since
A suggestion was raised that each Council was lacking the n u m b e r of
q u a d ' s hallol he available on all cam- people needed to bring a b o u t trial
pus residences. I his would eliminate
the need lor. Inpothelicallv. an
Council discussed t h e fact that
Allen Center student, planning to 1 removal is unlikely because there are
move lo Indian quad the following
nevci enough members present to
semesier l o e o m e to t h e uptown camhave a trial.
pus pisi lo vote. Instead, this student
Council passed bills accepting the
could vote on the Indian quad ballot
Spring Weekend
h u d g e t. a p on the downtown c a m p u s
piopiialing moiiev
lo t h e Harness
I he 'amendment was passed as
such wuh the stipulation thai unless
housing lists were avilahle. prool
would be required lo verity tuture
aieas ol residency (il that prool is
available liom Housing)
Racing CIUTI. uiul icqiiiring class olJ i e e r s lo l e p u l j o SA president bimonthly. Hills involving the S A
budget, the judicial system endorsement, and the Suidcnt-I acuity
Cooperative were postponed until
next week.
The Pinball Wizards Play All Day
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Central Council, in a lengthy
meeting Wednesday night, approved
a bill a m e n d i n g present S A election
policy. It includes the option of using
voting machines as a n alternative to
the paper balloting and a new system
whereby students may vote on the
hallol of their future residency on
any q u a d .
Much discussion of the bill, submitted hv the election reform committee, centered around the issue ol
whether accuracy in election results
or more student participation should
he the primarv ohjeelive in deciding
upon the best svslem ol voting.
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SUNYB
Albany Disciples of Maharaj Ji: Seeking "The Knowledge"
by Linda Gaylord
there has been a center for premies
(as the disciples are called) at 393
by Glenn von Nostiti
State Assemblyman Arthur Eve
thinks the State University at Buffalo
is guilty of racial discrimination, so
in about four weeks he plans to institute court proceedings against the
University Center to correct the
situation.
In a recent wide-ranging interview
in his Albany office, Eve described
his efforts to achieve fair hiring practices at S UN Y Buffalo and the entire
statewide S U N Y system. He is trying t o find out about past and present actions at Buffalo by talking to
staff members, and is obtaining line
item budget compilations and other
data on the number of minority
employees hired by the university.
The Assembly man says the SUNY
Buffalo administration has been
generally uncooperative with his investigation. When he began about
two years ago, he says they completely refused to release any of the
information he requested. Eve adds
that the present administration of
Robert Kctter appears to finally be
opening some of the records to
scrutiny.
Education and Welfare Department
investigators uncovered widespread
hiring discrimination about three
years ago. Its aim is to increase the
number
of
minority
group
employees in SUNY.The program
has set up unofficial quotas for the
University to meet. Affirmative Action is funded and operated directly
by SUNY Central Administration in
Albany, with a budgel of several
hundred thousand dollars.
Eve also charges that SUNY's Affirmative Action program is not being properly adhered to, as well as
being inadequately funded.
Eve calls this level or appropriation "totally inadequate" and thinks
it should he raised to near $700,000.
This amount of money would
provide an increased central administrative stall is well as a stall for
Affirmative Action is a S U N Y —
wide program set up after Health
Prison massacre. He is asking ilic
slate to finance a $2.5 million \ui c l ,
Brothers Legal Defense, lo enuiitcr
the $6.5 million he says the stole Inn
already spend on prosecuting Hit ,\|.
lica inmates involved in Ihc uprising
Close lo 100 people have been
placed on the slate payrolls to conduct the prosecution against M „|
the I2KI Atlica inmalcsulin ULU'III
the prison yard during the upiising.
Many of the defendants lace HK
possibility ol gelling .lOseparatclile
sentences.
each S U N Y campus to oversee the
Affirmative Action Program on a
local basis.
The proposed I974 SUNY budget
calls lor funding of one affirmative
action
director
on each campus,
which Eve calls "not enough."
He says that more money is needed for Albany operations. "With 72
campuses scattered around the slate.
Central Administration just doesn't
have enough money to check on
everybody," Eve asserts.
I he Assemblyman also criticized
Opportunities
Program. LOP and
and
I K
presently have an
of about
ilunks
llus
$250,000,
should
be
doubled.
I \o had more harsh words lor the
SLM
Hullalo administration,
criticized t h a n
lie
anlltpiated and ills.
lor abolishing the
I his international mission, which
claims 6 million members, is e x periencing widespread appeal. There
arc over 40.00(1 followers in Ihe United States. And since May of 1973
(•or the people who have joined
Ihe
movement
this " s a c r e d "
.n,,:
program which had ensured lhal a
lixed number ol jobs would he set
I llllll P e o p l e . Ms Well .is |I
aside In] minorities each year. Since
in ihe juries.
Ihe
Vln.i
bee
thai .i siiiul.il one is in opcinlion .it
Rite Mubtitim Cadet of 323 central
New
legal complications.
because llu
Wmhlvman
Ave. offers the students of SUNYA a 10%'
Hi..":
o polilleal
the I inveisiiv ,>l California with no
> int-.
discount towards any purchase vjfith this
11.
•
SI.IK
coupon.
I
pi., v. in.
millions nl .I..11.II .In i
also
had .i gieai deal in sm ahoiil the
i\
new slienlls ami
llnlls stemming Iron! the 1971 \tlica
( inrar, in an c i t a t u m
'ontmiwtifron,
/, ,i
lirst being ilic plii>ci r u n l e t i
iim)
h i u !
IIK-ITISCIU'S on llic losing side since ii
is u n h on rare occasions ulicn a
,
i/\M
Ilic \ i u i i u c Incigv ( m i l
s\Un sliirul .nut u . i u h ,
miss
the machine
people ale
\ l ( " s nucL,n d u m p i n g ajea ileal
Richland. Washington, accidentally
leased 2sl)0 gallons ol higlilv
plau't canheai llie machine h\ soei • huj.
.mil
li is lieli - «
nun. fh-n
because
:
"I
lias
dime
ihe tt.itei
lahlc below The diim-
piueaiea
and wilUienlnallv Iced
min the C ulumhiu Rivet.
lnviiiiniiiciitalist.svvaiulluilibe.se
i.nil...mitt
s..il Hiis in..mil
i-,in inn be siuictl salelv: I hcv piitnl
the machine
kicking, punching
and wuious I m m s o l pounding Upon
machines llic\ u i l l n .
Perhaps the besi i \ p
1 IK spilled liquid emu.lined the
i.tilio.itiivc uicgicdicnis siiuiiiiiiin
'ill. plul..iiium p . u n t i e s .mil eesiiiin
..ui ih.n ilic spills are occurring tnI|.I\ t t l i c i i i h c l ititcd Stales operates
.mil Mines lite tt.isles ol unlv IS
I ..> pei i pic H ho keep hack "I sinli
Mini.;", llus is llu- I7ili publicly
i . p . H I , . I leak .11 lilt' II.nil.Mil silt
.intl I'iss
II in It .11 pi.nils,ii. HI ml Ilic nation. Ilv
ih.' v,-.0 .'nun 111•. \ l ( ' plans In 111.if.ISI llu IMIMIIHI til aloullt' plants
, is I,, loon
u'i|iiMiiic m a i n
Unlike (lie l u s u l e l i m -
u
|
u
people pi,is pmlult
( 1 h\um>
is vers c o m m o n , )
pmhall "because a isiii i
I lie
second
breed
ol
pinball
one
I'eoph p "
Umg as lhe\ esisi
p,..|»ii
uncle.o
vtasics
,nnl then nilc is essentialK lo psyche
out the pla\et. Such euphemisms
I t u s t i a l i o n in.in\ uct In
One dissalislteil pla\
IN. liiiiiiiiissiiiii u p , u i s 11 I.I i ;i|i
pi,,.mi.M, Iv Mli.iliHI g.illiMis nl Inn
.iililuiiMi.ilntieli'.-ii d u m p i n g a t e a s
\ t t i , u l i i i a in ihe \ l ( . ihe a n a s
as "(in
ih;tt vse gel a 'TiubaH .v.]
tt ask- li.n, l i n n spilli-,1 .uiiikiii.illt
il ill, Rn.hl.ihtl Mlt- m llu p.isi II,
ithi'u Hie spills a i e IICCIII nng can ma
h. iisi-il Ini liiiiii.iiih.ihil.il
oi l.n
"Down
the
ill
spills indicate lhal
living
go."
dcspiu
u.isles into Hit-
o h s e r \ c i s aie the niachinc rtioters
Yukon
litem
sides." "Middle." " I he h o o k " and
"Kiss ol dealh Ik o d )" .lie all used
mil lee in gel I" I i n t;..im m c i M t \ " I'ci h a p . i!
in clloiis to shallci the lict'U.s ol
would v \ i u e u - i \ u t u i HI
323 Central Ave.
10% |
low levels ol l a d i n i m h have reached
Ilic
sadislrcal eii|o\ nietii •••
p | c seiiNelcvsh blow if:
lion ol healing the machine, this l\ pe
mulcn
u again
111 IJ a phenomenal a m o u n t ol points
[Note: Second dcliiulion ol beating
I he machine
Come in a n d say Hello.
i
i
i
i
i
i
Radioactive Leakage Found
From Reactor Waste Dump
h,,|| ;HILJICIKTS.IU'» um|>.
IM.iu-i iunlets Ltlmosi ;IIW»\N liiul
| |0%
Visiting Guru, Mahatma Trivinanand, close associate of Guru Maharaj Ji, leading
group in meditation at their local headquaters.
. . .
Pinball Wizards Blow Dough
|i|;i_urv
, ,K. l h m )
Premie Roherl Cutting has said of
the movement, "What he's (Guru
Maharaj Ji) really saying is. it's
I inner pence) available il you want it,
and il sou really want peace, it's a
juiaraulcc that you can gel il here"
As an opening month special,
1 .
in most cases."
program is illegal, hui Eve contends
I his movement has attracted people Irom all walksof life. The general
coordinator of ihe Millennium '73
Icsiival
held at the
Houston
Astrodome, was Rennic Davis of
the Chicago Seven.
Coupon Special
assistance lai bcvum! n .
Keller
has Mini ili.n inianlcnancc ol such .1
And with Ihe political tensions in,
not only this country but the whole
world, with the economic insecurity
in many countries, including our
own. and with the spread of the disease known as "man's inhumanity to
man." it's not hard to see how a
movement which offers so much for
so little has caught on as this one has.
Ihe Guru asks of his disciples only
that they meditate on the unspoken
word, attend Satsang, and do service, which in Miss Levi's words.
"Can he just about anything."
,.
savs llnil Ihi' dclcii.l.iul
Mich ions have been resetted,
I he Hullalo
I Ins
seemingly
ethereal
"knowledge" isdescribed as the "true
knowledgcol God" as revealed in the
past by such highly revered persons
as Jesus Christ. Krishna. Buddha,
and Mohammad. It consists of: the
unspoken wold, divine light, divine
harmony , and nectar. The Guru's
desciples claim that anyone who truly desires this knowledge can
be
shown how lo experience these four
things by a Mahatma through a
"practical experience," in premie
Ronni Leu's words. A Mahatma is
s o m e o n e empowered by Guru
Maharaj
Ji l o
reveal
"the
knowledge".
.i ; . :
Under these ciKiiiiist.n.
Ihe abolition ol the p r o g r a m , no
Hullalo President Robert
knowledge has brought stability and
contentment
to their formally
chaotic lives. Some premies claim
that disillusionment with the world
today, and its values, were what
caused them to turn to Guru
Maharaj Ji for peace of mind and
soul.
vvheic there is ,i s\ sk niai,, i,r.
presenlatioii ol women III., .
Job Incentive Program lasl vcai, a
A New Dimension inCinema IiuXM%
FOUR EXCITING THEATRES UNDER ON E i R bOS i i i i
Our Officer Selection Officers are looking for a few good college men—
maybe 3 out of 100—who will make good Marine officers. If you're one of
them, we'll give you a chance to prove it during summer training at Quantico, Virginia.
Our program is Platoon Leaders Class, PLC. With ground, air and law
options. You might even qualify for up to $2,700 to help you through college.
But if money is all you're looking for, don't waste your time.
The challenge is leadership. If you want it, work for it, If you've got it,
show us. It's one hell of a challenge. But we're looking for one hell of a man.
l a s t May, Hclainc Orcnzow and
Patty Morian of Albany attended a
lecture by Mahatma Rajeshwar who
was visiting this area. Hollowing him
to New Pall/, they received the
"sacred" knowledge there. After
returning to Albany. Hclaine and
Pally proceeded to establish the
Albany center, with help from
several New York City premies.
Eve charged thai the Special
(irand
Jury
euminis-siniieil h\
I o r mi' r
( i o \ e I iioi
\ L- | s u n
Kockelcllcr was chosen limn peuphj
in the Atlica area vmli duei i lies i„
persons working ni ihe pns.iii. n,
eluding hostages, lie nls,,„ ,.,| ;i.,t,
lite trial has been tiaiislcin.il • II,
lalo.whcrelhc |in v selc. Hun -.
he considers inadequate staff funding lor I he University's Educational
appropriation
challenge
Washington Avenue here is Albany.
the proposed SUNY budget lor what
LOC combined
We
World peace can become a reality
if each individual discovers inner
peace - so profess followers of the
"Perfect Master," Guru Maharaj Ji.
Ihe Ciuru is the leader of a religious
movement whose "gift" to those who
join is inner peace.
Since then the center has grown to
a membership of about fifty from the
tri-city area. The center serves an
area within a one hundred mile
radius.
A short lime ago, this branch of
the mission was visited by Mahatma
Irevinanand. He conducted Sutsang. which are discourses on "the
knowledge". While here in Albany,
he communicated this knowledge lo
approximately twenty ncwdisciples.
ve.lls Independent sludiesshow III
GRAhD
ROWER
SHOW
lllg lllllll ilk veal .' I M All
1§74
If you own a Uolhswagrn "Bus" (any year),
you can get a spectacular
paint job...fr« and jet paid $20 per month
just for driving your car
as you normally do.
II v o n o w n a V W " b u g " , y o u p r o b a b l y d i d n ' t
MARCH 25 - 30
rcilli/cexactly
how l u i l i i i i a l c s u n were.
Lnlil
inivv.
U e c t l c b u a i d s ol A m e r i c a , I n c . is in Ihe b u s i n e s s t i l ' m a k i n g u
p l a i n antl s i m p l e Uccllc c o n s i d e r a b l y less p l a i n .
Ilv m a k i n g llicni liccllcbiiaicls,
I lies applv
pibs,
B
o x JOUU
3 8 9 0 1I
QUA
•
paint
the n c x l ft, ' ' 01 12 m o u t h s . , llicj p a y Ilic
ovviicis e a c h n i o n l h |tisl loi t i m i n g llicn
cats
I h e n ihcy r e m o v e Ihe t l c c a l s
LOs Angeles, California 90038
Alien viiui c m h a s h c e n a l l c c t l c b i i a i d , il i s . n i c e a g a i n a p l a i n
jjgj Name__
•
b r i g h t s i i p c i g i a p h i c a d v e r t i s i n g o n new
I lien, loi
a n d s i m p l e " h u g " , bill t h i n k ol t h e s t . m c s il will be a b l e l o
Address
icll
d e l all t h e d e t a i l s o n m i n i n g y o w I'UB « ' l " a l l c c i l c b o a t d by
c a l l i n g (21 ' ) K7h-7517 C'Ol.l I I ' l .
D o il R i g h t
I t c c l l c h o a i t l s ol A m e r i c a , Inc.
77Ha Siinscl
rHIUAY. MAHCll 2'2, l ( i / 4
ALBANY STUDENT PHI
IENIER
lllvtl
I us A n g e l e s , ( a Id.ii m a
PAGE FOUR
Now!
"QIMd
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE FIVE
Legislators Slash Wilson State Budget Proposal
Assembly Votes To Allow Tenants To Sue Landlords, Ban Sexist Want - Ads
Governor Wilson's budget suffered a cut of $63 million by the state
legislature's fiscal committees this
Wednesday.
This reduces t h e proposed budget
plan for t h e state's next fiscal year to
a still record-level S9.3I billion. T w o
areas which were heavily slashed by
the committees were t h e p r o p o s e d
spcndings in the areas of education
a n d t h e arts, a s well a s several
p r o p o s e d new state p r o g r a m s .
t h e budget plan n o w rests in closed
conferences
among the
Republican
a n d Democratic
legislators since being presented to
t h e m on Wednesday, after the
legislature had formally recessed for
the week.
It now is expected that the budget
plan will pass a s is during next
week's legislative sessions.
In extensive budget chopping, the
committees allowed o n l y S I 0 million
of the S3U million which Wilson requested for t h e stale's cultural
organizations, and denied a requested allotment for a controversial
program which would
produce
cassette I V . p r o g r a m s lor fourth
grade social studies classes, which
would have cost S4.4 million.
I he slate uniwrsMy saw S9.1
million trimmed J p n i iis alread)
light budget, a n a t h e committees
recommended thai sludcnl campus
overseas programs he placed in a
m o r a t o r i u m . 1 he justification for
the
trimming? ol campus a p p r o p r i a t i o n s was thai studenl
enrollments have stabilized. The
SI \ \
budget now totals S578
million l o r the next fiscal Year.
I he committees denied funds lor
several
programs proposed b \
Wilson, including$7.2 million which
was l o prepare for increased arrests
expected under the new harsh state
d r u g law. I he committee pointed
out that drug arrests have not increased so lar. I ) a \ care and prison
construction p r o g r a m s also met the
committee'* disapproval and were
dented. -\ S I 5 million day care
program had been planned.
One item not cut h\ the committees was a 12 percent across-thcbo;ird increase in wellare payments.
which will cost New York S t a l e S22
million. 1 his will allow, lor example.
a family ol lour to receive S25S per
month as compared to the present
S2.1I. A proposed $2.48 billion in aid
in public local schools was also
retained.
t e n a n t s Rights
I he assemblv on Wednesdays
voted to permu tenants to initiate
l a w s u i t s against landlords lor
violations ol housing codes in New
'l urk C ilv and liullalo. 1 his is not
Students Eligible For Primary Voting
by Susan Lebnff
In a move that will benefit all New
York Stale students. G o v e r n o r ,
Wilson signed
into law Tuesday a
hill permitting absentee balloting in
primary elections. I h e bill, sponsored by Senator Calandra, had the
support ol S A S U . along with goodgovernment groups such as the
League ol Women Voters.
Back in J a n u a r y , the legislature
voted lo m o \ e ihe primar> dale Irom
June lo September. As. al that lime,
absentee balloting was not allowed
in primaries, il seemed as il a large
percentage ol YN Stale students
would Imd voting in S e p i e m b e r ' v e n
dillicult
W bile il was a mended several
limes, ihe bill in its tinal versions
passed hnih houses handil) last
week, with a unanimous(125-0) vole
in the Assembly Despiie ihe unanimity, some legislators lrom the
New York ( u \ area, where the
winner ol the Democratic primary
procedures, could lead lo election
traud. l u r n o u l tor a primary is or-
dmaritv light, and thus a relatively
small a m o u n t ol Iraudulanl absentee
ballots could make a higdilterenee.
Trior to this week. New York was
one ol only three stales in ihe union
I hat did not allow absentee \ o l i n g in
ordinarily wins ihe election, have
evpressed concern that the absentee
h a l l o t i n g . unless coupled
with
tightened
administrative
primaries. Ihe other two states are
Delaware and New Hampshire,
si,iles which physically and population wise are much smaller than New
'I ork. and thus pose less ol a
W
—
PAGE SIX
—
P
J
Against Sexism
I lie s p o n s o r ,
\\u'iiiM
Allien .1. Ilatlshcck. K-Biill.,1,
owns a l a v e i n . said lie alsu
present a hill to increase the pi lor youths violating the .n
quiremeills lor buying liqu.ii
An Assembly-approved bill would
end the right ol a newspaper lo
separate Us Help Wauled listings by
sex. Classification ol j o b openings
The proposed law will allow sexual identification of j o b s onK M the
advertiser presents a certificate from
the slate Division ol Human Rights
declaring that such classification is a
b o n a fide occupational qualtlicaliun
lor the position being adu-iiiM.il
Liquor Buyers
I he lower house passed legis latn.il
thai would relieve Uivcm-uui l e l s u l
legal responsibility il ihcy •* IU' liq u o r lo an under-age cusioim i »Inpresents
aulhentic-lookinjj
tilicalion papers showing hiin
l« years ol age ol oldei
by David Shaffer
(AP) The Assembly has approved
an anti — obscenity bill which contains a list of sexual activities so explicit that it caused giggling and
tittering during debate.
The bill, approved 109 — 26 on
Monday, would ban "patently offensive" sex
oriented material which
"'taken as a whole, lacks serious
literary, artistic, political o r scientific value."
Ihe Senate approved a measure
with similar intent last week. But the
two houses* versions differ greatly,
and there is no indication whether a
compromise between ihe two can be
reached.
Both bills would drop the current
siandard banning only material that
is "utterly without redeeming social
value" would be dropped.
Ihe
Senate version does not have the
laundry list ol sexual activities.
however.
Ihe Assembly bill goes l o great
lengths io definite "sexual activity.**
the "patently ollensive" rendering td
ThruwayGas Sale
Limits Lifted
1974 Draft Lottery Numbers
which would b e banned.
The
laundry list runs t h e gamut lrom
various lorms of intercourse to
"physical
contact
with the
clothed...buttocks ol a h u m a n male
or female."
Hut "patently offensive," which
some lawmakers suggested would be
harder lo define than "sexual activity." is not spelled out. A jury would
determine "patently offensive." says
the bill, "with reference t o ordinary
adults."
mandatory meeting
to vote on
Like the current law. the bill
would apply stricter standards in
banning the sale of pornographic
material to minors, and il would
allow prosecutors to get injunctions
lo stop Ihe sale of such materials.
I he hill would apply to movies, live
peilormanccs. books, magazines
and other media.
Ihe penalty sections
of the
current ohseenity law. which would
remain unchanged under either the
Senate or Assembly bills, provide for
jail terms of up l o a year.
4) September 2412) May 11
5) June 27
1.1) July 24
61 March 13
14) May 29
7) March 6
15) March .10
XI March 24
JUNIOR BrfNQUGT
Sunday March 24
LC. 13
7:00
All dues paying members
are urged to attend
March 17
24 was National
Wildlilc week. Us theme being "We
Care Ahoul laulangered Wildlilc."
Sponsored by the National Wildlilc
hederalion. the week seeks publicity
l o r t h e nation's 100 plus endangered
species. 1 bese include the southern
bald eagle. American peregrine
falcon, w hooping crane, 1 lev il's hole
puplish. and eastern limber woll.
I he limber woll was this years poster
animal.
luiuneeil WL'IIIICMI.IV
I luce Ibiuvvay stations t h a t closed eaihei Ini a lack ol lucl will remain closed until adequate supplies
,uc instiled, si.He I'oliee said.
I he stations .lie at (illildcliand.
nc.ii Albany, K.unpo in Rockland
t otllllv. and \idslcv 111 Vonkcis.
May 15
November 25
February S
November 6
June 8
August 28
November 24
April 5
September 5
J u l y 22
March I
J u n e 11
September 2
September 11
April 6
July 5
April 11
August 9
December 17
March 28
November 21
November 26
October I
July 27
September 12
January 3
March 14
43)IDccember5
44) January 21
45) May 19
46) March 17
47) November I
48) April 14
49) March 21
50) December 31
51) September 3
52) October 16
53) March 2
54) March 29
55) J a n u a r y 18
5'6) March 8
57) May 20
5 8 ) J a n u a r y 12
59) November 17
60) January 13
61) September 9
62) July 7
6.1) November 5
64) August .11
65) April 30
66) July 19
67) l-ehruary 9
68) November 15
69| Ocloher 26
70)
71)
72)
73)
74)
75)
76)
77)
78)
January I
December 3
December 16
October 21
May 31
April 20
February 20
January 4
November 8;
79) August!
80) August 17
81) August II
82) August 2
83) November 9
84) October 3
85) August 12
86) July 12
87) January 7
88) August 26
89) May 28
9 0 ) l e b r u a r y 24
91) December 23
92) December 20
9.1) October 11
94) August 19
95) November 29
ENDJLWED WILDLIFE Threatened By Man
I MM I IK- weekend ban mi gasdline sales al New V a k Slate
I hi u \ \ a \ Minimis has been leseindetl. Slate I'uliec lieailquaiieis a n I llcctivc iiiimcijiulclv. gasoline
Kill lie available on a 24
hour,
seven
i!a\
a
week basis at
llltlivvav stations, which previously
hail been eloseil between S) I'M
Sniinilav aiul midnight Sunday.
I
I roupers said lliiuvviiv stations
occasionally would reduce gasoline
[Miichasi's io a minimum ol S3.
I he mandators odd
even
svsiein will continue at I hruwav
siatioiis. as well as ihe requirement
I hat a vehicle's lank he less than ball
lull heloie being served. An exemption t o odd
even sales is available
to motorists who travel more than 47
miles lion! the point wheie lliev
picked up a toll ticket
16)
17)
IS)
19)
20)
21)
22)
2.1)
24)
25)
26)
27)
28)
29)
.10)
.11)
32)
.1.1)
341
.15)
36)
37)
.18)
39)
4(1)
41)
42)
I h e following a r c t h e first 95
n u m b e r s in t h e 1974 Draft Lottery.
The numbers affect those who were
born in 1955. T h e government established the n u m b e r 95 as the cutoff
for this year's draft. All t h o s e below
that n u m b e r will b e reclassified according t o their present civilian
status. It should be noted that even
those with n u m b e r s below the cutoff
will probably n o t be called by their
draft boards for either the physical
or mental examinations.
No one has been drafted in the past
IK m o n t h s since the draft ended. The
numbers are in activeoperation until
the a g e of 26. in case of national
emergency.
II l-ebruary 25 ')) October 22
2| J a n u a r y 5
10) October 13
.'I l e h r u a r y 16 11] J u n e 22
Stations Open Sundays
NEW at the Bookstore
G E M GQtiJQ i
ORSON WELLS
l
is
*
Wilson Asks Rail Route to Boston, Chicago
t A I ' l - tiov. Malcolm Wilson has
endorsed a proposal lo have AmIrak. the national rail passenger
system, inaugurate an experimental
route connecting
Huston and
Chicago, via Albany a n d Buffalo.
Amirak now operates only one
route m New Yoik State, running
lrom New York City, through
Albany ;ind west to liullalo.
I lie governor noted that the
Such a m u t e would restore nowabandoned service between Albany
and Huston and west ol Hullalo.
Boston-Chicago route would mean
restoration ol rail passengei service
lo such cities as 1.ne.I'a.Cleveland,
Hend.
l o l e d o Ind.
. 1 Ikhari. Ind.. and South
Besides ihe requirement lor one
new m u l e each sear. Ihe Amirak
system pel nuts restoration ol .service
on any line provided t h e a p p r o p r i a t e
siale government agrees lo help ahsorb ;inv Imancial losses on lire rou-
•William Randolph Hearst
#
£
•
•
•
Wilson said in a statement
I ticsdas thai he was recommending
ihe restored service under let ms ol
IV'M lederal legislation obligating
\ m i i a k in open at least one c \ p e u m e n t a ! passeiieei mule each
the
II
FINAL WEEK of 2-for-l paperback sale.
'&2^$ffi//MWl&iSi^d!&8iwZltfffiffl&ffi&fa&"
:
#
*
•
••
J
•
•
in
CITIZEN KANE
J <£ 2 5
• ^
Sunday March 24
LC. 18
7:00 and 9:15
W / t Q X
$.75 without
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a
( s t a t e university of n e w
i yorkat albany
u
u u g u u
f u n d e d by student associationthe other f i l m group
-)nr
Women in Cinema
week 3
admission
7:15 & 9:45 L C I
COlOlt by IVC
„|
* PARAMOUNT
PICTURE
&# ?>:&:ft-
EH11JAY. MA.HCI1
NEXT WEEK-
Saturday,
March 2 3
A Political Midnight
Animal Farman animated version
of the George Orwell parable
Ignored ;ii the time ol its release,
this film is now being recognized
;is one ol ihe finest American films
of the past ten years.
F«
•1-ilDAY MAH<
i-
Friday, March 22
:
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
international (
f i l m group
GULAG ARCHIPELAGO, in Russian - $12 50
August, 1914, Solzhenitsyn - $2.25
-1974 Guinness Book of World Records- $1.75
'Jaws, Benchley- $6.95
The Romantic Rebellion, Clark - $15.00
'Marx Brothers Scrapbook, Marx- $13.95
Watership Down, Adams- $6.95
We've got the
cure
2 3 4 WAMHJWiTON A V E .
According to the bill's spons o r s . " ( h e r ihe years, ihe primary
election, particular!} in urban areas.
has become ihe deciding election,
and while i h c n u m h e i ol uitescast in
primary elections is still extremely
low. interest
in primaries is
growing. Once absentee toting is
made possihle lor primary elections
we will see .in increase m \oter intciesi ,iiu] .i mure representative
h u m ol government."
u n d e r t h e terms male and female will
not even
be accepted if the
newspaper
prints a disclaimer
stating that the categories are only
for the benefit of the convenience of
the reader, a s is now the ease.
iHHiaHiagigcjiHaiaaaafBDingciij flaBBs n
GOT SPRING
FEVER?
Outsirje
inn
problem lo in-siaie siudenis wishing
lo \ o t e in primaries.
possible now under the existing laws.
Current state law provides t h a t
o n l y t h e local housing codeenforcement agency can take a
landlord to court if it finds violations
in a multiple-dwelling building. A tenant can, however, sue if he suffers
injury as a result of a dangerous condition in a building.
Under the new proposed law,
tenants will he able t o sue simply
because the conditions have not been
corrected alter due notice. They can
also file a countersuil o n the basis of
code violation if their landlord has
sued them lor non-payment ol rent.
I he bill provides tor a "warrant of
hahitahihty" which would allow the
breaking ol a lease il Ihe landlord
I,ills to keep Ihe property in a
habitable condition.
State Pornography Bills
Pass; Termed Explicit
Nixon'8 "Checkers" SpeechHe was in trouble in '52 you know
Red
Nightmare-
Government propaganda
narrated by Jack Webb
lo each:
$.50 with lax card
$1.00 without
Midnight Only
LC 18
Friday- Hedy Lamarr in Ecstasy
Saturday Midnight- Don Siegel's Invasion of the Body Snatchers
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SEVEN
by Kay
Joslin
(CPS)
In
higher
education
it
m i g h t b e s a i d t h a t o n e t h i n g is c e r -
H o w e v e r , recent n a t i o n a l r e p o r t s
r e c o m m e n d i n g increases i n t u i t i o n a t
recommendations that a l o w t u t i t i o n
public
p o l i c y be m a i n t a i n e d f o r he first t w o
and
moves
by
m a n y s t a t e l e g i s l a t u r e s t o d o so h a v e
years of schooling,
r e s u l t e d i n a firm c o m m i t m e n t t o t h e
concept
of
low
private
and
tuition
public
by
both
educational
o r g a n i z a t i o n s , as w e l l as w i d e s p r e a d
debate o n t h e subject.
Carnegie Recommendation
T h e m o r e radical C E D report said
o r d e r t o ease t h e
financial
plight of
reports had indicated.
P r i v a t e e d u c a t o r s feel t h a t s t u d e n t
higher
s t i t u t i o n s b o t h p r i v a t e a n d p u b l i c is
p a s s i n g t h e c o s t s u n to students and
s t i t u t i o n s a n d over the n e x t ten years
charges
in
controlled
il
t h e i r f a m i l i e s by r a i s i n g t u i t i o n s
publicly
at t w o
- year i n s t i t u t i o n s u n t i l it
stitutions...The
covered
one
recognizes...that
half
of
instructional
tuition
in-
Board
l u i t i o n charges i n
to
a
wide
paramount
variety
of
in-
importance.
I:lden S m i t h o f the A A C
Dr.
• has l u n d i n g a l t e r n a t i v e s o l h e i than
said t h e
association's p r i m e c o m m i t m e n t
is
Comedy of Errors
T h u s , she s a i d , h i g h e r education
access
As
an
example
ol
studenl
in-
Make No Mistake About It
by Nancy Miller
llucnce in the t u i t i o n haltle.students
Si a i c
t h a t t i n e I'tgger o f a w e s t e r n w o m a n ,
University
I h e a l re's
whose
William
deprived
to
to g i v i n g students a w i d e choice o f
in
B o a r d is c o n v i n c e d
institutions to a t t e n d , a n d that g o o d
l i g h t a g a i n s t a s i x per cent t u i t i o n in-
S h a k e s p e a r e ' s G m u ' f / r c / Errors
t h a t it is i l l u s o r y l o b e l i e v e t h a t (his
student aid programs, n o t increased
crease
weekend al'lordcd a pleasing night o l
that
tendency
oilers
l u i t i o n . could help a c c o m p l i s h t h i s .
h a v e t a k e n s t r o n g stands against t u i -
linancial
problems of
puhlic
nse.
O p p o s e Increases
Among
the
Association
in
of
education
as bleak as the
about
t i o n increase*
increased
all
higher
arguments
the
be
to
were not
current
( C E U ) r e c o m m e n d i n g that t u i t i o n in
sector
out ol the education m a r k e t .
presented
show
finances
e d u c a t i o n hy t h e d i v i s i v e effects o f
o n Higher Education and the C o m -
public
i n g it " v i e w s w i t h g r a v e c o n c e r n the
would
— year i n -
costs.
Development
lend to price m i d d l e i n c o m e students
of
n e x t f i v e y e a r s at f o u r
reports by the Carnegie C o m m i s s i o n
Economic
p r e s e n t l y r e q u i r e s t r i c t n e e d s tests,
threat
arts b leisure
education
h a u s t e d a n d s a i d t h a t f u r t h e r study
American
Association
higher
e n d o w m e n t s a n d g i l t s h a v e been ex-
C o l l e g e s has issued a s t a t e m e n t s a y -
Ihe
that
r e v e n u e s s u c h as s t a t e a n d federal aid
t u i t i o n s h o u l d be i n c r e a s e d o v e r t h e
M u c h o f the debate has c o n c e r n e d
mittee for
clusions
Should Colleges Raise Tuitions ?
t a i n — t u i t i o n will go u p .
institutions
C a r n e g i e c o m m i s s i o n a n d C E I ) con-
Nationwide Debate Rages On:
and
organizations
are
of
Land
the
institutions are
.Bui
this
tending
a solution to
the
privately
Illinois
Universities
Cirant
Colleges
at
state
won a
universities,
production
o f
last
r e c o m m e n d e d hy t h e I l l i n o i s Hoard
unlet l a i n m e n I l o
o l H i g h e r E d u c a t i o n in December.
f a m e w i t h i n its c h a r m e d sphere, l o r
National
State
have apparent!)
Recently,
Northern
(old
the
president
Illinois Univcrsuv
students
their
,,|
(Ml |
"campaigns
virtual!)
all
who
\lhanv
ihe
Sun*.', t h e t r a n s p o s i t i o n
pla\
into
the
milieu
ol
( N A S U L G C ) w h i c h represents m a -
a g a i n s t a l u i t i o n h i k e h a v e w o n out "
accounts
A s a r e s u l t . G o v . D a n i e l W . I I U I has
btiiie
l o r 30 p e r c e n t o f the s t u d e n t p o p u l a -
said he w i l l n o l r e c o m m e n d .1 t m l i o n
w buse a p p e t i t e s t o i S h a k e s p e a t e h a d
ot
i n c r e a s e t o I h e s l a t e l e g i s l a t i i i e . hui
n e u ' i he-en u n e t t e d , l l u s p i u d t i e l i o n
Universities
w i l l ask t h e s t a t e t o p r o v i d e t i n ad-
• d i e t e d .i ;:o.nl s u i t i n g p o i n t
ditional
•\ h u l l t u h n i l i l a n . i p p i e i u l i o i i l o r j
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s in t h e r e p o r t s t h a t
t u i t i o n increases be a c c o m p a n i e d by
c o r r e s p o n d i n g increases i n s t u d e n t
t i o n : the
State
(AASCUl
Association
and
which
accounts
for
a n o t h e r 25 p c r c e n i o f t h e s t u d e n t s :
aid.
Aside
from
all the
controversy,
t u i t i o n s h a v e been i n c r e a s i n g at b o t h
p u b l i c and private institutions.
The
r e a s o n s g i v e n . l o r recent increases a r e
inflation,
higher
costs, t h e energy-
c r i s i s a n d decreased r e v e n u e s
o t h e r sources.
Irom
.^
Studies show a v J j r g e l u i t i o n a n d
the
c r e a s e d 4 4 percent
i n t h e last
f - o r t h e 1972
live
3 year p u b l i c
t u i t i o n rose 3.6 percent l o r in -
stale
s t u d e n t s a n d 43 percent l o r out o l
slate students.
increasing
tuitions
at
(AACI
ol
which
American
(AECEl
Council
an
representing
Education
organization
schools
and
Who Benefits?
c o n t r o l l e d institutions o r that an e l -
Hut at Ihe center o l
l o r t l o assist p r i v a t e i n s t i t u t i o n s by
o r g a n i z a t i o n s I r o m the p r i v a t e a n d
incrasing
p u h l i c sector as w e l l as c o m m u n i t y
stitution:,,
a n d lunior collges.
t i o n e d . can he c l l e c t l v e . "
tuition
in
puhlic
however,
well
in-
inicn-
ihe
d e b a t e is w h e t h e r h i g h e r
benelits
society
I hose
or
the
advocating
education
individual.
higher
tuitions
t h e ACT. s a i d : ' a l o n g w i t h the p u b l i c
o r g a n i z a t i o n s also c r i t i c i z e d present
the i n d i v i d u a l is t h e c h i e l b e n e f i c i a r y
sector,
ol
student
aid p r o g r a m s , leuring that
ol e d u c a t i o n a n d t h u s s h o u l d pay l o r
e d u c a t i o n is c o n t e n -
student
aid
postsecondary
ding
with
private
staggering
induced
hv
tuitions,
sector
linancial
ml latum,
the
e n e r g y c r i s i s , a n d l i m i t e d sources o l
revenue.
However,
ihe
Representatives
Irom
into
tin
In ..o^
legislature
Indiana
students.
IIKIIHIH,.
state Y o u n g R e p u b l i c a n s e i , " , p i n . c
s e e k i n g l n g l l e i e d u c a t i o n because o l
henelits
t h e p r o s p e c t ot heavy d e b t s .
e d u c a t i o n a n d s h o u l d pas l o r it.
O n e c o n c e r n ovct
substantially
Another
s t u d e n t aid is
Irom
important
w i l l i n d u c e eoi r e s p o n d i n g hikes in
ihe
structional
puhlic institutions "
student
1 inancing ol Postsecondary
tuition
a i d S a n d y M , l can o l
VNSCl
expressed
concern
the
ovei
i c p o i t v i g o r o u s l y d e b a t e d is t h a t o l
National
iion
Commission
Mthough
r e l i a n c e o n s t u d e n t a i d . " I t is u n d c i -
made
ihe
n o specific
on
slate
[lent
s and
l.duca-
commission
Student
I o l low . d e p e n d i n g o n I h e n o b j e c t i v e s
lecenllv
loi
the
maintain
in-
lesidcnt
e
used as a s u b s t i t u t e
lor
I d i i c a t o r s have said t h a t present
.ml
pioeiaills
Basic
s u c h as t h e
l.dueational
would
require
tuition
creases
ledelal
institute
tuition
a i i' .
v.'.,!
.i iv.
,ili
In
MfiKti'chmi.
euileiil
a
coined)
arises
Irom
identity
ol
t w i n loi the other,
this
basie
the
repeated
identical
lo
tuition
..'
Shakespeare
presents ns w i t h n o t o n e . hut i w o s e l s
loi
misatkeniuie
ueoinetnealK
I h . w a t d K o l i n s and Nelson
\\uion
as ihe t w i n
I Null
lipliuh.')
\inip-h.olouv.es
ul
S u a e u s e and
! phesus
r e s p e c t i \ e l s . sei \ e as t h e l o c a l p o i n t s
lot
m u c h o l the I n n u h i e l i d c w i U e s
Innn
ihe s i t u a t i o n a l c o m e d y ,
with
the
uppo.l
InvoliU
by
Ice,.I.
Ymk
ul
by
their
the
two
mser-
I hum
I'rager
and
Charles Varadian.
Although
New
lurther
vants D r o m i o , played w i t h puckish
,\
the strobe-light
complicate
o l t w i n s , i tins m ei easing the c a p a c i l s
leiehangeahiht)
s t u d e n t s ,nul t a i l . . ! :••
with
escape
scene
a m o n g the highlights,
Ihe
one
problem.
compounded
icsoh.l
of
m u c h o l the p l a y ' s :
o t h e r , w i t h h i l a r i o u s consequences.
.Un
Down
Heavily i n d e h l e d l o I ' L H I U I S "
I \\tn
I his hasic c o n t u s i o n is a m p l i f i e d a n d
nppmvcd
supervision
setting
each b e i n g t a k e n , i n t u r n , f o r
pul
H o . i l d o l l( .
increase ol s
luition I p — Enrollment
at
I he I o l o i a d o
could
highei e d u c a t i o n . S o m e ol
plans
. *....
Simmons
u t i i e l i a h l e l o the p o i n t t h a i it s h o u l d
h
lo
on
liuanee
ei t u i t i o n . " she said
illvolveiuenl
Ssscmbly
liee/e
o n t u i t i o n h i k e s , ii p r e s e n t e d e i g h t
'level
ih
h e l p e d i n l l u e l l c c Ills < l i n o ( i
l l i n d e d . l i e d l o p o l i t i c s in Congress
schools
lobbying
eie.lse l o i n e v l ve.n
the
recommendation
that
:,
I !. . in.li
a n a p p i o v c d l i v e pel vein hi l • '
.Mid the led tape b u r e a u c r a c y ..it is
plans
legislatiiie
heeil a s k i n g the l e g l s l . l l u u {•• ,.n . . .
education
whether
incieased hikes in
higher
:!,,
the
\ n d . finally,;
plaxwnehi
mistaken
h i o l l g h l t h e n ease l o i low tint
society
no!
the
contingent
Irom
«i e r r o r
lo i h e p l a y , a n d the m o m e n t i n A c t V
w h e n ihe s e p a r a t e d c o u p l e r e c o g n i z e
ime
aiiolhei
was
priceless.
I he
p i e s i d i i i " o i l ieei i n those p a r t s , i n t h e
pei-oii
ol
plaved
with dubious
1 twin I
ol
the
Sheiill
sulemmiv
Ranlet'aiingiam),
Vn n p l i o l o t i s
HK-
Internalionul
film
(iroup's
linucsiliis l-rida\. March 22nd. with
l i c i c o l l a p s e i n t o hersell m o r e
Watergate,
I-rank
m o i e a s l i c i a b i h i v a n d even d e s i r e l o
ularity low.
leel
MIIIIS whal
Orns-
tiilroy's
D I - S I ' I K A 11
( HARACI IKS
k-alunng
Shirley
M a c l a i n c u m l K e n n e t h M a r s . Ciilroy
away.
film
w o n her Best A c t r e s s h o n o r s a l the
etheless
UC.
Adriana's
object
sister a n d
Ihe
Miatt,
unwitting
ot her b r o t h e r - i n - l a w ' s
twin
through
Ihe
British
operated
A l e w m o n t h s a l t e r its N e w
il.
1\
Paramount
outraged
propriety
covl\
by
Ihe
seeming
mi-
o l Ins a d v a n c e s , yet w a s
receptive
to
Ins o v e r t u r e s .
Irom
had
in
CHARACTERS
linest
sight.
What
DKSPERATE
was
American
one
ol
the
lilnis
ever
promote.
which
cent deelease 111 e l l l o l l n i e i i l . a l a e l
I I \ l ' | lo
each o t h e r w i t h r e m a r k a b l e b a l a n c e
i h e g o l d s m i t h , as t h e
Mudeni llighls all veal
K.iy.in Mutlcfll h a v c l S e n ist
I
J
I I M I lleinpslcad I p s e
I nioiulale.S v. I | s s l
S|(,
4Mi - J'SSi)
l i e q l i c n t l v t o u t e d hv low n a t i o n a d -
p n v . i l e college
vocates
l a l i v e s l i o l l l i n a l o l 'sew V, ,,: 1 ;
Ihe c o m m i s s i o n also c o n -
Ki ;'•
c l u d e d t h a t s t u d e n t a i d is m o i e c l l e c -
i l l s t m i l i o l l s I c s t l h e d al .i I, ai
i r . e I I I n i c i e a s i n g s t u d e n t access t o
I \ P i h a t t u m u l i m c i c . f c - ai ;••
e d u c a t i o n t h a n low
sill,,,,Is
l)i
loi
( .nol \ . i n
ihe
\( I
l » « » l l « W . « H U U » . « . l .
YEAR'S
sludcllls
tuition
Msivue.economist
disagreed
with
the
Mi«„,
have l o u e d
stale's i n t d d h
Ihe p i l h l u s v s l e i n
wlinhh.i
in
v.te.uu
thousands
ol
I.uee b u d g e t d c l n i l s
•• 1!
,11 11,
1
SCCtOl
never heen very t a s l e l u l a h o u l t h e n
p r o m o t i o n (case in p o i n t is w h a t has
characters
t o the twins.
lather
ol
the
pl.ned
In
Joseph
were,
twins
1 g e o n , the
Anupholous.
K o a c h e . gave a
h u e p o i i i a v a l o l the d o o m e d
b c a inpe
I M '
NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE ARRANGEMENTS TO ATTEND THE SIX-WEEK
SUMMER CAMP AT FT. KNOX, KENTUCKY. TENTATIVE STARTING DATES:
14 AND 21 JUNE, 1974
Would
ICSIIIKIIHV
cow-
a i d p i u g l . i l l l s l o e, •
eie.lsed
aid
private
schools,
linancial
lo
sludcllls
based
need
Misloug-losl wile. I miha.
in ihe p e i s u i i ol M a r i a M a k i s . was
slinlelil
Westeinhiis
M e x i c a n a d d e d the f i n i s h i n g t o u c h e s
boy whose last n e c k t i e was l a t e d t o
JUNIORS
Ihe t a k e o v e i I n t ' l i l l &
1,,
plement
stud :.'
slick-ialking
P a r a m o u n t , at leasl since
m e i a l l success o l the p l a y .
the
western
panorama
in
high
lashlnu.
come l o
Although
l i n i h e must p a i l , a n a d e q u a t e c o m -
In i l l . .1
incoiiK
Angel
a n d e o n g i u i l \ - a s is essential to the
I lie s e c o n d a r y
She-
leels p o w e r l e s s l o d o a n y t h i n g a b o u l
vanished
d e n i e d , .and one o l Ihe hardest l o
I ufnpe.Israel.Mrica.South America I
festival).
and
L a s t , h u l n u t least, . l e r r o l d B r o w n s '
l o Hi,
film
live
were s o m e w h a t
niinoi
weak
characters
and uneven,
t h e ) were, h o w e v e r , m s i i u m c i i t a l in
l e c r c a i i n g the West w i t h i n the h o u n d s
ul
this
p l n \ . and
iHiiignialU
were,
siicccsslul
thereloie.
I h e special
OAISHY
couldn't
he c a l l e d " I U I : O K I
merkill")
and lllev
he h o t h e i e d w i t h
AI
just
(iilroy's
him
S o . the p i e l u i e was d u m p e d
onto
Ihe
bottom
hall
ol
some
d o u b l e - b i l l s a n d t h a t was I h a t .
1)1 S I M R A 1 i
C H A R M ' I I KS
e l l c c l s called I m were met hv i h e i m -
is a h o u l a w o m a n w h o f i n d s heisell
a g i n a t i v e c i l o i i s ,,l l a n e M o r g a n as
n i l her m a r r i a g e at a p o i n t o l t o t a l
. y m i i " " "
easv i n d e s c r i b i n g this f i l m .
however,
was
look
al
the
previous
his
greatest
lo
pop-
I h e parallels are o b w i l h the y o u n g
the m a n
Next
w i l l be
1-orccs
Khl)
Nixon
who
made
the
Ihe
United
Stales
Information
NIGHTMARE.
A
film
panicky
piece o l p a r a n o i d p r o p a g a n d a ( p a r -
loo
the
alliteration)
narrated
Jack W ' e h h w h i c h s h o w s h o w
good
Il can,
ole'
by
much
Amcrican-Slatuc-of-
I iheriy-apple-pie-old(-glory-girl-
he said w i t h n o f e a r t h a i
DESPERATE
lo
what,
Armed
don
Ihe adjectives come a little
lime
mess, l o c l e a n it up'.'"
which
ed up l u r d i s t r i h u i i o n by P a r a m o u n t
highly stylized p o r t r a y a l ol
.ii.l
Berlin
y o u trust
Sophie
brother's love ( w h e w M w a s a l l e r n a t e -
ly I d l e d a n d were p l a y e d o i l a g a i n s t
boost
lo
k n o w s she is b e i n g s u f f o c a t e d , b u t
t i v e , a l l l o u r o l these r o l e s w e i e a m p -
loans,
right
Y o r k C ' n \ o p e n i n g t h c film w a s p i c k -
Keen w o i k i n g o n a p i o p >-.,
Student
1971
seems
Maclaine in a role
in
a s k i n g us s u c h q u e s t i o n s as " W o u l d
V a l u e s seem p e r v e r t e d a n d
s o m e o l her speeches, h u t was n o n -
Ihe
Sssislala, I '
drain
(Shirley
M l 1(1 h i k e m l u i t i o n . l l i e i c is a 2.5 pel
I union
slowly
nothing
t h e c o m m i s s i o n was t h a t l o i every
and
human
m a d e t h e f i l m in 1971 w i t h n o s t u d i o
the
students,
he
h a c k i n g a n d m a n a g e d ( o release the
low
income
and
and
was u n e v e n in s p o t s , o w i n g t o
Jody
.easunable
b\
the d i f f i c u l t y ol r h y m e a n d meter i n
effective.
..
president
( H a u l s I B O O M w h i c h are a i m e d l o t
m o r e effec-
A r o u n d her is a n o p e n l y
hostile u i h a n universe w h i c h makes
\ i n o i i g the s i g n i l i c a i i t l i n d i n g s ot
Syracuse were slightly
stagnation
sci i f s o n w o m e n i n I h e t ' l i i c i n n c o n -
1-phcsiis.
Marilyn
Desperate Women and Politics
was
Ihcwiie
o|
A d i i a n a . p l a y e d hy
lem.
Duke
rose 11 berg
w a s i h e 1 o m e d y , b u t a success.
Opportunity
(lu.iranieed
NEXT
introduced
. .,,,
the
that
p i o h i e ins o l p r i v a t e i n s t i t u t i o n s c a n -
with
iiinvcis,!
vocates
years l o a level ol one third o l i n along
hecti
puhlie
under
J e r o m e Hanley were especially fine,
l o o k o n a d d e d d i m e n s i o n s in lis new
l i o n a r e s o l u t i o n l o s t o p i n , , , , , , , u,
at
effects
Robert
Lighting
Un.se u n l i .i m o i e s u p h i v t i c a l c d i
..,!.,
creases
of
Innn
1 m v c i s i l v o l I l l i n o i s had a p p i
In < - I I M ,K
the m i s s i o n . H e r m i s -
and
novices,
i.,i. k e i o m u l . i h e d e l i g l H l u l i e n d i t i o n i
it ( I n the o t h e r h a n d , l o w t u i t i o n a d maintain
liieai
those
" i l l i i N c a i K S h a k e s p e a r e a n <• o i n e d y i
Irom
ihe f o r m
some
I..i
loi
hie
i n c r e a s e in l u i t i o n
of
designer
West o l t h e IKOU'h was a
succesv
t i o n increases l o l e s c i n d t h e n
loans
in
detei
\ineiican
Du'
ol
linancial
he r e s o l v e d by r a i s i n g t u i t i o n at
hike
students
might
p u b l i c i n s t i t u t i o n s o v e r the n e x t t e n
costs,
luition
a n d s t u d e n t l o a n p r o g r a m s , believe
ihe
lini
was
bane
s i o n a r y zeal w a s a s p l e n d i d a d d i t i o n
silies i h a t h a v e a l r e n d v a p p i o u s ! na-
12',
these
I n us s t a t e m e n t o n l o w
a
W a l k e r has a l s o asked the t i i u . e i -
represents
on
umbrella
revenues
w o u l d have p r o v i d e d
American
761) c o l l e g e s , m o s t l y p r i v a t e , a n d t h e
burdens
Brielly. the Carnegie C o m m i s s i o n
advocated
Association
Colleges
Ices i n p u b l i c i n s t i t u t i o n s h a v e i n years,
American
Colleges
spinstorhood
children
that
costume
D o n n e l l y as set d e s i g n e r .
of
jor
on
her
into
once
the
t h e p r i v a t e sector a n d to m a k e the
T h e d e b a t e has a l s o c e n t e r e d
of
chanelled
energies
I dvvard ( i o l d e n ' s d i r e c t i n g d e b u t a t
t w o more competitive.
stale universities a n d
mothering
n e \ I - d o o r - r i g h I -1 o - b e - s I u p i d -
CHARACTERS,
w i l l s t a n d l o r m a n y v e a r s as a t r u e
liccdom-ol-choice
r e f l e c t i o n o l ourselves a n d o u r c o n -
have k i l l a l t e r i h e (gasp) C o m m u n i s t
lake
cept u l cities.
Ihe
l i l m . based o n a n o v e l
on
lax
dollars
at
A n d t h e n the f - c a l u r e . J o h n H u l a s '
and Joy Batchclor's brilliant adapta-
I.
t i o n ot Cieorge O r w e l l ' s
I here w i l l he a very p o l i t i c a l M i d night
Your
we'd
w o r k , il y o u please.
by
Paula l u x . w i l l be s h o w n a l 7:15 &
'1:45 i n I C
Over.
freedoms
Saturday.
March
I ARM.
23rd.
ANIMAL
I his a n i m a t e d l e a t u r e . t h e
only l u l l l e n g t h c a r t o o n p i o d u c e d i n
I I ( i w i l l be p r e s u m i n g t h r e e s t r a n g e ly c o n n e c i c d l i l m s i n l . C I X . a l e a l u r e
B r i t a i n , b r i n g s l o v i v i d life a l l t h e
a n d I w n shorts
ol
characters ol O r w e l l ' s acrid p a r a b l e
M.
a h o u l Ihe dangers o l socialism gone
screening
\i\on\
ihey
In t h e i r o r d e r
aic:
Richard
" C h e c k e r s " S p e e c h . I l seems
^ . . « * i « w . m » « . * i . « * * « « . « * m . i . * . i .• • • " i t i i r i "
i
L
t
m
i
wrong.
T1...ii...tmiititl.ll
m
all
Every
sol
1 o w c i ,1
s l u d c l l l s w o u l d leccive gi
l o 4171)1) l o i l l l l l i o n a n d l i p p v
Air travel to and from camp, all living expenses and $489.15 will be provided.
s u m s l u d c l l l s c o u l d gel SI Sim I'
SUCCESSFUL COMPETITORS WILL:
SjliSII
secloi
students could
to
iKlK)
Mthough
be admitted as third year students In the Siena College ROTC program
elillclsin
there
that
icecr.t
yeailv
loi
has
I AI'
discounlf
recordso
IUI
been
ovellook-
l!„
state's p a r a m o u n t o b l i g a t i o n 10 und
earn $25 a week tor the remaining 20 months of school for 4 hours per
week of program participation
public
higher
education,
Ihe
p r o p o s a l is e x p e c t e d l o be passed hv
Ihe legislature.
become eligibletocompete for executive positions In any one of 47
career lieMs Hollowing graduation, at STARTING salaries of $10,000 per
year, plus benefit*.
S t u d i e s c o m p a r i n g e n r o l l m e n t in
I h e p u h l i c a n d p r i v a i e s e c l o i show
I h e t w o w e r e e q u a l i n IV50 c o m p a r e d
STUYVESANT PLAZA
OPEN: 10-9; SAT: 10-6
489-8346
l o t h e p r c s e n l 7 5 ' , e n r o l l m e n i in the
retain all options for graduate school
s?
p u h l i c s e c t o r a n d 25'< ( in the p i o a i c
Rep.
have options to select a career program or strictly part-time participator**'
following graduation
f. . >
V
>iena College Officers Training Program. Siena College campus, Loudonville(lO minfrom
O'Hara
|I>MD
Ihe first i w o years o l college
O'Hara
is c h a i r m a n
Special
ol
the
House
WE GOT IT
a n d has s l a t e d he is " u n u l l c i a b l y up
p o s e d l o the c o i i c e p l t h a i increased
tuitions
costs are
in to Building
Campus.
u n Siena
i m
i n
. . . - , . , . . t , , , - f t
• «involved.
. i » i » . Call
. . » Hati u(518)
m » i785-0501
i i M » m norm come
i
I H BQ2,
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
(i
Subcommittee on Highei Iducation
SUNY on Route 9 North). A Hudson-Mohawk Consortium college, therefore, no tuition
PAGE EIGHT
James
has c a l l e d l o r Iree p u b l i c l u i l i o n I " 1
u/iin/ii'fi'
will
lead 1
creased access loi amhmh
Aio,/ ol nislitution "
r
I" ""'
FK1DAY, MARCH 22, I 1 ' / '
. . . . I M l l l l l l l l
PAGE 1A
KH1DAY, MARCH 22, 1974
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