a sports Boaters Down Hamilton,7-5 Selca Nets Three, Martinez Two;

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a
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Stats UaWeralty of Naw York at Albany
^/FRIDAY
October 2 1 , 1 9 7 3
Boaters Down Hamilton,7-5
^ f STATIUNIVUISITY Of HIW VOW AT AUHUff
ERA Rally
Held Here
Selca Nets Three, Martinez Two;
Albany Eighth Instate Rankings
fey Betty 8 M B
Ankle-deep puddles, icy winds,
and a slow but persistent drizzle
made Saturday's soccer match
against Hamilton more li ke a melted
down version of the ice capades, but
the Danes slid and splashed their
way to a 7-5 victory,
"Playing in the rain didn't help
much," said Albany's varsity soccer
coach Bill Schieffelin, commenting
on the more than four inches of rain
that wen dumped on CiprtaHand
this past weekend. "The field was
like a cess pool out there."
Despite the adverse weather conditions, Schieffelin was pleased with
the overall team performance. "We
really had the game under total control all of thetime," said Schieffelin.
, Left wing Chepe Ruano makethis
obvious from the start with a goal 23
seconds into the game.
"I think we scored the fastest goal
ever m a d e here," q u i p p e d
Schieffelin.
I
The Danes continued their assault
on the Hamilton net as Paul Schiesel
took advantage of their goal tender's
untimely advance from his post,
blasting the bail straight down the
middle, about three minutes after
Ruano's goal.
The score was brought to a neat 30 when center forward Edgar Martinez booted in Albany's third
straight goal at 11:41, inadvertantly
aided by Hamilton's Kerry Reagan.
Hamilton began a slow comeback
at 15:55, slamming the ball past
reserve goalie Mitch Sherman. The
score was brought to 3-2 four
minutes later, when the ball again escaped Sherman's grasp.
"We ended up giving up two easy
goals," said Shieffelin, referring to
Hamilton's first couple of points. He
attributed this to the fact that Sherman is relatively new to the position.
When asked why Albany's regular
goal tender, Henry Obwald, did not
start, Schieffelin cited his poor performance in the Danes' previous
by Kandl B. Toler
*mitM8£iiMt&*&ggiiX'
«;«/
floodmon
First halt action In Hamilton contest.
match with Onconta. That game
ended in a disappointing 2-2 tie.
"I think he played much better,"
Schieffelin said. "The trouble is
when you're the goal tender and you
make a mistake, it can be fatal," he
philosophized.
Schieffelin praised the save
Obwald made i n t he second half. The
Danes had come through with
another score at 22:00, Martinez'second in a row, but Hamilton's Chip
Williams responded with a goal lor
his team, 19 seconds later, making it
a close 4-3.
Part way into the second half,
Hamilton made a convincing
continued on page fifteen
Dane Rally Nips Owls, 19-17
Albany's "scoring machine" Frank Selca scored thro* goals Saturday
to bring his total to thirteen-three shy ol record.
Trailing 15-0 in the second
quarter, the Albany State Great
Danes varsity football team scored
an impressive comc-from-behind
win over the Owls of Southern
Conn., 19-17, Saturday..
"It was the greatest team victory
we have ever had," said Danes' head
coach Bob Ford. "We were losing by
15 points. The team could have given
up. But this team is finally developing a personality and wouldn't quit."
The game was played on a field
more suited for water polo than football, and its condition caused
numerous fumbles, four by Albany,
live by S.C,
The Owls opened the scoring on a
three-yard run by quarterback Ed
Switklas, alter S.C. gained possession of the ball on the Albany 35
thanks to a bad snap over punter
Mike Marion's head.
The Owls faked a kick on the point
alter attempt, and were successful in
passing lor t wo points when a deflection by Albany's Billy Brown landed
in the hands of Owl's tight end Mark
Slice nan.
S.C. added another touchdown on
a 64-yard punt return by Rich
Dunstcn. The point extra attempt
split the uprights, and the Owls led,
15-0.
Albany's firs! touchdown was a
case of the right man in the right
place and knowing what to do when
"the plan" did not work.
The Danes drove down to the
Owls' 30-yard line, where the drive
stalled. Al Martin came in to attempt
u field goal on fourth down, as did
Ahonen, the number two quarterback, who doubles as Martin's
holder.
DeBlois Powers Over
The snap buck to Ahonen was off
the mark, so Ahonen took off and
run 16-yards for a first down, Six
plays later, Tom DeBlois powered
his wuy into the end zone from a yard
out, and it was a 15-6 game,
Albuny went for two points on the
Frank Villanova set up the Danes'
conversion, but the Dunes were
thwarted by a wet ball which slipped last score when he recovered a
out of Ahonen's handsjust short of a Swicklas fumble on the Owls' 16yard line. Five plays later, quarterwide open Dave Dupre.
Albany's offense came on strong back John Bertuzzi scrambled for
in the second half. On their second ' the touchdown.
possession, the Danes drove 70But there were several surprises to
yurds for u touchdown, DeBlois go- come.
ing in from the five-yard line, after
Late in the fourth quarter on a
carrying the ball 37 yards two plays fourth and 22, Albany was called for
previously.
continued on page fifteen
Batters: Tough Season
IJ
The main reason for the hitting
by Mike Piekarski
famine was the loss of the three, four,
"I didn't foresee a great season,
and live men in the line-up, at the
but I thought we did well, I really
start of the season, explained the
did, with what we had." And make
coach, "We just didn't replace
no mistake about it, varsity baseball
them."
couch Bob Burlingame didn't have
There were no replacements in the
much, as he guided his Danes to a 4-6
pitching department, either, With
record in the recently concluded
the loss of Tom Blair (ineligibility)
1975 fall campaign.
and (ilenn Sowalskie (football
But, according to Burlingame, it
team), Burlingame had to rely mainwasn't a total loss.
ly on the right arm of Dollard to pull
"I wasn't awfully displeased with
our 4-3 record in the conference," he the Danes through.
Dollard posted two of the team's
said, retiring to the State University
of New York Athletic Conference lour victories—one a shutout— and
hurled approximately two-thirds of
games. "I knew I was thin in
pitching: [John) Uollard was our' the innings played by the Danes this
fall. Although pitching statistics
only experienced starter."
And the hitting wasn't all that po- were unavailable, Dollard's earned
tent, either. With the team batting run average was low enough, and his
average hovering around .200 all all-around pitching was fine enough,
season, and the Danes stranding for him to be called "a good, solid
college pitcher" in the coach's esrunners as if they were the enemy, it
timation.
was not a hitter's paradise.
The other two Albany victories
Only senior first baseman Jeff
Breglio managed to crack the .300 were recorded by a hard-throwing
mark, baiting a nifty .345 an the freshman named Paul DiLcllo,
strength of a ten fortwenty-nine per- DiLcllo seemed to improve as the
formance. Centerfielder Paul Nelson season progressed, and Burlingame
was next at .276 followed by John was "pleased with the way [he] came
Irate at .240. Irate and Breglio tied along,"
The two other freshmen pitchers
lor the ruiu-batted-in leadership
with third baseman Jim Willoughby, on the staff—Roger Pianlier and
continued on page fourteen
as I hey each had five.
Speakers infayor of the New York
State Equal Rights Amendment
(ERA) rallied on Tuesday night in
the Campos Center Ballroom. The
speakers ranged in notoriety from
Lieutenant Governor Mary Ann
Krupsak to Student Association
President Andy Bauman.
Disappointingly for the Albany
County Coalition for the Equal
Rights Amendment, whosponsorcd
the rally, the attendance was barely'
greater than the list of speakers who
came to the stage.
Rose Marie Rosen, a member of
the steering committee lor the rally,
blamed the sparscness on lack of
preparation time and poor publicity.
The rally began with folk entertainment by Lee Wilkic and RCO
Professor Richard Wilkie. SUNYA
student Kim Krieger played guitar
and sang in between the speeches of
the ERA supporters.
While all of the manyspeakers expounded on the great need for the
amendment. Lieutenant Governor
Krupsak spoke out most strongly on
the urgency of the issue at hand.
Krupsak stressed the need of the
ERA to give strength to women and
men in lighting corruption and oppression in government. Stated the
Lieutenant Governor, "I thought
we'd had it when we got rid of
Agnew, but those same kinds ol
forces are there." Krupsak went on
to say, "Putting it [the ERA] in the
constitution is a fulfillment of a 200year promise that we want in!"
Krupsak explained that without the
amendment added to the constitution equality lor all could never be
reached. Said Krupsak, "Equality
under the law is not yet a reality...
The laws may be there, in some instances they may be specific . . . Yet
reality is that some 69 per cent is
what a woman may expect lor the
same job as a man."
Additional speakers lor the Equal
Rights Amendment included several
state and local politicians, all eager
John Bertuuitakeslhesnapand prepares to take off on end around In
second hall action ol last week's game. Dana* have now won lour ol
live thus lar.
Beyer Calls A Moratorium
On All SUNY Construction
moratoruim is yet to be determined.
The master plan in 1968 for student enrollment in the State University system was originally 268,300. In
1972 the figure was modified to 205,
700, and will be again decreased for
1976. The enrollment figure on
SUNY campuses now is 163,000
students.
"We have in effect frozen
enrollments on 20 of our state
o p e r a t e d c a m p u s e s , " said
Chancellor Boyer,"and I will be
revising downward the growth for
the so-called emerging campuses, so
we know that our 1976 master plan
will fall sharply below what we had
estimated in 1972."
Chancellor Boyer expressed conSpeaking in the Ballroom, Lieutenant Governor Mary Ann Krupsak
cern a b o u t "maintaining a
called the ERA part ol a "200-year promise" to American women.
guaranteed transfer" for community
college graduates, while maintaining
to announce their support.
the freeze. Although enrollment has
Eunice Lindsey, Vice President of
been frozen on most of the SUNY
the Republican State Committee,
campuses, community colleges with
pointed out the support forthc ERA
open admissions policies will not be
from many state and federal party
affected. Boyer stated his belief that
leaders, including support from the
markets and the lack of enforcement "The community college is a very exby Judy Jaeger
President and the Vice President.
Patricia Koczko, a senior at by the appropriate regulatory citing and unique institution . . . it
Joyce Chupka of SASU spoke out
should remain inexpensive and
member
of bodies".
lor the ERA statingthut it is needed SUNYA and a
Ross
told the committee that open." "Many of our campuses are
to insure equality for women in NYPIRG, testified before the Joint
Senate and Assembly Committee on the supermarket industry has becoming increasingly selective,"
higher education.
Cohsumir'P'rot'ectidn
oh MoVfday. forfeited its right to institute the said Chancellor B o y e r . " . . . As our
Dick Meyers of the Albany'Coun-*
computer checkout system because enrollments have slowed and we've
inreference!othe
unit
priungsurvey
ly Legislature assured the ERAsupit has "proved itself untrustworthy.. put a ceiling on our enrollments the
portcrs of the legislature's backing, that she coordinated in Albany, The
. by its flagrant violation of the unit community colleges continue to inlie informed them that Albany's hearings were held in Rochester in
crease." Chancellor Boyer assured
pricing laws".
legislature had recently passed a consideration ol a law requiring
The supermarket industry argues Ihe press that a plan was in effect to
resolution in support ol the amend- supermarkets to individually price
all products. Ai present, such label- that consumers will be checked out sec thai transfers for community
ment by a vote of 38-1.
faster, and the checkouts will be college students are indeed
The Equal Rights Amendment ing is foe the benefit of the cashier;
more accurate. They also offer the guaranteed.
states the "Equality of rights under however, with the future institution
shopper a tape that describes the
Stable Enrollment
the law shall not be denied or abridg- of the Universal Product Code, a
item and its price. Consumer groups
The State University intends to
ed by the state of New York or any computer checkout system, such
labels will no longer be necessary. argue (hat the difference in speed is maintain a stable enrollment
subdivision thereof on account of
Shoppers will then have to rely on negligible as bagging is the actual between the New York Stateschools
time consuming clement of grocery and private institutions. SUNY now
It is listed on the ballot as amend- the unit pricinglabelsontheshelves.
NYPIRCI's testimony was led by checkout, and there is no guarantee enrolls about 20 per cent of the New
ment one. Eunice Lindsey warned
NYPIRG director Donald Ross, that stores won't simply have fewer York State student population. "The
the supporters that proposition one
checkout counters running at one State University," said Chancellor
is not ERA. "People must be told to staff attorney Val Washington, and
They reported on con- lime and have longer lines. They also Boyer, ''is committed to a policy of
vote yes on that second item—the Koczko.
sumer reactions to the unit pricing argue that there is no guarantee the .construction and enrollment planERA."
system, the non-compliance of the prices in the computer will be the ning which assumes that private secsupermarkets, und the possible dis- same as those on the unit pricing tor enrollment ratios will be mainadvantages ol the Universal Product labels. "A customer can hardly be tained."
The enrollment freeze will affect
Code. They basedtheirtestimonyon expected to remember shell labels
Ross nine of the eleven arts and science
the surveys that NYPIRG ran in for a cart full of groceries",
colleges, five of the agricultural and
Albany, Binghamton, Rochester, explained to the commission.
Supermarkets also claimed that technical schools, all of the specializSyracuse, Brooklyn, Queens and
LONDON (AP) Scotland Yard, never seen a black, oriental or
Statcn Island over the past three they can save several thousand ed schools and the SUNY medical
worried about accusations of beinga Asiatic police officer/The advertisedollars per year in labeling costs, hut centers. The four university centers
"racist" force, launched a $50,000 ment admitted, "There's no doubt
weeks
consumer groups argue that there is are still scheduled to grow.
advcrt:sing campaign Thursday to there are prejudiced people in the
Unit Pricing Unused
The schools which will most
attract more black policemen and metropolitan police just us there ure
"Our study proves that consumers no guarantee that this saving will be
heavily feel the lack of new construcin the populution ut large. But a
women.
don't make use of unit pricing, and passed on to the consumer.
NYPIRG was only one of the tion arc University of Buffalo,
t he supermarket i in* ustry is not comAt present, Scotland Yard has police officer isn't doing his duty if
plying with the law",
Koczko groups that testified before the com- College at Old West bury, College at
only 40 black police officers among a he speaks or acts with prejudice... He
total strength of 21,302. The first of isn't going to last very long... When a said in an interview after the mittee. Several supermarket chains Purchase and Stony Brook.
Rehabilitation'
of SUNYA's
testimony. The law requiring unit were represented, as well as the New
these joined in 1967 and none has yet' police force consists exclusively of
pricing was passed in New York City York State Consumer Protection downtown campus was to be
risen above the rank of constable- people of one kind, and has to look
alter communities where people of
in 1972 and il went into effect on Board, labor unions, individual con- proposed to the budget committee
lowest rank of the force,
sumers, and other consumer groups. but has now been scratched from the
January I, 1975 statewide.
The Yard, 5,000 policemen under another kind predominate, there is
described the list.
The Albany survey (the largest in Washington
strength, look lull page adver- hound to he a certain lack of unthe upstate area) showed that of 330 meeting as "large and high
tisements in lour of London's most derstanding. At worst, the police
INDEX
shoppers interviewed, only one in powered", "Wedefinitely had anim-.
widelyread newspapers toappeal for become totally alienated from the
Arts.
four understand und use unit pric- pad", she commented, and then
more non-white recruits. All hough it community.
Classifieds
S
"It hasn't happened in London yet
i ng. "The fact is I lull most consumers added, "the strength of the promentioned Asians us well as blacks,
Editorials
11
lhe ad was clearly aimed at lhe black and we're not going to let it happen rely almost completely on prices ac- consumer testimony was thut il was
Graffiti
•
community which has been most in the future." The appeal got a mix- tually marked on individual items", based on many undeniable and
shocking facts. The supermarket inLetters
10
ed reception from blacksin Brixton, Koczko said.
critical of alleged police racism,
News
1-1
the suburb south of the Thames
In
Washington's testimony on dustry had to use rhetoric to
Integrated
Newsbriels.
8
Under photographs of a black where most nonwhile immigrants store compliance, she explained that strengthen their case,",
Koczko
pointed out the need
Preview
la
:
46% of the items surveyed did not
policeman, u Muck police woman, a huvc congregated.
Sports
1S-1S
have unit price labels that complied for consumer groups in such a case,
Political student Scipio Aton said
white constable und u smiling Sir
Zodiac
7
with the law. "In theory, unit pricing because individual consumers lack
Robert Murk, head of the Yard, the it would be nice to sec more black
advertisement asked, "Is racial pre- policemen," But I can't somehow see is a powerful consumer protection", the facilities or the knowledge to pretestimony.
Libertarians on Campus
Washington
I old the committee. sent an effective
judice keeping you out of the il happening, Colored people are
very suspicious' about the police. "Its weakness is due primarily to the Wushington stressed the role of
mctrqpolitun police?'
continued on page two
— « - — •
willful violations of the law by superIt went on;"Most Londoners have They feel they are very prejudiced."
The Yard Recruits Blacks
halt
'VOL UUI HO. 41 OC1QSM H 1STS
by Randi B. Toler
A moratorium on new construction on SUNY campuses has been
declared forthc first time since 1962.
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer told the
press yesterday that "There is now
new construction being submitted
for consideration this year... Cond i t i o n s now financially and
I otherwise required that there be a
; moratorium on plan, growth and
physical facilities through 1980"
asked that all projects now underway be reviewed for priority
status before rcappropriation is
alloted.
Boyer cited that the moratorium
will have some effect on enrollment
growth for the University. The actual figures arc unknown, for the
s c o p e of the c o n s t r u c t i o n
NYPffiGFaulteGrocere
/EC JTfjw off Telephone Grooks
Author Rovit Reflects
t h e Justice Department joined in
NEW YOKE (AP) A new Hate to file arguments on its own behalf
Public Service CommUsion policy of before he rules on the government's' with a warning that the disclosure
tipping off telephone subscribers request for a permanent injunction. policy would have "grave and
who came under criminal investigaBacking up a suit he filed Mon- adverse impact on its law enforcetion was upset Wednesday by a day, U.SJAtty. Paul Curran told ment duties, including those of the
federal judge who called it "an in- MacMahon; the PSCs new dis- FBI." f • • •
/•
credible encroachment on federal closure policy inaugurated last May
Telephone companies ignoring
law enforcement."
could-obstruct justice, impel the PSC requirement that they disJudge Lloyd Mac Mahon criminal suspects to flee, and scare close the subpoening of their tell
scathingly rebuked the PSC for in- away or even lead to th murder of records are liable toafine of J 1,000 a
vading' "in this outrageous manner a witnesses. He said it also breaches day.
HE
field that is none of its administrative the secrecy of the grand jury process.
"At the very least it's a usurping of
or regulatory business."
Starting with names of sub- powers of Congress and the federal
MacMahon granted the govern- scribers, Curran explained, in- courts," MacMahon declared. "It
ment a temporary order restraining vestigators may develop from their would seem to me that the Public
the PSC from alerting telephone phone bills a variety of information, Service Commission might better
customers when their toll call such as patterns of contacts, links to spend its time protecting the conrecords are subpoened by federal other persons and places and tips suming" public and its principal
crime investigators.
toward new evidence of criminal ac- business of regulating monopoly and
MacMahon gave the PSC 20 days tivity.
itsjrates."
UN Adopts Renewal of Slnal Mandate
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) The Security Council adopted a resolution
today renewing the mandate of the U.N. Emergency Force in the Sinai buffer
zone for a full year. The vote was 13-0, with China and Iraq not participating.
Iraqi Ambassador Karim Al-Shaikhly said he did not take part in the vote
because the renewal only gave Israel "more time to consolidate" its
occupation of Arab territory. There was no Chinese explanation. Without
council action, the mandate would have expired Friday at midnight.
Cabinet Considers Ousting Franco'
MADRID.Spain (AP) Gen. Francisco Franco is showing signs of heart
failure, his doctors said Thursday night. "The chief of state has suffered a
relapse and incipient heart failure has appeared," a statement from 11
attending doctors said. The medical bulletin, opened the way under the
Spanish constitution for Franco to be declared incapable of continuing as
Spanish ruler. Highly placed sources said Premier Carlos Arias Navarro's
cabinet met late into the night Thursday inan attempt to initiate a transfer ol
power from Franco to the Prince Juan Garlos de Borbon, his designated
successor.
Eugenlo Montale Awarded Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Eugenio Montale, Italy's grand old poet of
nature, love, and solitude was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature on
Thursday by a sharply divided Swedish Academy of Letters. The 79-year old
Montale, often a candidate and said to be the choice of older members oft he
academy, won over 60-year-old U.S. novelist Saul Bellow, the most serious
contender, informed sources said. Bellow vacationing in Israel, said: "It's
very nice that Eugenio Montale won the Nobel prize. I'm not disappointed.
There's plenty of time to win it yet."
House Committee Approves Tax Reductions
WASHINGTON (AP) The House Ways and Means Committee on
Thursday approved its chairman's proposed $12.7 billion 1976 extension of
general 1975 personal income tax reductions. The action, ona2l-to-l6 vote.
came after the committee killed ideas for making this tax cut extension
contingent on a limit on federal government spending for the next fiscal year.
President Ford has said repeatedly he will veto any tax reducing bill that does
not contain such a spending ceiling. The proposal, by Rep. Al Ullman. DOre., was accepted as part of the wide-ranging tax bill which the committee is
preparing for presentation to the full House next month.
by Perry SOver
disenchanted by WW1 and its
"It takes a lot of patience to listen societal roots as is commonly believto me," stated guest speaker Earl ed, but by the "ultra-hygenic
Rovit, anil then he spent the next domesticity" of their snail town,
hour proving it.
Protestant upbringing which precedLast Wednesday a lecture spon- ed the war. Rovit constructed an insored by the English Department tricate sociological framework to
featured Rovit, an author and show how the family backgrounds of
professor at CUNY. The theme for the members of the "lost generation"
disillusioned them and helped shape
the lecture was: "Some Truths, Half
. Truths and Lies About the Lost their yiew of people in general, which
they exhibited in characters they
Generation."
Rovit, a white-haired, pipe- later created in their novels. "It
smoking man of about 50, described . would have made no difference if the
United States had. not entered
himself in his distinct Boston accent
as "a 19th century man at heart." His WWI," Rovit explained, "Actually,
style seemed to reflect that sedate it was a God-sent opportunity for
self-image, as he read his entire lec- them to, flee from intolerable family
ture verbatim from a set of papers he situations to the tune of the Star
Spangled Banner."
had prepared. It was very complex
and very hard-to-follow, loaded with
He went on to say that they were a
, long, twisted sentences and needless- brilliant generation which would
ly difficult words. "I end up writinga
have been full of creative despair
very densely elegant prose," he ex-, regardless of the historical event.
plained, "it tends to be opaquely in- which preceded it. In addition, they
coherent." It was as if he were con- were actually very conservative,
sciously trying to "out-Buckley" ". elitist, class-conscious, and • kept
William F. Buckley.
strictly within their clique—a far cry
The main point which Rovit was from the"progressivethinkers" label
which has often been attached to
driving at was that the famous "lost
generation" of writers and artists them.
who flocked to Europe in the I920's
Rovit has written three novels:
(Hemingway, Faulkner, Fitzgerald,
Far Out, Crossings, and The Player
Gertrude Stein and others) were not
Kind, and three critical works onthe
writings of Ernest Hemingway, Saul
Bellow, and Elizabeth Madox
Dianne Piche' was elected to the
Roberts.
SASU Student Assembly with
Wednesday's lecture was the se128 votes in the special election
cond in a series sponsored by the
which ended yesterday. Bob
English Department. The next one
O'Brien received 97 votes; Bart
will be on Thursday, October 30th,
Minsky received 73. Piche" will
at 4:00 in HU 354, Murray Schwartz
take SUNYA's seat which was
will be the speaker on the topic:
vacated by Gary Bennett last
"l'aradincs of Psycho-analytic
month.
Criticism."
Author, critic and CUNY profaaaor Carl Ro«H apoko Wadrwsday about t h * "Lot* annexation."
Liquor Laws Eased At Colleges
by Cynthia Crossen
(CPS) - While the specter of alcoholism is haunting
more college campuses these days, many universities are
relaxing their rules prohibiting drinking in residence
halls and campus bars.
In recent months, universities in at least four states
have edged toward or approved limited drinking on
campus. One of the arguments frequently given for
liberalized on-campus drinking policies is that drinking
in dorm rooms is so widespread that it might as well be
legal.
Problem Drinkers Statistics
In fact, one out of every 20 college students is a
problem drinker according to statistics of the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare. And
almost half the college students surveyed recently by a
Chicago-based advertising agency said they bought
carry-out liquor at least once a month.
That liquor can now be consumed in the privacy of a
student's own dorm room at Oregon State University
where students 21 years and older were given permission
to drink in their rooms last summer. The new rule .at
Orgeon State forbids drinking in public places like
lounges or dining halls.
The Oregon policy also forbids drunkenness. But
enforcement efforts are not likely to be rigorous. The
University is counting on the "living groups," not the
University admisistration, to keep track of who's
drinking and how much.
The right to drink in a dorm room hasn't been as
easily won at other schools. Students at Marshall
University in Huntington, WV are battling the
University administration just for the privilege of
drinking 3.2 beer on campus. According to West
Virginia law, 3.2 beer is not intoxicating.
Marshall students have been pushing for 3.2 beer on
campus since 1969. Until last spring, it was up to the
University president to decide whether students could
drink on campus. For a few months this summer, liquor
was prohibited on all West Virginia campuses, but the
Marshall University president has the final say once
again and students have "some hope of approval."
Abzug Forced to Postpone Hearing
WASHINGTON (AP) Stymied by pressure from the Ford administration
and by the failure of some key witnesses to appear, Rep. Bella Abzug. I )N. Y„ today postponed a hearing into allegations the government has
regularly monitored overseas cable traffic. The hearing was called to probe
efforts by U.S. intelligence agencies to look at and obtain copies fo ca hies and
telex messages addressed to some foreign embassies and countries.
committee aides said. A telex message is transmitted by way of teletypeprinters on telephone lines.
Quinlan's Condition 'Grotesque'
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) A
neurologist who specializes in the
treatment of coma victims said
T h u r s d a y that Karen Anne
Quinlan's physical condition was too
grotesque to describe, but said no
physician has the right to take steps
that could end her life.
A Now Dimension ii\Cmem<v Luxury
INI U H ONI n o n
The testimony was by Dr. Sidney
Diamond, one of three neurologists
presented by attorneys opposing a
request by Miss Quinlan's adoptive
parents that doctors be ordered to
disconnect a respirator to"let her die
with dignity."
The trial recessed until Monday,
when more medical testimony will be
presented.
Dr. Diamond testified that Miss
Quintan will never regain thought or
control of her body and that she rests
in a hospital intensive care unit with
her legs and arms drawn to her body
in a way, "too grotesque to describe
in terms of the fetal position."
Miss Quinlan, 21, has been in a
coma for six months and her parents
assert they have the right to remove
extraordinary medical procedures
that keep their daughter alive
beyond hope.
Aft Dec©
i i<*i i< i> ii i i i ii i«ti h t>
Comfort Sued for $3.08 Million
181 tail? Street, i l l 11 >
LOS ANGELES (AP) Dr. Alex Comfort, author of "The Joy of Sex" and
"More Joy of Sex" is being sued for $3;08 million by the Center for the St udy
of Democratic Institutions. A spokesman for the Santa Barbara-based center
said the federal suit contends Comfort wrote "More Joy," a sequel to " I'he
Joy," to induce prospective purchasers to bypass the first book, allowing
Comfort to avoid sharing its proceeds. The center was to receive 20 pet cent
of the proceeds of the first book but was left out of anysharcfrom the sequel.
the suit said. The center is an organization of various scholars and
researchers.
H i . . - * H . 11s33-5s33
HELP US HELP YOU
Semlch Helps Ball Out New York City
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) Temperence Semich, being a neighborly sort,
donated $5 to New York City to help it out of its staggering multi-million
dollar debt. Mrs. Semich said she never lived in New York but thinks of the
city as a neighbor in need. She received a letter of thanks from New York
Mayor Abraham Beame thanking her for the "expression of energy and
perservcrance which is the foundation of American society," Mrs. Semich
said.
NYPBtG
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
The Office of Student Life is administering]
a bus survey to identify specific problem
areas related to the SUNYA buses.
Carey Fires Sgagllone From Board
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Al Sgaglione, who filed the lawsuit which blocked
Gov. Hugh Carey's plans for the mandated use of pension funds to bail out
continued from page one
New York City, has been fired by Carey from a state board. Sgaglione. head
students in this long and often of the Police Conference of New York, has served as an unsalaried member ol
tedious survey. "Students are finan- the state Crime Control Planning Board for five years. The Police
cing and running this organization. Conference, an organization of police unions, brought a succes,.!,d suil
I hey should realize the impact that before the Court of Appeals earlier this month striking down a law which
they can have and are having on our required the investment of vurious public-employee pension fund in a $2.3
legal system", she said.
billion rescue plan for the city.
The committee, chaired by
Senator I'isani, will now draft a bill Boyer Announces Cutbacks for SUNY
concerning the requirement of in- ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) The State University Board of Trustees declared a
dividual product labels, and further moratorium Thursday on all new university construction-including 104
hearings will be held to decide if and proposed projects that would cost $156 million. In announcing the action,
when such u bill will be brought to State University Chancellor Ernest Boyer also said student enrollments
the floor of the legislature for a would be frozen at fulltime colleges and universities operated by the state
general vote, NYl'IIUi will probably The chancellor said the university would also examine projects already
testify at these
hearings also, included in the state budget or already under way for possible furlhet
cutbacks.
Washington said.
II
PAGE TWO
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OCTOBER 24, 1975
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Stop by Campus Center 130
and fill out the survey.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE THREE
ERA Supporters Unite to Push the Amendment
UtortorknsSiek
by Dianne Piche
Georgia Gray.' of the Albany
Coalition lor the ERA. spoke here
earlier this month at a forum sponsoredliy the Feminist Alliance in
support of (he amendment.
Gray's appearance
News
is part of an intensive
campaign by the
Analysis j Coalition to educate
prospective voters on
the L'quljf Rights Amendment
(LRA) which will appear on the
ballot in "Slew York Stale this
November.* Voters will vote on
whether to add the LRA lis an
amendment to the sWIic constitution.
The controversial, amendment
which reads: "Equality pi rights under the law shall'not be denied or
abridged by the slate of New York or
any subdivision thercol on account
ul sex" has drawn the support of a
wide range of organisations. Among
Ihe member-groups listed as part of
the state-wide LRA support group
are religious, political, professional,
labor, and ethnic groups. Of notable
interest, are SASU (Student
Association ol'the Slate Universily)
and NYl'IRCi (New York Public Interest Research Group), both
members ol'the New York Coalition
lor Equal Rights.
Nationally; the Equal Rights
Amendment has been ratified by .14
slate legislatures, including New
York, and needs approval in lour
more states within the next three
years before it can be added to the.
federal constitution.
The strongest opposition to the
LRA has been by Ihe Stop ERA
group headed by Phyllis Schlafly.
Schlafly's group maintains that the
LRA will force housewives and
mothers out of their comforablc
homes and into armies, jobs and unisex toilets. Additionally, her group
has linked the National Organization of Women (NOW) and other
feminist groups, including Ms,
magazine, with Marxist political
by Roamury P ^ H M C
"Aik not what the government
can do for you, ask what the government i i doing for you."
President Kennedy's quote is
probably better known to most people than the above quote from writer
David Friedman. But to a new group
on campus, the Libertarians, the
Friedman excerpt is more accurate.
Libertarians began meeting on
campus last May, under the direction of John Deane, a SUN VA undergraduate. Earlier this month, the
group held its first organizational'
meeting of the year.
Speakers focused on communicating the libertarian viewpoint
• to the group of twenty who came to
the meeting. Deane pointed out
some opposition the group had
received on campus. He said several
posters advertising the meeting had
had 'Fascist' written across them.
Several members of the organization
complained that most of the posters
had been torn down.
"Libertarians seek a society
without coercion . . . without the
terror of the omnipotent state," said
Don Fedder, an attorney in the
Albany area, and head of the local
Free Libertarian Party. He started
off the speeches, claiming that the
government is " . . . the greatest
threat to the individual." Libertarians want everyone to have the
right to lead their lives as they wish,
provided they do not infringe on the
rights of others, he explained. A
sign, "State forbids smoking in
public places", which was on the
blackboard, served as a backdrop
for his speech.
Fedder also pointed out the inefficiency of the state, even in activities
which it forbids anyone else to take
part in, such asthe postal service. He
referred to this inefficiency as "the
Midas touch in reverse", explaining,
"Whatever the state touches turnsto
shit."
Government interference in
people's lives was stressed by Albert
Weincr, of Ihe theatre department.
"There is virtually no area of our
lives, public or private, which is not
controlled," said Weincr.
Deane came to the front next to
sum up the libertarian objectives.
'We've seen our lives drifting away
from us," he said. "There's a point
you reach when you say 'No'." That
is why libertarians finally entered
politics, he explained. But, he added,
'Don't associate us with politics. We
believe in individual liberty." To be a
libertarian, Deane continued, "You
simply have lo be led up with what's
going on."
One member of the audience
seemed lo feel libertariansim would
catch on. Continuing with Deane's
message of dissatisfaction with the
system, a young man said," We have
one thing in our favor; things are getling worse."
She pointed out that the question of
alimony would not affcel many cases
since il is awarded in only 2'f of all
divorce cases and requested in only
II)';. "Ihe real question is child support." she said, which' would be
determined on the basis of need,
number of children and salary ol'the
spouse if she or he was actually
working. She said that in the case of
a woman who had been awarded
custody of her children, she would
not necessarily he lorced to go to
work in order to support them, and
the same would be true if the husband had charge of the children. She
also stated that in New York state,
neither parent has the unquestioned
V'\4.
even rape, than ever before.
However. Gray maintains that
because such legislation deals exclusively with one sex. it would not
be denying the rights of the other.
I herefore. these problems would not
be affected by ERA. She suggested
the fact that "This (ERA or abortion
reform) is just another point on the
side of women's rights and women's
autonomy" as a possible explanation
of the opposition.
Speaking to questions as to how
the ERA would effect divorce
problems. Gray denied charges that
the amendment would abolish child
support and alimony for women.
H
right In.Ihe children hut that this is
up lo the judges lo decide.
"Ihe point of consideration is
what's in the best interest of the
child . . . . Laws are interpreted by
judges who have their biases," she
said referring to the tendency of
judges to grant custody to mothers
except in cases of proven incompetence. "People on the political
right do not trust courts at all." she
suggested, saying that while the
ERA may have good intentions,
many fear judges will make a
"mockery" of il and "crush
motherhood and apple pic."
Speaking lo Ihe benefits of the
ERA. Gray said that there are weakness." In this way, women who
were physically competent could do
already laws which prevent sex discrimination in the state and in traditionally male jobs and women
federal matters, hilt that the ERA who were not would not be forced
would lend more support to these into such situations.
One member of the audience raisand make it more difficult to overturn or repeal such legislation. She ed the question ol'the ERA legalizcalled the ERA "a step in the right ing marriages between homosexuals,
direction, hut not an end-all solution a claim made, by Stop ERA
to sexism." Some of the legislation literature. Gray cited State Senator
Karen Hurstein's position on this
she referred to included title IX
which prohibits sexism in education question. Hurstcin claimed that the
and sets guidelines for'schools to definition ol marriage in the law is
follow, and a hill in New York state one of a heterosexual relationship
which already prohibits discrimina- and that in order to grant homosextion on the hash, of sex or marital uals the right to marry, one would
first have to change the way the laws
status in terms of credit.
One of the most frequently raised arc written, and that passage ol'the
LRA would be irrelevant. Gray also
)
mentioned that while marriage may
discriminate on the basis ol sexual
preference, the LRA did not deal
with this as discrimination on "account of sex" as it is written.
Gray did mention one adverse
elfeet the LRA might possibly have
for women. Affirmative Action
legislation, mandated by the Health.
Education and Welfare Department.
calls for "preferential treatment" of
women and minorities. Many have
called affirmative action policies,
designed lo give women better opportunities in education and
employment, a form ol "reverse discrimination" against while males. If
questions uhoul Ihe ERA concerns the LRA was passed, many people,
women and the armed forces. Many including Gray, seem lo led that
feel that if the ERA passed, women these programs would he affected
would he drafted and lorced to serve adversely.
on the from lines on combat duty.
According to Sue l.cibowil/, a
Gray conceded thai if indeed the member of the feminist Alliance
draft was rcinstilutcd. women would who organi/cd ihe forum, this
probably he called to serve. program is only one of several in a
However, she noted that the purpose campus-wide effort to support the
of lighting wars was lo win and lhal passage of the ERA. She said that
if women were to replace men in cer- there will he articles in AI'IIHSA.
tain roles, the army would cease lo the groups' newsletter, tables with
function properly.
bullous, literature and Information
" I he army has certain.standards," in ihe campus center, and a resolushe said, hut what ERA would do tion before the Central Council in
would heto"prcvent generalizations the nc.M lew weeks before Ihe elecof male strength and female tion.
DORIAN
i»»
FIVE SENSATIONAL WOODWINDS'
...Headline. Chicago Tribune, 1972
Organized In 1961 under a Fromm Foundation grant,
the DORIAN QUI NTliTis an outstanding participant
in the world oj chamber music, li has concert lied widely in the U.S., Canada, and Europe, and. under Slate
Department auspices, in Africa. Asia, and the Nearhost. The Quintet has become resident ensemble at
Brooklyn College in New York City, and holds a position as Unlversity-in- Residence/or the Stale Universily
ii/ New York.
*r"""7iii
•.&#
$3 general
I Got a message
' but tired ol writing
on puMIc washroom
walla?
educational or
senior citizen i.d.
I
student tax
TRYASXSP
CLASSIFIED!
OCT 24
THAT'S TONIGHT!!
.••I'm
KARL BRAKER,
CHARLES K.USKIN,
DARKY BENJAMIN,
JANE TAYLOR,
JERRY KIKKHKIDE,
flute
oboe
horn
bassoon
clarinet
RECITAL HALL
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
ASP Classifieds reach 15,000
people, twice a week. Sell, buy,
trade. Find a ride. Find a rider.
Amuse a friend.
State University of New York at Albany
8:30 pm
FORMS AND
INFORMATION AVAILABLE
ATi
SA Contact Office
(neil lo Chack Cashing)
PAGE FOUR
philosophy and subversive attempts
to undermine traditional American
values. As a counter-group to NOW.
Schlafly's supporters have formed
HOW, or "Happiness of Women", a
group which seeks to uphold nations
of women as homemakcrs and men
as bread-winners in order to reaffirm
separate sex roles, for men and
women.
According lo Gray, many of the
same people who opposed liberalized abortion laws are now part of
campaigns lo stop passage of the
Equal Rights Amendment. Some of
these opponents have argued thai
LRA would give more of a legal
ground for abortion; and possibly
AAUSICOUNCIL funded by student association
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
OCTOBER 24, 1975
OCTOBER 24, 19?
5
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
457-8606
PAGE FIVE
ISRAELI FALAFEL
HOUSE
t
Tex as in s t r lirn e n t sa ad Hewlett Packard
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Prices for Albany
SR-50A
CC Ballroom
Saturday Oct. 25
side rule cdcubtor
8:00 pm
WAS
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ONLY
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Cost:
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J.rlMto. . ' ; :
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JSC members $.50
12
with tax card $1.25
w / o tax card $1.50 |
Jewish Students' Coalition-Hillel
| n n i i m u f v ; m j < «
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ease
•SCIENTIFIC NOTA I ION
RUACH REVIVAL
to
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{.*'.<.
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i m m n l i n n wvwtr i n JMHBV wn
tharr ihow. Aftir.
tmtrifilm
•hoc*, the Foot Fondltr iMi|i»1y
The-weekly tabloid, the National
Enquirer, has obtained and publish' carened the womWt'i feet a»d M M ! .
ed what has long been called the
thdrtoei.
PoliceftaicthataaoiT'*most embarrassing" list in
duty officer nabbed 24-year old
Washington D.C. The list of "who
i Faiutino Collato at he ran away
had stabbed the Mad Hatter sibilities.
MICKEY
MOUSE ..tourists
gets saved" in the event of a nuclear
In addition. Hie* have been froma woman who jaidthe man had
square in his fiberglass head; that
TRAPPED
war.
Winnie-The-Pooh
was pushed to helped by the marketing of various shoved her against her ear, grabbed
Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck
her ankles and forcibly removed bar '•
The Enquirer says that the list it
the ground and had his nose broken: pastel-colored condoms as well as
have lost their battle to join the Ac;•. •
has obtained contains about 200
and that Br'er Bear was even tossed some models which even glow in the . s h o e .
tor's Union.
names, all of them members of the
Collato is being held on $10,000
into the jungle cruise river by dark.
The National Labor Relations
Forbes says that the rubber
government's branch.
bond, after being booked by San Anteenagen;
Hoard has sided withthc Disney emThose on the "who gets saved list"
Despite these hardships, however, devices are even more popular in tonio police on charges of possessing
pire by ruling that the workers who
many parts of Asia. In Japan, door- a stolen shoe.
arc slated to be rushed to deep, undress up like the famous Disney the N.L.R.B. has sided withthefolks
derground funnels on the outskirts
at Disney rulingthat i l l he characters to-door saleswomen reportedly INSURANCE
FOR
of Washington where thcycould
want to join any union at all. they make fortunes selling condoms to
ELITES
uiHcfcTrtElMJirK
oFmeoiVitW,
reportedly -survive a worldwide
should forget about the actor's union homeowners: arid some countries,
First there were those antifWpEFORHW
nuclear holocaust.
and join the shop that already according to Forbes, even honor terrorist driving courses, and then,
•wwe?....
Among those on the list, accorrepresents Disney's restaurant condoms as tokens for bus rides.
ami-terrorist insurance policies for
ding to the Enquirer, are President
potential kidnap victims.
CONDOMS BOOM
Gerald Kord; Vice President Nelson
Now. a Los Angeles firm has
Rockefeller; Secretary of State
Forties Magazine reports that
formed a special "Mission ImpossiHenry Kissinger;" F.B.I. Director
condom sales in the United States
ble" team to deal with potential kidClarence Kelley and CIA Director
have begun to skyrocket.
nappers.
William Colby.
The business publication saysthat
The special anti-kidnap team is
The list, according to the Federal characters and wander around Dis- the annual sale figure lor the male
headed by former FBI agent John
birth control devices in the United
Preparedness Agency, contains the ney World don't quality as actors.
Lynch. Lynch reports, that for a cool
Mickey. Donald and the others States has reached $10 million, a
names ol "essentials" or "nonS i5.000 he will talk to families, of
interruptibles" who the government had tiled suit against Disney World, ligurealmost equalto the amount of
kidnap victims at times of crisis; for
believes must be saved at all costs. contending that they encountered all money being spent on birth control
FOOT FETISH
another $50,000 Lynch says, he will
Police in Texas have arrested a attempt to arrange an on-the-scene
The spouses of those on the list are kinds ol strange problems on thejob pills.
at the amusement park which entitle
not included in any rescue plans.
Forbes says that the phenomenal man they think may bethc notorious negotiation with the kidnappers.
"San Antonio Foot-Fondlcr."
growth in the popularity of the conIt is interesting to note that not a them to special benefits.
Lynch stresses, however, that his s
As an example, they pointed out dom is being caused, partly, by the
In recent weeks, three women I i mil lee for t he release of kidnap vicsingle member of Congress or of trie
have reported being attacked by a tims remains negotiable.
judicial branch is slated to be saved, that Dumbo was recently shot by his spread ollhe feminist idea that men
young fans with a nellel tutni that should share birth control responman in his twenties, who allegedly
according to the Enquirer's list.
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WeVthowfa tow * ftrtfll
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Frea Dexter, Jr. — Former
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• IIIREE MEMORIES
Fall
Pow-Wow
will be held at Mohawk Campus on
•IRKi l-UNCIIONS
•IIYFfcRHOLIC FUNCTIONS
•I.OliS & AN I ll.Uf.iS
•CT-.CHARtiEAHI.E
•ONI: YEAR GUARANTEE
Saturday, October 25(. Sponsored by the
Mohawk Stall, this "af'ter-the-game" event
will be held from 8:00PM to 1:00AM.
Admission is tree to all University
students,laculty and stall.
HEWLETT M PACKARD
HP-21
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7:30 and 9:30
LC—18
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CellJbrate
$125
HP-22
ITSIS
'X MEMORIES
Folk singers Roger Weiss and Gloria Jean
scheduled tor the Long House and planned
outdoor events include a bonfire and
hayrides. Refreshments, including beer, will
be for sale.
So c'mon out to Mohawk Campus and
bring your guitar if you wish. Directions to
Mohawk are at the Campus Center
Information Desk. Just ask for a Mohawk
Campus brochure.
my,
,Q ButymtrlMrt
at 9PM in the
CC Assembly Hall.
$156;.88
•I'V, IV. I in I'M I
* I incur Regress •>.
•Siitnilitnl Douiii""
•Much more
£
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HNANCIAI c AAl t I I M" *
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•CONDI I IONAI. IIRANl'IIING
MI.EVEI SIACK
' IRICi. LOGS. MAUI l-UNCIIONS
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•MX IIAKGI -.AID I
•ONE YIARl.UARA.NIEI.
No.ofculei
CLASS OF 1979
1
•ENGINEERING NOIAIION
|i
Nominations and
Elections for
Executive Committee will
•4') SI El" I'UCKiUA'MMAIH.I:
Inatown!'
Free Public Lectures
„ Hyatt House
8 pm lues. Oct. 28
I20.CONVURSION.S
Friday and Saturday
October 24 and 25
• Reduced Class Size
• Income Graduated
Reasonable Tuition
• In Depth Discussion
of TM Principles
•
.XWIOJ
•dd NY state Mta tax :
add 12.60 pottago each ,
,
.-TOTAL., ; J; •
Any dues-paying Freshman may run
or vote.
Refreshments will be served.
Iwwt.
$.50 with tax card
$1.25 without
-t
m»^PI^W^IV Wk,
»»uu.
t«
Ms
Ml
iiit^ogi
1
lixit tt on Mtirih\uiy, tttm riyjn t>l/i'xii, ItlOyiirtlsittm rif-hi itRttm, tnilr turn
rifjhl. amtimu' mile and \ our there!
OCTOBER 24, 1975
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Funded by SA and Class of 1979
PAGE SEVEN
f.
Tlrs»;o«.be1n^riBP«fcl tffy'Msjto.'SttJM'.ll, fto» Professions!
l u s i M M rVemMtfr), (*•»«<<»«"• Assistant AttoV'»y General of
New York State, Hairy C. Mfenersen, speaking 3n con,umw
fraud at 3YJ0 p.™. on Thurs. Oct. 30 in the Campus C«mw
Assembly Hall.
ANYTIME
SA Pester Service. Advertise with dost! Colored inks printed o..
14x22 paster beard, Coll Bob 7-7841 or Inquire at CC 346.
Please note new fitness one" recreational swim hours: FitnessSaturday 7-8 p.m.; Sunday 9-11 p.m. and 7-8 p.m. Recreational... Monday-Friday 9-10:30 p.m. Sot. and Sun: 1-5p.m.,810p.m,'
The Italian - Amsrleaw Sf«t*enf 4»»sasa, follewlftglesti
IIKCWS with the 0 * Sea Wm ftsHva), wW p r o m t another I
film by him"Sunflewer" starring Sophia lortn and Marctila
Moitraianni to bo shown tonight In I C 24at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
"Don't miss this.
Colonial Quad it having a party tonight from 9 p.m. to t a.m. in
the U-loungo. All wolcomol
Looking for Christian fellowship? Albany Evangtlical
Christians moat tonight at 7 p.m. in CC 313 for prayer and sharing. Com* and join in God's lovo.
*
The AM.I.A.
*
*
*
* *
Delta Sigma •i-Executlvecommittee meeting Sun. at 9:30 p.m.;
on the 2nd floor of the BA building. Committee reports and
' i
appeals will be on the agenda.
Living proof at the freeie Mod Coffeehouse, contemporary
folk. CC Assembly Hall 8:30to 12, Fri. and Sat. $.75 without tax,
free with tax. Fresh breads, etc., available. Help keep that cornbread comingl Call 457-4735.
*
* *
Going to Church, but don't know how to get there? Pineview
Community Church sends a bus to Dutch Quad at 10:40 every
Sun. morning. Fellowship in the Lord with us.
Anyone interested in attending an Orthodox Christian
Fellowship group is urged to attend our meetings on Sundays at
6 p. m. In the Campus Center Patroon Lounge. For further Info coll
Terry at 436-1535.
•»
*
*
A "Consciousness Symposium" sponsored by Ecxanxar, the Ancient Science of Total Awareness.will be held Sat. Oct. 25 from 1
p.m. until 5 p.m. in Room 315 of the Campus Center. There Is an
admission fee of $2.50 per person: $1. OOfor students. For further
info call 456-1973.
MONDAY
Two n«w specials on WSUA with free give-away albums. This
Mon. join Randy and Finny for the Album or the Week—Bongo
Fury by Frank Zappa. On Tues. listen to Mike Barr for the Group
of theWeek-the Rolling Stones.
*
* *
The Albany County lay Diabetic Association is having its
monthly meeting on Mon. Oct. 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Cusack
Auditorium, Cusack Memorial Bldg., St. Peters Hospt. New
Scotland Ave., Albany. The Speaker wilt be Pom Brizzie, R.N.
Diabetic Regional Medical Program.' Subject: Diabetts and
Pregnancy.
#
#
si-
*
* * *
WEDNESDAY
There will be a meeting of University Speakers Forum every
Tues. at 7:30 p.m. in the Patroon Lounge. All are welcome.
There will be a meeting of the Jewish Studontt Coalition-Hilie!
Education Committee on Wed. Oct. 29 at 7 p.m. in the Dutch
Quad Flagroom. All are invited to discuss programming for this
year. For more info call Monica 7-7820.
Attention History 5tudenfs: There will be a History Coffee
House on Wed. Oct. 29 at 3 p.m. in the Social Science Lo nge SS
388. This will be nr ""cellpnt opportunity to meet the professors.
R.i I-, unents will be served.
Albany State Fencing Society meets every Wed. at 7:30 p.m.
and Sat. at 10 a.m. in the Women's Auxiliary Gym (2nd floor
Phys. Ed. Bldg)beginners welcome For info call Mark 7-7987.
. . .
Want to get away from it all? The Outing Club meets every
Wed. night at 7:30 in CC 315. We hike, climb, cave, and enjoy
ourselves. Come join us.
Duplicate Bridge Game meets Weds, at 7 p.m. Beginner's class
at 6. All welcome. Cosh prizes, refreshments. For info call Andy at
7-7705.
W.I.R.A. Council meets every Wed. at 7:30 p.m. in the Bleeker
2nd Foor Lounge.
•
*
*
THURSDAY
Whither Turkey? 5 Turkish studants discuss recent elections and
political meaning for Turkey and the world.' Presented by Sayles
International House Cultural Committee. Sayles Hall
Ballroom, Thurs. at 7:30 p.m. All invited.
*
.
*
* *- *. *
Older and Returning Students* (over 25): the Drop-ln-Contcr is
now in operation in the Patroon Lounge of the CC every Mon.
and Thurs. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Come socialize, bring your lunch,
and have a cup of coffee.
* *
An interesting class in Mishna, Midrash, Chassfdic and Jewish
Philosophy is given every Tues. evening by Rabbi IsraelRubinat
his home 122 So. Main Ave. 8 p.m. all are welcome. For info call
482-5781.
There will be an Alumni Quad Board meeting on Mon, in the
Alden Main Lounge at 7 p.m.Thismeeting is open to all interested
students. If you want to do something to make Alumni better,
please come to the Quad Board meeting.
An informal group discussing the relevance of the Torch in contemporary times meets every Mon. night in a Chumash review of
the Sidra with Rabbi Rubin at 8 p.m. in CC 373.
* *
* *
»
* - t '
libertarians meeting Tues. at 8 p.m. in the PAC Lobby. All
welcome.
Ski Club meeting Tues. at 7:30 p.m. in LC 7. All trips for thecoming season to be discussed. Everyone welcome.
Freshman: elections for officers will be held Tues. Oct.28 in the
CC Assembly Flail at 9 p.m. All dues-paying freshmen may run or
vote.
Production party for Spoakout the f emi nist journal f or the tri-city
area. Come collate and staple with us on Tues. Oct. 28 at 8 p. m.
at the Women's Center, 3 Lodge Street.
Albany State Archers meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Women's Auxiliary gym on the 2nd floor of the Phys. Ed. Bldg. every Tues. For
info call that Dale, 7-5228.
Saha'i Club of SUNYA—information and discussion open to all.
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. Room 373 Campus Center.
Judo Club meets in the Gym Wrestling Room, Tues. at 7 and
Thurs at 6 p.m. Beginner's class starts at 7:30 p.m. on Thurs. For
info call Andy at 7-7705 or Bonnie at 7-7875.
*
To all students who have had problems or difficulties with i|le
Educational Testing Service, fill out the NYPMtG survey and
place it In the ETS Complaint Boxes in the library and in the CC
near Check cashing. Forms are available in the NYPIRG Office
(Rm 333) and at the Complaint boxes. For further info tall 457.
2446;
The AM.I.A. Volleyball captain's meeting is Tues. Oct. 28 at 3:45
in IC 19.
WEEKEND
It's week 6 of Albany Great Dane foot bo/// Sat., Oct. 23, it's the
Albany Great Danes vs. the Norwich College Cadets. Join < Doug
lewanda and Craig Boll for all the exdting play by play action,
live, starting at 1:25 p.m. with Aft AMU, the pre-oame show.
Also, John Falcon will be on the field again giving hit view of the
game. That's Albany Great Dane Football, on your campus minded radio station, the Sporty 640—WSUAIt
•
Wam to be a legislative activist? Boa SASU Intern, designedto
give students practical experience in their chosen field whilethey
recieve credit. For more info contact SASU 109 State Street,
Albany. Applications due by November 7.
TUESDAY
* *
fall is here at boautilul Mohawk Campvi, serving the student
community with 284 acres of rolling hills and wooded land, Just
15 spectacular minutes on the Northway off Exit 8.
floor Hockey captains meeting Is Monday at 3:30
.
p.m. In LC3.
' There will be a mandatory meeting for anyone interested in officiating A.M.I.A. batkelbail. The meeting will be held Tues.
Oct. 28, at 7 p.m. in CC 315.
Oaf ta Sigma H—Tour of the Capital, Fri., moot bowtoen BA and
Adm. at 2 p.m. Appropriate dress.
THIS
Telethon 'To It sponsoring a Halloween eondy corn guessing
game in the CC Lobby,. Oct. 27 through Oct. 31. Guess the
number of candy corns in the jar and win 2 tickets to the Dave
Mason Concert. Why not fryl?
A lecture by Prof essor Hans A. Pohlsander will t * given Mon. Oct.
27 at 7:30 p.m. in HU 354 on Dionysus and the •ocehae of Euripides.
TODAY
•r
*
y-*
*
Graduate School Interviews—for students interested in grod.
'school admissions. Sign up for appointment in the Placement office, Adm. 135. Oct. 28— Adelphi Univ, Lawyer Assistant
Program.
. . .
Camera Club announces an all new photography contest. Enter
the State Photo—SUNYA Camera Club Photography Contest;
you just might win a brand new 35mm SLR, or one of the many
other prizes. For details, go.to any branch of State Photo, or contact one of the officers of the Camera Club.
Halloween is approaching again. How about welcoming it by
getting involved with the 1975 UNfCEFcampaign. Ail interested
groups and people call Odlre 7-4761 or Nancy 7-7951.
*
* *
Wanna buy a Pumpkin? Wait a few days—Telethon 7 6 will be
selling pumpkins and candy apples in the CC Oct. 28 to Oct 31.
W.I.R.A. Volleyball and basketball rotters are now available
Captain deadlines are Oct. 29 for basketball and Oct. 30 lor
volleyball. Rosters may be picked up in the CC rm. 356.
Students and Faculty come together Come to le Cerc/e froncais
Pol-luck Dinner, Tues. Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. Sign up in the French
Dept. or call Viviane 7-7729 or Faith 7-4027. It will be a French
blastl
Volunteers are needed at Trinity Institution, a youth services
agency in the South end of Albany. We need your help working
with developmental^ disabled preschoolers as well as lor urts
and crafts, high-school equivalency and other programs. Please
help and coll 449-5155 nowl
Basketball Marathon coming Nov. 8-9. 24 hours of fun. Wotch
for details. Sponsored by Telethon '76. Applications for basketball team participants available now at the CC info desk
Attention Community Service Students Evaluation sessions are
going on right now—YOU MUST ATTEND ONE.
*
* *
Community Service Registration for Spring 7 6 will take place
from Nov. 3 to Nov. 7 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. between LC 3 and IC
4.
Timers are needed for the SUNYA Men's Swim Team. Anyone
interested please contact Pamn Leshin at 457-5107.
Torch: All members of the yearbook writing staff are to contact
us immediately for assignment. Drop by CC 375 or call 7-2116 or
Call Joel at 7-5057.
The bibliographers in the University Library have begun a
systematic review of the library collection. In order to improve the
overall quality of the collection, they will remove those maienak
which have become out-of-date or are no longer needed Tins
weeding will provide an interim solution to the serious problem of
space within the University Library. Faculty members will have on
opportunity to review the titles selected by the bibliographer* for
discard, The bibliographers will notify the academ.c
departments when material of interest primarily to that depait
ment will be available for review.
|jQQ ; The international Filmfinmip
The alternative filmic experience since 1954.
Don Siegel directs this action packed film (naturally).
I
with Walter Mathau
$.50 with tax
PAGE EIGHT
$1.00 w
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
OCTOBER 24, 197 r
Two Part Art
sculpture.
DiGiusto works with metals; mostly
stainless steel, zinc, and bronze. They are all
painted in muted yellows, browns, and burnt
oranges. The most interesting and unusual is
the Contro I, II, III, IV series. Parallelogram
and rectangular shapes are placed alongside,
next to and above one another in tall zig zagging structures. They appear perfectly balanced
and precise.
This holds true for all the pieces in the exhibit. There is not one curved, flowing edge in
any of the works. They all deserve respect for
their form, precision and clarity. As for evoking any sense of beauty (aside from the beauty
of scientific efficiency), there is none. This il
not to say that DiGuisto's work is not creative
and imaginative. Anyone who appreciates the
cold, harsh beauty of symmetry, regularity
and conformity will certainly rejoice in the artist's work. He expresses himself in the various
Winter Say, one of Irene Altmenove's patntlnge on oxttJbtt, le sxypfoaf of the ccxtooflon*
configurations of lines, cubes and rotating
but nonetheless la Indicative of her talent
planes. Squares come out of other squares. A
further away. Standing next to the picture I
out
its
fury,
leaving
in
its
wake the thick, wet,
Squares coming out of cubs* part ol jutting half submerged cube matches one exwas first disappointed. It looked like blotches
DIGiutto'a exhibit on the first floor of the actly the same on the adjacent side of the lush, tropical growth of foliage. The forest is
dense and the colored masses are seen, even on of color on a black base. These patches blendart gallery.
sculpture. The designs are as balanced as the
ed together to create a moving andvibrantly
the other side of the gallery, gaining perspectowers and buildings in which they rest.
by Hillary D. Kelbick
alive painting. Life. That is the overall, encomtive as the distancefrom the picture increases.
For relief from the symmetry that surAn array of squares, cubes, rectangular and
passing sense I received from Altmanova's
Similar is Blue Green Island. This one is
parallelogram figures. Some are set up on rounds and encloses our existence here, the mo're intricate. Again, walking quickly by the
work.
platforms, others are large enough to stand upstairs of the art gallery is devoted to the picture all I noticed were the same blurs of
Although there are no people, houses,
alone. They are scattered throughout the works of Irene Altmanova Frinta.
blue and green. Wait. Back up. An island.
or signs of civilization, the sense of nature and
impressionism.
Up
close
the
brush
strokes
room, each standingstark and unadorned; unLooks uninhibited by any life but that which natural beauty pervades each painting. The
touched by any softening influences. The liv- look just like that. Blotches of color. Greens, grows out of the land. And water. The trees added touches of civilization would have only
ing room of someone's 21st century home? No. blues and browns sometimes hint of reflect themselves off the water's mirrored distracted from the simple but exquisite
A conference of all models used in the study of trees. Mauves, oranges, yellows, and reds edge. Not as clear as the original image. Just effects.
solid and plane geometry? Not quite. The suggest fields, meadows and flowers. Up close like any reflection viewed through a natural
ground floor exhibit at the SUN YA art gallery you can't be sure. Take a step back. Perhaps shimmering mirror. The reflection in the water
is filled withthc sculpture of Gerald DiGiusto. several steps away from the paintings. They isn't as distinct.
His works consist of square and rectangular are all transformed into landscapes and
Winter Sky is different. Bare, barren trees
blocks and forms, each piece a mathematical wilderness more real and suggestive than even are clearly and coldly outlined against an
the
clearest,
most
precise
photographs
could
perfection. The lights in the gallery cast
eerie, chilling sky. This is one of the few picshadows on the sculptures. Changingthe locus ever be.
tures in which the viewing distance makes little
Lose yourself in the pictures. Against the difference. Imagine a late November day,
of the light creates totally different shadows
on the pieces. Very similar works with soft background music of the gallery, when the trees have finished undressing
different shadowing takes on a different look. everything else disappears. Summer National themselves of their flaming dying leaves, imThere arc sketches on the walls surrounding Forest, at first glance is no more than a agine the wind kicking up right before the
DiGiusto's sculptures. Even his sketches take jumbled mass of blurred colors. Movingaway, onset ofthefirstsnowstorm. Look at the painthe light into account. Most arc shadowed in the painting becomes real. Trees emerge. ting. It isimpossibletoimagincanythingelse.
the way that light would ordinarily affect the Perhaps a summer rainstorm has just played
None of the paintings contain figures. All
are of natural surroundings, of things belonging to the earth and not to humans. Open
fields, meadows, gardens of flowers, cornfields, and mountains make up a large part of
the collection.Color is an important mode of
expression. Skies have never appeared more
brilliant (Alpine Meadow) nor more dismal
(Gray Day). There is a surrealistic touch to
some of the paintings because of the artist's
use of intense colors. Landscape in Troodus,
done almost entirely in varyingshades of purple, is spooky. By the use of color, an aura of
mystery is created. The hills and mountains
arc no more than shaded lines.
Natural phenomena are evident in Altmanova's work. Misty Morning Near
Thatcher Hark is covered with a fine, translucent fog. The mist is superbly recreated makingthc picturesomewhat indistinct. Where the
fog is thickest, the colors of the morning fade
out. Another painting, Inside Vesuvious is
very dark, almost black with hints of orange
and midnight blue. A sense of awesome terror
at being trapped inside a volcano is
transmitted from the artist's canvas to the
onlooker. Stifling, oppressive heat is emitted
from that picture as well as from Hot Afternoon in Cyprus, Perhaps because of her painting technique Altmanova lets you look at the
picture as if you were looking out your window on a very hot day. You can see the heal
waves passing through the mountains.
My favorite painting in the gallery is
Myakka Lake. The colors of the rainbow are
reflected off the water. Long horizontal
patches of colors put the lake in motion.
Wherever I was, my eyes intermittanlly
A piece of DIOIusto's Contra I I I
THIs picture la part of the Altmanova exhibit on display In the upstairs portion of the art returned to that picture. Viewing distance was
important. I sensed greater depth when
«»»l«ry.
-M-
,
.
,
',
The Classical For a s *'ma
preview • leisure
Heilman 459-5322
Cine 1234
Albany State
459-8300
Mahogany
Fri. & Sat. 7,9:10
Chinatown
Fri. & Sat. 7, 9:30
LC 18
a
Hearts of the West
Fri. 7:25, 9:25
Sat. 8,10
Heilman Towne
3 Days of the Condor
Fri. & Sat. 7:15, 9:35
Tower East
70 c 1 e 1 c
/OJ-IJIO
E O P S A Dance
D o r i a n Woodwind Quintet
P A C Recital Hall
C C Ballroom
8:30 p.m.
10 p.m.
Freeze Dried Coffeehouse
Hot Tuna
by Ccdric Kushner,& WIRY
Palace Theater
8 p.m.
Living Proof
8:30 p.m.
Jaws
Fri. & Sat. 7, 9:30
3
Peper
Fri. & Sat. 7:15,9
free w / t a x card, $.75 w / o
:*:WSW.mWS«W^
During his many years of
leadership Pericles was not without
opposition. Yet his integrity and the
quality of his leadership were such
that his opponents could not attack
him directly. Instead they sought to
embarrass him by attacking his
friends. His mistress Aspasia was
charged with impiety but acquitted.
His friend Anaxagoras—the first
philosopher to take up residence in
Athens—was also charged with impiely and forced to leave the city.
Phidias did not escape cither.
Mcnon, one of Phidias' workers, to
accuse the master of stealing some of
the gold plate with which the statue
of Athena was being adorned.
Pericles had, however, anticipated
trouble. At the beginning of the
work he had instructed Phidias to
mold the gold in such a manner that
it could be removed from the statue.
Amidst charges of speculation,
Pericles ordered the gold taken
down and weighed. The results
revealed that all of the metal was accounted for.
The enemies of Pericles persuaded
Having failed once, the detractors
of Pericles picked Phidias as u target
a second time, charging him not with
embezzlement but with impiety.
They charged that he had portrayed
himself and Pericles on the shield of
the Athena Parthenos. The shield
was decorated with a battle of
Greeks and Amazons, and one of (he
(ireck warriors looked very much
like Phidias, another like Pericles.
Phidias had violated the Athenians'
sense of civic propriety rather than
any religious code. He was forced
into exile. It is no credit to the
Athenians that he was able to continue his career at Olympia,
Saturday, Oct, 25
Madison 489-5431
Hard Times
Fri. & Sat. 7:25, 9:20
IFG
Italian American
Student Alliance
Sunflower
Fri. 7:30, 9:30
LC24
Lets Do It Again
Fri. & Sat. 7, 9:15
Mohawk Mall
370-1920
Guilderland Plaza
456-4883 1
Hard Times
Fri. & Sat. 7:30. 9:30
Charlotte
Fri. & Sat. 7:30,9:15
off campus
Delaware
462-4714
Once la Not Enough
contact theater for times
p
IT
Farewell My Lovely
Fri. 7:30, 9:20
Sat. 7:45, 9:35
Fox - Colonie
459-1020
Charley Varrlek
Fri. 7:15,9:45
LC7
Let's Do It Again
Fri. & Sat. 8, 10
Shark's Treasure
Fri. & Sat. 7:20
Rollerball .
Fri. & Sat. 9:00
Z" r^ r^ r~ n
3 Days ol the Condor
Fri. & Sat. 7,9:15
7— 6
9
IB" IT it
14
17
IB"
IS"
!T
Z5"
2T
Fall Pow-Wow
Israeli Falafel House
byJSC
M o h a w k Campus
music by Roger Weiss & Gloria .le
8 p.m.-l a.m.
music by Ruach Revival
CC Ballroom
8 p.m.
Saturday Night or Cold
WSUA II p.m.
Glen Trotiner & Joe Fremont
Freeze Dried Coffeehouse
Living Proof
country folk
8:30 p.m.
free w/tax card, $.75 w/o
Charles Mil'lursun
CC Cafeteria
3 p.m. free
State University
Theater
P
FRIDAY
10 M A S H
I 39HiW
32
IT
W
IT
50"
W
8:30p.m.
•Pr
I
52
u
if&lwar i Ju
ACROSS
1 "Swan Lake", e.g.
i
1 lead shot
ius
19
f
was commissioned to create a
colossal statue of Zeus in the
chryselephantine technique which he
had already employed with such
huge success in the Athena
Parthenos. At terrific expense a huge
amount of gold, ivory, and other
material was collected, and the temple which was to house the statue
hud to have part of its floor rebuilt.
Phidias' Zeus was seated on a
throne. The naked parts of his body,
lace, chest, and arms, were of ivory,
the rest of gold. He was bearded and
crowned, like the winners in the
Olympic Games, with a simple olive
wreath. In his left hand he held a
scepter crowned with an eagle. Inhis
right hand he held not his usual attribute, the thunderbolt, hut n Nike.
Phidias apparently desired to represent Zeus as the benevolent father of
mankind.
The statue filled almost Ihe entire
eellarol the temple. About 40 feet
high, it almost reached the ceiling.
The gallery of the two-storied interior allowed visitors a close view of
Hie god's head. Accounts in both
Greek and Roman authors indicate
that the viewing ol Phidias' work
was not only an aesthetic but a
profoundly religious experience.
THE-3DAYALLYOUCAN
EATITALIANFEA5T.$2.95.
Including Wine or Beer.
13 Space 1999 8 p.m.
Luxurious accomodations available al
^ S ? P \ UrtXOOt e/uut
Marco Polo and Desert Inn
itcduvn A WW C/ttlflL
aitatXM.iooouitand,
17 Sounds!age
I a.m.
d/ULOOtyftOO'
pLftUAini.
M a r t i n M u l l , l i o & liddie
17 Jennie: Lady Randolph Churchill
drama
12 Shakespeare's "The
I I p.m.
drink and dance at a gallery
all week Ted Fish Co.
Freel Latest disco
dance lessons
TUESDAY
10 Good Times 8 p.m.
comedy
science fiction
46
13 i. .ylvanlan city 47
14 Pittsburgh athlete 46
16 Responded to
49
frUdWlUOTTUl
9 p.m.
13 Star Trek
13 Welcome Back Kotter
last week's
solution
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!
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anEsara aiiiao nam
imatiii amm
Sag araran iu.inr.iM
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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Call Now-457-7806
fudtud
SATURDAY
|
The Interior ol the Parthenon
with the Athena Parthenos of
Phidias.
$59.00 to Miami
.puetluLIMtO
science fiction
6 Midnight Special
Helen Reddy
master's largersizc drinkingcup. The
latter bears an inscription: P H I D O
E I M I — " I belong to Phidias." One
can hardly imagine a more unlikely
find.
Nothing is known about Phidias'
death, but his descendents enjoyed
hereditary rights at Olympia.
Mark V Travel Club Inc. presents...
MONDAY
variety 12:30 a.m.
13 Paul Klee, e.g.
Semite
15 English novelist
Western Indian
Charles, and family
Bird's nest
20 Cereal grasses
"Last Supper"
23 Clear
17 One —
(singly)
chalice
24 Barter
IB Colleges of Science ,50 Points the way
26 Madame
for short
52 Lightweight cotton 27
the Red, et al.
19 Propelled a gondola
fabric
29 Idiots
21 Health resort
54 —— Tentmaker
30 Aspirations
22 Hiss Luptno, et a l . 55 Molly and Dorothy
33 Fake
23 Rich, dirk soils
56 Famous cow, et a l . 34 "With thee conver24 Evened the score
57 Gapes
sing I forget — - "
25 Punctuation mark
35 Football pass
(abbr.)
DOWN
36 Sesame oil
26 Sects
37 Frees from sin
27 Worn way
1 Hemophiliac
38 — Day
28 Ridicules
2 Chilean desert
39 Miss StHtch, et a l ,
30
Tomb
3 Lomond and Ness
40 Turn the
31 Prefix: boundary
4 Quite a bit
42 Breaks down a
32 Suffix: resembling 5 Compass point
sentence
33 Wan
6 Polllwog
45 River In Hades
36 Piece of Jewelry
7 Old Testament book 46 Protective clothing
41 Roofing material
8 Diminutive suffixes 48 Play part (2 wds.)
42 Banana parts
9 Play the first card 49 Festival
51 Hesttatlnn syllables
43,Southern state
10 Allow
53 Rat-a— •
(abbr.)
11 A slurring over
thousands of pilgrims flocked to
Olympia to see the Zeus, which was
generally held to he the most
beautiful and most sacred effigy in
the whole world and counted as one
of the seven wonders of the world.
In 40 A . I ) , the half-crazed Roman
emperor Caligula ordered the
transfer of the Zeus to Rome. Kortunatcly, the Roman governor
charged with the execution of this
order stalled, pleading technical difficulties, and Caligula died in the
following year. Kor another threeund-u-hulf centuries the statue stood
in its place In 391 A.D. the emperor
I heodosius I ordered an end to all
pagan cults and observances. In 393
A D . the Olympic Games were held
lor the last time, ending a tradition
of I Ki8 years. By 395 A.O. Phidias'
Zeus had been transferred to Constantinople, and there it was
destroyed by a life in 462 A. D. Coins
of the cily of Elis, some showing the
entire statue, others the hcud only,
arc our only visual record.
from 1954 to 1958 excavations
were undertaken at Olympia on a
spot which turned out to have been
Phidias' workshop. Finds included
bronze tools, clay molds for the
golden drapery of the Zeus, and the
Round trip via deluxe motorcoach
N Y C to M i a m i
Jan. 2, 1976 to Jan. I I , 1976
9:30 p.m.
Col legi »te iW76 -i
44 Young pigs
46 Cornea down to
Earth
10:30 p.m.
We have already seen the circumstances which brought Phidias
from Athens lo Olympia. There he
Phidias drinking mug: tha inscription raada "PhleJo ElmT, or "I balong to PNdiaa."
10 p.m.
10 D o n Kirschner's Rock Concert
|
it
17 M o n l y Python's Flying Circus
comedy
10 Medical Center
drama
43
ISTP
The Zeus of Phidias.
SUNDAY
comedy
It is a fact of history, but probably
was no comfort to Phidias, that
before him others who had served
Alliens well had fallen victim lo invidious and discriminatory persecution. Miltiudcs. the hero of
Marathon, was tried and lined for
the failure to his campaign against
Paros. The tragic poet Aeschylus
had hud to defend himself against
the charge of having profaned the
secrets of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
"The Effect of (lamina Rays on
Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds"
Fri. & Sat. 8:00 p.m.
Sun. 2:30 p.m.
I.V.
7T
Si
"AGE 2A
Friday, Oct. 24
country folk
Tht Gambler
Fri. 7:30, 10
LC I
Sat. 7:30, 10
LC7
Dilemmas
Of the
Sculpture
Phidias
luthfjCWKfJ?
KJJW'A
on c a a p n i
The
comedy 8:30 p.m.
17 Soundstagv
HALLOWEEN
11:30 p.m.
M a r t i n M u l l , Flo & Eddie
Every Sunday, Monday** Tuesday
WEDNESDAY
13 When Things Were Rotten
comedy
8 p.m.
17 New Y o r k Performance
Pete Scegcr, Arlo Guthrie
8 p.m,
OCTOBER 24, 1975
A feast auamnh-ed
feata*Ht«^^^^^A^SfJ^T6
AMTPASro 8u«erand followed byheapingP^erso{ SPAGHETTI^""*.
LASA&NA.MeATEJAUS.SAUSA&EQnd MORE. Andtotapir oK,an,ey
mu£jo( BE.EP,,q0bletot WiN£,or-anvott*K beverage.
CHILDREN 1.75
under 10
•erv.d 5unday 12Noon tallW-Monday 1,-fue.da)/4PM*. new
Chef Italia
OCTOBER 24, 1975
AlAANV
Western A * o* f u l l e r R d .
October 3 1
Dance Contest
V4 price w i t h
costume
champagne,
prizes and surprises
Gin and tonic:
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
At Rembrandt's...
Happy Half Hoar
Free Wine and Champagne
Cheese and Crackers
PAGE3A
•MMM™—m
I
«<
Von may think fure're superhuma
but we're only human, be >ve me.
- I t •'-
tf
3
\ l&.fau
Renaissance, above, at the Palace last Tuesday
night, and at far right, Jon Camp, their bassist.
Caravan, below, opened the show, but they were
plagued with sound system breakdowns as well as
prc-perlormance problems.
At right, Geoff
Richardson, their violinist.
At left, Annie Hailam, lead linger
for Renaissance. Above,
drummer Terry Sullivan looks on
at Jon Camp's bass playing.
Mickey Ounford writes most ot
the group's music and plays
acoustic guitar at above right.
John
Tout,
at
right,
Renaissance's keyboard wizard,
performed on piano, moog,
mellotron and organ.
m.
14
marcui
coleman
cabman
by David Lcrner
They hud bad sound equipment, their preliminary
group began u half hour late, and they played to only
1700 people, but the music which Renaissance produced
at the Palace transcended the mundane.
They were superb.
Deep beneath the Palace stage, Renaissance lay in
waiting. They had arrived in Albany from New York
only three and a half hours before at 4:00 p.m. and now
they waited to commandeer the stage and begin their
concert.
The basement room they prepared themselves in was
a model of poorly lit, groovy-art decor camp. On the
wall, a mural done with an amateur hand ruined the luce
olJoni Mitchell. Next to her, another mural nl a woman
seated cross-legged on some grass. Along side Joni, a
trumpet spouting out the word "jazz." It was ugly.
In the center of the room, an eight foot long table
graced with cheeses, spreads, bread, and their
concommitant paraphernalia. A large box was
alongside the table, filled with cases of Budweiscr, eight
bottles of Blue Nun Liebrfraumilch, one bottle of
Johnny Walker Black Label and dozens of cans of Coke
and Ginger Ale.
In each musician's hand rested a plastic glass filled
with the Blue Nun. While they all waited for Caravan to
show up, they supped their drink and chatted with
members of their roadcrcw.
In that dingy, grimy, slovenly, mess they call a prep
room, the members of Renaissance walked around,
trying hard to keep their minds off the impending
performance. "One is always apprehensive," Mickey
Ounford, the group's song writer and acoustic guitarist
said, "worrying about how its going to go down.
Relaxing is really the thing. You can't really worry
about the musicianship, 1 mean, we've played it enough
times to know it. No, the things to worry about are the
sound systems."
Michael Ounford shuffled his feet a lot before the
pcrfomance, glancing around the room and twirling his
"glass." "Might I offer you a drink?" Jon Camp, the
bassist said, offering me an upopenedcan of Budweiser.
It was cdl iiiil went well withadrylhroat."Thanks,"
PAG* 4A
The lifeless room has come to be a common sight to
the group. They have toured the United Stated three
times since December, playing in New York State each
time. Some ofthemthriveonit,othersyearnforhome.
Jon Camp and drummer Terrcnce Sullivan arc
married. Sullivan had two children. They won't see their
family for seven WCCKS, when they conclude the current
tour. Annie I lal'—m, the lead vocalist, hus a boyfriend
back home as well. For them, the excitement of the tour
are weighed against the other variables.
Dunford, however, thrives. " I enjoy it. It's tiring, and
of course, it's not everybody's cup of tea, as we say. But
it's a whole different way of life."
John Tout the keyboard wizard said, "I much prefer
touring to sitting around, doing nothing or rehearsing."
Sullivan looked on in disbelief. "Well, actually," Tout
said,"wc haven't done nothing in about two years now.
We certai nly haven't had a holiday for a least a year and
a half. Even after this tour we won't have a break until
Christmas. When we get homein December wc go right
to work at the studio mixing the new album. Hopefully
wc have a break during Christmas."
"I much prefer
to sitting
touring
around,
doing nothing
or rehearsing."
Even for him, touring has its lower moments, During
their first tour in I972, Renaissance played loa group of
12 people at a place called the "Smiling Dog Saloon" in
Cleveland, Ohio!
"I never want to play in Cleveland again,"hc said, "Oh
don't write that down." They play in Cleveland in
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
November. They are also scheduled to piny in
Pottsdam, Westchester, New Jersey, and Connecticut
before heading out to the West Coast.
Tout played with a small gold and ebony cigarette
lighter during the hour, and a hall pre-pcrlorniiina'
period. With facinating care, he held his ringers tiloli.
much like a surgeon after a pre-surgical scrub.
Whenever he would lift something, he would gingerlj
wrap his long, thin fingers around it, assure himsell thai
his grip was true, and delicately accomplish what
needed to be done.
His meticulous precision extended to his eigtirrettes. a
British brand which he described us "weak." Rather
than tap the bottom of the pack to force n cigarette m
the top and then pluck it out, he would shake I hecnishproof box with his fingertips gripping the edges and
then pinch the tip with his other hand and slottl)
remove it. The movement look less than two seconds,
and it was an unconscious reflex.
By 9:00 p.m. things, began to pick up tempo, buret)
noticeably. Sullivan began to play the drums ul Ins
knee, decending into an oblivious trance. DuiiUml
began to tune his acousting guitars. Haslnm had lone
since disappeared. Camp paced the room slowly ai lirsl,
then a little faster. In the room...out of the room, hack
again. One of the road crew came to pep up Ihe
musicians, affecting a French uccent over his British
one. There was no tension, just a quickened pate ul
light-hearted good-naturedfun.a fun that comes lioin
being on the road together six months out ol theuai
At 9:20, Annie bounced into the room, lamp was on
his feet in a blink, the look of mischievous Puck nil ovci
his face. "Come on, come on, you know we've only g"1
ten minutes." Dunford never budged, "Ien minutes.
Anyone want to tell a story?" Annie's eyes weie alive
with the game, "Blimey, all i've got to do is to put'"'
dress on, or haven't you noticed I've already done me
face up."
"No," Camp came back, "it looks the same as it
always docs." Annie bounced right back out again. Itei
head cocked back trailing behind her in another look in
the men.
Camp, Dunford, Tout and Sullivun started scurrying
now. With eight minutes before Caravan was due to
wrap it up, the four men decided it was about lime to
change into their costumes. Annie caught them all with
their pants down. "Wow." Camp did a slow pirhoucttc
for his lead singer. "You like?" She laughed.
"We never rehearse before a show," I out said, " Wc
just play around with Ihe guitars."
Somewhere
between putting his punts on and tying his shoes, he
added, "We did all that before you got here."
"Don't you ever get bored with all this. Do you feel
anything before you go on the stage?' "Oh no," said
Dunford, "II it ever became routine," Tout said, "we'd
all just pack it in. We're never satisfied. Wc never do it
right." "Speak for yourself," Camp chimed in. And
then, as he was leaving for the stage he called back.
"Remember, it's not our fault. Whatever goes wrong,
it's not our fault."
And suddenly, they were on stage.
Fo.tr men and one woman, who minutes before wore
jeans and workshirts, telling me that "I like to have
people around. My sister comes to rehearsals, and ot
course Mums and Dads are there at the shows," were on
stage giving 1700 ecstatic fans a royal show for the
dough.
Only minutes before, lout was telling me that lie
never listens to his own music during his free time.
Now he wus producing it before an enthralled audience.
Dunford likes the Moody Blues, Yes, and Emerson,
Luke and Palmer. But his audience was there to hear
Renaissance, and with obvious delight, they all obliged.
Tout hud said that he and the group can't wait until
they have enough time to really learn their instruments,
to study and perfect their talents. The audience found
no fault with their talent in its present form.
As t he lime drew closer, lout's words came out faster.
"1 look classical piano study lor eight years. '.Veil, it
wasn't really study, it was really piano lessions, with this
old teacher. She was really strict und set in her ways. We
did all this out-of-the-way si till like 'The Mermaid sings,
to the sen, when I wanted to do Bach and Beethoven.
She was old."
The music he played on stage was out-of-the-way to
no one's ears. They played their best, and it sounded
m 24, 1975
fine. With their standard opening, "Can you
Understand." (Tout had said catlier that it was the only
song that seemed to work as an opener) the audience
was swimming.
Mellow. Ihe music lapped and played around Ihe
head. Playfully swirling und turning around the head,
the only feeling was mellow. Annie's voice was as fine
and as crisp as it had ever been, depite a third ear
operation as a result of which she can just now begin to
hear out of her left car. Jon Camp's bass was driving.
John lout's versatility on the keyboards was
astounding.
Tm never
satisfied.
but I guess
it was all right.'
Without the aid of an orchestra
Renaissance
performed their ultimate crowd-pleaser, the entire song
ol Scherhcruzadc, and Tout's keyboads and
synthesizers were called on to fill the gup.
He did.
I he group pluyed hard. Mickey broke two strings on
one guitar, and ferry Sullivan broken stick. But with
the energy came power. Their set was powerful. And
Mellow. It wus always mellow.
"Mother Russia" hud the audience on its feet.
"Schcrherazadc" had it jumping. "Ashes arc Burning,"
the encore put the audience in Renaissance's pocket. It
was theirs, lock, stock and barrel.
Through it all, the group seemed geniunely thrilled by
their reception, It was no greater nor less than they
received in June at Carnegie Hall, or in December at the
Academy of Music
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
__—
colaman
marcus
After the concert, Dunford would say, perhaps
gratuitously, "Ihe audience wus rcallyovcrwhclming.
They were so warm, so friendly. Even over that
blasted orchestra pit."
Their show lasted two hours. Sheer enjoyment. The
sound washes over t he audience like a happy tide. Not
Happy like the optimism of
the Moody
HI lies,bin u serene happiness I hat invades the body and
renders it immobile.
Within the group, members played games with each
other. Camp and Sullivan made faces. Annie laughed.
Mickey smiled. John Tout was absorbed in his
keyboards, but managed a lew quick glances at the rest.
Camp and Sullivan kept making faces. It was
wonderful, I hey hud fun. It was a contagious motion.
When it was all over. Renaissance was tired. Very
tired. But the spark in their eyes had not gone. They
were out of breath, exhuustcd, anxious to hit the
I hruway und return to their hotel rooms in New York,
and they were not satisfied with the show.
"How arc you , Mickey?" "Not good." "Not good?"
"We're very tired." "How did you. like the show?" "It
was OK, the sound wus pretty bad." "Are you satisfied
with how you played'.7" "I'm never satisfied. But I guess
it wus all right."
Jon Camp wus less pleased. "I knew, after we left the
stage, before the encore, that something was wrong, the
sound, und it's not good doing an encore when you
know something is wrong."
With seven weeks ahead of them, without their
families of friends, the loneliness of a successful group
becomes painfully obvious, "I miss my wife," Jon Camp
said, "and she misses me." Nodding toward Terry
Sullivun, he suid, "We're trying to forget about it." It
simply costs to much to have them come over.
Using poor judgment, I reminded Mickey that they
had used snatches of tape during Schcrheru/ade. He
had said that John Tout would by playing all the
orchcslriul parts himself. "Come an," Camp suid with
noticeable irritation, "We used about two snatches of
tapeand we played withthem.... We're only human. You
may think we're superhuman, but we're only human.
believe me,"
PAGE 5A
•N
Celebrity Series a Classical Success
by Stephen EtMnmin
When a reviewer is privileged to
witness a musical experience of as
extraordinarily high a caliber as that
given by the Beaux Aits Trio, he is
fortunate indeed; hit job is made
easy. On Sunday, October 19, this
trio of world renowned artist* performed a selection of works by
Hayden, Ravel and Brahms. This
first concert of the Univeristy
mmdia
Celebrity Series was given at Page
Hall, downtown where the other
groups in the series, the Cleveland
String Quartet, and the Tokyo String Quartet will also perform later
this year.
Sunday's program began with
Franz Joseph Hayden's Trio in A
major. It is a work of great wit and
charm which calls for both restraint
and unreserved energy on the part of
the performers. Here the timing and
musical interplay between the
artists—Menahem Pressler, piano;
Isidore Cohen, violin; and Bernard
Greenhouse, cello—was letter
perfect. The final Rondo was a
brilliant display of musical balance,
timing, and harmony that left the
audience ecstatic, calling' the
musicians out for 4 curtain calls.
The second work, the Trio in A
opening allegro, with its clever six
note phrase as its base Was perfectly
executed. The group took no shortcuts in the work, at times sacrificing
a bit of control for excitement and
color. This musical tenacity excited
the large audience, which demanded
and received a short encore at the
conclusion of the program.
For those who have never heard
music at Page Hall, it is a must, It is a
comfortable and intimate theatre
with fine acoustics. The Beaux Arts
Trio will perform there once more in
a program of music by Mozart,
Dvorak, and Beethoven, on April
25.
minor by Maurice Ravel, waa a very
different tort of work, showcasing
the group's great versatility. Ravel's
fine Impressionist composition was
filledwithdelicateshiftsinharmonal
balance; at times crisp, at time subtle
and un-delineated. Hisjuxtaposition
of musical dynamics and shifts of
mood, perfectly captured by Cohen
in the difficult violin part, arc
precursors of the hemoiola rhythms
and dissonances of the modernists.
The trio stressed this modernist
view, certain sections sounding
almost like Bartok.
After an inter mission, t he tri o performed Brahms Trio in C major. The
madnmw
Space 1999-A Poor Enterprise
waste on the moon. Somehow, a freak
I miss Star Trek just as much as anyone else. magnetic lightening storm sets off a massive
Memories of Spock's ears, Scotty's accent, thermonuclear explosion, sending the moon
Yoeman Rand's beehive hair, Lt. Uhura's but- and all of the 311 inhabitants of Moon Base
tons and Kirk's stomach leave me yearningfor Alpha into space. Bach subsequent show has
another episode in the final frontier. Of
all the usual adventures of space travel. Imcourse, I could do without the nostalgia
mortal humans, colliding planets and
trinkets they are peddling these days. Per- mutants. The characteristic of Space 1999that
sonally. Enterprise blueprints area bit imprac- is supposed to set it aside from other space
tical considering 1 can't drive a manual shift.
series is that the people of Moon Base Alpha
Hoping that my science fiction cravings are totally unprepared for space travel. In
other words, they have a limited supply of
would be satiated, I eagerly awaited the coming of Space 199V all summer. Labeled as the toilet paper and birth control pills.
most expensive show ever in TV history
But Space 1999 lacks the idealistic
($200,000 per episode), I expected a quality
mysticism of Slur Trek. Although both series
show. Having Brian Johnson doing special
portray the strengths of women and men in
effects with the same sophistication he disunknown environments, only Star Trek, inplayed in 2001: A Space Oydessy and starring stills a good feeling instead of the absolute
Martin Landau and Barbara Bain, the scries hopelessness of Space 1999. The Enterprise in
just had to be a cure for my starsickness. In- itself is a symbol of awesome strength and
stead, after each episode my mind lingers in perserverence. Lunar Base Alpha looks like
thoughts of Captain Kirk and his mighty crew. the Pentagon on a meteor. The Enterprise
The plot of Space 1999'w, a simple but clever represents a cavalry-like presence in the untwist on the usual interstellar travel shows. As iverse, always coming to the rescue in times of
thefirstand best episode explained, in the year need. It is unsettling to be out alone in space.
However, I take comfort in knowing that if
1999 man is carelessly storing thermonuclear
by Lon Levin
Kirk is in trouble he- can always throw the
Enterprise in reverse and go home.
1 realize that being hurled into space can put
a damper on your social life, but the actingand
plots of Space I999are so serious that the people come off as no more than machines. Every
show is a trauma and a joke is as rare as a Big
Mac in outer space.
Slar Trek nevcrlostitshumanness. Thccast
was much more emotional. William Shatner
appeared to be happy and having labor pains
all at the same time. The human
characteristics we would identify with were
accentuated by the presence of Mr. Spock. His
personality represented the strength of logic
that we need when our mattcr-anti matter
engines are about to explode. The interaction
between Spock's logic and Kirk's intuition
'
•
makes for far more interesting drama that the
relationship between Martin Landau, the
moon base commander and Barbara Bain, the
head surgeon.
But mostly, I never realized how essential
the transporter is to the flow of each episode.
It saves so much visual time to just beam
someone to a planet instead ol travelling there
by spaceship as in Space 1999. At least if the
ships were piloted by New York City cabbies
they would take short cuts and avoid tolls.
In a recent episode of Space 1999 while
Moon Base Alpha was under attack, Barbara
Bain sternly said to Martin Landau, "We are
looking for answers, not heroes." Doesn't she
know that when I turn my dial I am looking
lor answers, and heroes?
I line in next week.
pf
:
Ace
ISpectrum
Tonight in CC ballroom, EOPSA
Presents Ace Spectrum in concert.
Ulthough they have released two
falbums, they still arc a relatively
pbscure vocal group.
Ace Spectrum began with Elliot
Isaac and Ed Zant. native New
[Workers and veterans of thc> New
krork local scene. The group was
formed around them and Aubrey
llohnson, who they met later on.
Il hey started to rehearse as a trio, doing something most groups don't do.
•I hey wrote their own material and
Tvorked to improve it on a recorder
pv taping cassettes of themselves.
vtost groups start by working on
Lther people's music, that is well
Jcnown to everyone. They were introduced to Rudy Guy, who. performed in clubs, and they expanded
to a quartet.
The group signed with Atlantic
alter perfecting their style. They
released their first album last year.
Inner Spectrum. After this, they suffered the loss of Johnson. The
remaining three had to pull their
talents togct her and perform as a trio
again. They then released their second album. Low Hem Rendezvous,
Spectrum tries to produce a sound
I
C ^ T H I i LOOKS USE ~)
\
r TO S
•Sr
TICKETS
$6.50 W/OUT
%
Charles HcPherson
C.C. Cafeteria
8 P.M.
OCT. 25
1
PAGE 6A
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
> THIS. S U E V I V A l S ^ " HAS
, WE BERT . . . " " > * " • «
gKn
IT &i>fcC ISe»U>T6*HW** '"
~K0W x BUI1* s o n t ^"^
«CE. VCMVCAHTI <,ETTHIS*J
t
I T * Tint TO f*|(lpnV F « * i V
.JjISHT \u |r\&TH£REA*TH!
ftp OF OCTO^eKf 8 « C .
Ride the
Downtown^
*& Late Night Bus **
CIRCLE
Sponsored bjj Concert Board
VflU)ET0MtW£BlTflWflF,'J
(Hit AciilluW mflPt * SHELRRl
with tax card*
FREE!
Schedule- leaves from:
rfT THG MWCG TH€/4TR€
SAT.
owl yeun ideas
<?inn!39
8 : 0 0 P.M.
TO€TC 4SO ON MLG dT TH€ MLr1C€.
BU9 TO€TC ON ML€ OCT. Q9, OCT. 30. OCT. 31. NOM. 3.
Bring |wtaj,
-
for...
T i a O ON SM£ IN W CONTACT OffKE rtOM
10 A. M. TILL 3 m
TME>«'0FPWANCfSTfl**
M l A V T i A puiELUNt). etfUa
VJ
and
Special Guests
H50W/MX
sing, or can only really sing, onclype
of music.
II you are interested in various
types of music, you should come and
see this concert. Ace Spectrum
should be different than most ol the
groups that come here this semester.
Contrary to popular belief, this concert is for everybody. IIOI'SA
schedules black performers, but
anyone is welcome to come
"c«Lt HIS ' - " ^ X " ^ 0 ^ : ' /
STEPHEN STILLS
TUGflVIY. MOV1GMBGR 4
that can't he categorized and that expands Into many different types of
music, this was their goal and they
began to fulfill it. All I he artists come
from musically inclined families.
The combined background of the
trio covers soul. jn/z. gospel and
rock. Each member can sing either
lead or background. You can see
why their music is different, as opposed to other vocal groups who
CuJU TL
m
.'
Mtjb pun
)>y Keith Graham
fUMDGD BY SA.
OCTOBER 24, 1975
12:30 a.m.
(express to Lark St. l-'ri. night)
1:30
2:30
HOTEL WELLINGTON
QMIABIO * WESTEPM
12:45 (Sat. only)
1:45
2:45
LARK & WASHINGTON
1:00
2:00
3:00(ierniinates)
EABIBIBfii & WESTERN
*"
2:2i
LARK ft WESTERN
12:50
1:50
2:50
LARK & MADISON
107 fltffit Tovrn) |
2.07
Friday &
Saturday only
* $ . 5 0 w/o tax card
LATE-NIGHT BUSES RUN ONLY ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS funded by student association]
OCTOBER 24, 1975
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 7A
i I
Tartiafl Toaga* C M Always Tell
„__
"toe best starting point
btlLCorHa
The great Chinese chefs «ajr in developing your own technique
that good food appeah to all flvir of tastingsense*. It should be attractive to t h e wine you are going to taste
look at and a pleasure to smell, should be in a clear, stemmed
feel good In the mouth, produce glass of no lets than an eighta proper sound when masticated ounce capacity. (Clear, so you can
and, of course, appeal to the taste. .evaluate the color of the wine;
Except, I must admit, for t h e stemmed, so your hand does not
sound effects, good wine posses heat it) The glass should be
shaped so that 4he diameter of
ses the same characteristics.
The technique of tasting Is de- the rim is slightly, smaller than
. signed to permit evaluation of all the diameter of the part that
the salient qualities of the wine. holds the wine and poured no
Professional tasters vary a good more than one-third to one-half
deal in the details of their tasting fulL (Only partly full to permit
methods. I think the following volatile components of the wine
,
French Way: Fattening but Delicious
by Rachel
and Ran
I think of berets, the Eiffel Tower, Frere Jacque. I see Maurice Chevalier
and Leslie Caron. 1 am warmed by the beaches of the Riveria and cooled at
night byfinechilled wine. 1 starve myself to squeeze into their latest fashions
yet spend hours trying to prepare the latest dish.
To me French will always mean gourmet whether a simple repast of bread,
cheese and wine (somehow they make it sound better) or a spread beginning
with hors tfoeuvres and ending with chocolate mousse, the in between too
good to be mentioned. Somehow it's all so rich, delicious and romantic. (At
least in books and magazines.)
Put two candles on the kitchen table, (how many of us have dining rooms?)
flowers in a vase, put on the closest thing you have in the way of music with a
French twang, and serve a charming authentic though slightly Americanized
version of French onion soup and quiche lorraine.
In order to be able to serve both dishes together the best bet is to prepare
the quiche first and then put the onion soup in the oven for the last 20
minutes. One can always make the soup and serve while the quiche is
finishing. Quiche is also good cold for lunch the next day.
Quiche Lorraine
I 9" pie crust
1 pint heavy cream
2 eggs beaten
8 oz. swiss cheese
salt & pepper
bacon, tomatos, mushrooms (optional)
Buy or prepare one pie crust. Mix cream, eggs, salt and pepper together.
Set aside. Cut swiss cheese into slices andlayit on the bottom of the crust.
Now is when you can add the optionals. Either crumble cooked bacon, place
on cheese, or layer thinly sliced tomatos or fresh mushrooms (sauted in
butter) onto the cheese. Pour cream mixture over and bake at 400° and bake
20 minutes more or until knife comes out clean. It is best served immediately.
French Onion Soup
butter
1 large onion
2 packages of beef boullion
1 small package mozarella cheese
grated parmesan cheese
2 pieces of thick bread (preferably French or Italian)
Serves two.
Slice and saute onions in butter until light brown. Follow instructions on
broth package (remember 2 servings). Toast two pieces of bread. Place
onions on the bottom of one large or two small py rex or corning ware dishes.
Add bread, and a bit of mozarella and parmesan cheese. Then add broth and
cover top with the remaining mozarella cheese sprinkled with the parmesan.
Bake at 350° until cheese is lightly brown. Usually about 20 to 25 minutes.
to accumulate in the upper portion of the glass so you can smell
them, narrowing toward the top
to prevent the volatile substances
from dissipating into the air.)
Such a glass can be used for any
wine on all occasions.
First, took at the wine. Look at
a light source through the wine.
Then look down through the wine
at a white surface such as a blank
piece of paper or a tablecloth
that is well illuminated, tilting
the glass until the wine almost
runs out of i t (Looking through
the wine will reveal any cloudiness or suspended matter; tilting
the glass so that the wine is shallower permits you to evaluate
the color more accurately.)
What we are looking for is clarity and pleasing color. Color
variations, particularly among red
wines, are considerable. If you
take care to notice them, you will
find that different wines are more
or less pleasing to look at. For
example, I find a bright magenta
rather annoying, and am pleased
by, say, a velvety garnet with
hints of terra cotta at the edge.
Your preference may, with equal
justification, be just the contrary
—the point being that there is an
aesthetic factor to pay attention
to, however you may react to it.
Some people also note how the
wine slides down the inside of
the glass after swirling. I find
that factor (caused by variations
in surface tension among wines)
of very limited interest. A wine
with a high glycerol or sugar content will tend to form "legs"
rather than "sheets," but that is
only a rough guide to something
your palate can tell you with
relative precision.
House: Campus area. Comfortable 3
BR Dutch Colonial; quiet, dead-end st.
Ends, porch, Firepl. in LR, DR, 1 %
Baths, w-w carpet, hardwood firs.,
fenced yd., appli. $31,500. Call 4828714.
.
1971 Saab V4-model 96 f a c t o r y - —
air conditioning. Very good condition.
Best offer. Call Annie at 449-5864.
1969 450cc. Honda. Completely rebuilt
engine (with receipts). Excellent cond.
Call 434-0909.
Standard Car Jack—Best offer. "Car
battery (2 wks. old when car totaled)
$20. Call eves. 436-0403.
BR 78-13 Radial snows on rims. Fits
Toyotas, Datsun- Blackwall. Excellent
condition. Price negotiable. Call Jon at
7-5061.
LoFayette stereo and speakers. Used
for three months. Excellent tone. $50.
or best offer. Call 674-2603.
Minolta owners, here's the chance to
buy the zoom lens you've wanted. It's a
Vlvitar 90-230 mm, f 4.5 with U.V. and
case. $135. Call Mike at 1-966-4348.
New, suede coat with fur trim and
lambs wool inner lining. Ladies size 15.
$75. or best offer. Call Wendy at 4575239.
Beautiful sheepskin coat. New, never
worn and in perfect condition. Calf
length. Coll 463-0695.
Jansport buck-pack; canvas with adjustable frame. In good condition. $35.
Call Ellen 472-8737.
HOUSING
2 Dutch Quad roommates moving off
next semester need 2 off-campus male
students to take over their housing contracts. Call Richie at 7-7765.
§4 Central Ave. 411 11 > . NaT.
Large pleasant room in house adjacent
campus for gay male. Use of kitchen.
Call 438-1233.
Woman looking to share apt with other
upperclass-women. Vicinity of busline.
Needed immediately. Call 436-8760.
IT'S OUR DEAL!!!
*>%#
SALE
Radial snow tires 14 inch-mounted,
used four weeks. $60. Call Steve at
783-8789.
Just A Sen.]
^
FOR
SMs, Kcntle CPM Slalom, 210 cm. with
Marker Rotomat turntables. Vary good
condition. $100. Call Chuck at 4631958.
«
Th•a*
WANTED
Marvel comics 1961-1975, Buying in
bulk lots or individually to suit needs.
Also interested in other comics, comicrelated material, comic art, etc. Call
Charlie at 482-7887.
Used d o w n , sleeping bag and
rucksack. Call Lenore or Hillary at 4368760.
Drummer! If you play the drums and
would like to join progressive rock
band, please call or see Marcus, 8
Waterbury, 472-6775.
Home needed for female kitten. She is
litter-trained and very affectionate.
Call 463-0985.
Photographic equipment
needed:
enlarger, safelight, trays, tongs, and
easel. Call Gary at 457-8922.
HELP WANTED
Part-time—deliver pizza. Must be
dependable and have car. Call Scott
438-8350.
MY BODY NEEDS WORK—1971 Ford
Galaxie 500 needs rust spots repaired.
Call Eileen 7-4684.
Psychic development classes, also
private readings for advice or problem
solving, by appointment. Ms. Claudia
Le Marquand at 372-6378.
Classical guitar lessons. Call Mitch 4654130.
S69. Ski Week
Andirons lodge—
—Mt. Snow, Vermont. Meals, enter:
tainment, tennis, pool, sauna PLUS1
January 4-9or 11-16. Contact Jackie at
465-1314.
PERSONALS
Alone again this evening? Don't spend
another evening alone. Send now for
important free information to: INSTAMATE, Box 6175, Albany, N.Y. 12206.
Doors Freaks
tune in to WSUA's
"Whiskey Bar" Sunday Night at 11
p.m. when Jay Burstein interviews
Keyboardist Ray Manzarek.
Earn up to SI 800 a school year or more
posting educational literature on campus insparetime. Send name, address,
phone, school and references to:
Nationwide College Marketing Services, Ind., P.O. Box 1384, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48106. Call (313)662-1770.
Doors Keyboard wizard
Ray
Manzarek
Sunday at 11 p.m. on
WSUA, 640.
Uncle Sam Swim Club is interested in
hiring a coach forthe winterseason but
would prefer a year-round coach. Two
hours a practice session, three days a
wk. Salary is open. Call Earl Morris at
279-9235 or Betty Smith at 274-8527
for further info.
"Dad",
Wanna play doctor?
Love, Your baby-voiced "Mom".
LOST&FOUND
Lost: Sat. Oct. 18, gym lockers, Christ
head medal on chain, sterling silver. Inscribed on back: "Love Cathy 6-1-75".
Heavy sentimental value. Call 4578748 for Charlie.
Lost my jacket and found yours, Pool
Hall Mon nite 10-20. Would like to ex
change. Sentimental value. Call 4574716, Ro.
SERVICES
Person needed to share 2 bedroom
apt. near busline, $93 per month. All
utilities included, ample off street parking. Call 449-2978.
Photographer. Weddings, portraits,
albums, elc. All your photographic
needs. Coll Joe Ingoglio at 457-3002.
Manuscript typing service. Mrs. Gloria
Cecchetti, 24 Wilsliire Drive, Colonic.
869-5225.
At least one large room in female apt
wanted. Call Anna eves at 463-4532 or
462-0253.
Guitar lessons from music graduate.
Beginners and advanced students
accepted. Call Kyle at 456-5241.
You Can't
Dig Up A Better
Deal With A £ !
Montauk 204,
Spectacles!!!! (or a reasonable facsimile thereof)
Montauk 103,
Pertaining to the 16th
We
accept defeat, but wait until it
SNOWS/
The Owl.
Is Zenger Hall Sexist? Find out for
yourself. Come to a great Zenger Hall
Party, Sat., Oct. 25 at 9:30 p.m. on
Colonial Quad. Lots of beer and music.
Men $1.00 and Women for free.
Janet Elis has a baby (and boy can it
drink milk!)
The women of Morris 304 wish to extend our deepest gratitude to the
gentlemen of Potter Club and their
lovely pledges for making our evening
an exciting one. Special thanks for
Sarah's cut wrist, Liz's broken toe, the
broken glasses, the clean suite floor,
and all the showers. With all our love,
Sarah, Mary Ann, Nancy, Orsolya, and
Lizbeth.
To the girl with the short black hair and
beautiful eyes, who I saw at the
Boulevard last Saturday night
—
Please call 482-3702.
Tex Friend.
Dear Stretch,
Two Feot????
Wronnncjl
Duffy,
Locate theophilus with 345 and
retrieve them. If any thouble, 34S is
more important. Burn theophilus.
Jericho.
Tappan 103 and 104:
Tentative Song Party at midnite.
Who's got the Green?
M.W.
Dear David,
Get it on! Take a hint you fool! Get
moving, I'm holding my ever loving
breath! Pat.
To Captain Ahab and all of his crew,
I love you more and more each day.
Happy Birthday.
Love, Soup.
Fellini,
How about we share a tuna
sandwich and lettuce always be
together. U.K.
lefty.
Dear Little Hoot,
Skip around the room an d have a
Happy Birthday.
Love Freckles.
Sarah-Beth,
We all know you wish it were true!
Better luck with your roommate next
year!
Orsolya.
When THE "chips" are down leave it to the
"dealers" at Just A Song to "flush" high record
costs from your budget and "cut'' the price on
their "full house" of records.
Every domestic $5.98 and $6.98 LP will be on
sale for the rest of 1975 for the "low ball" price of
only
- ***
$3.99
You can "bet" your "ace" you'll be the "winner'
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
H\pa OF CLUBS
Just A Song also
carries tickets for most
concerts at the Palace
Theatre so check with
us by phone or come
see us.
We carry a full line of
import LPs and $1.99
and $2.99
nrfg.
overstock LPs
Charlie Smith Band
O c t 24, 25
O c t 31, Nov. 1
STUDENTS
4&VQ
DISCO
WELCOME
OCTOBER 24, 1975
The winning number lor o free record
at "Jut! A Song" ft a 30t tkket
M0001B from Cdoniol Quad.
Janie.
B'» cool Herbie, you can keep t h *
wotehl
HI Janie...Frrredl high Jani*,..Frrr*aV
Matt and Fred.
Dear lorry
the teitt are over.
Cheer upl I miss your smiling lac*.
IN.
Colonial Quad Party, Friday Oct. 24, 9
p.m.-lo.m. All Welcome.
Ron,
I want your MEAT!
'
IIS.
Elizabeth,
With chance, time and fate,
only five more years to wait,
life is love, love is you.
Elliot
Will Bessie make it to Long Island? Find
out Monday.
Dear Sue,
You still have me.
Love, Mich
Kenny,
We all love the Good Rati
but . . . (or was that Frampton?)
Come to 4+2 Bagel Shop, Sunday
through Thursday 10 p.m. to Midnight.
Where did Speedy Spencer go?
Agnes Fartini lives in the Van Ren 2nd
floor Shampo room!
Did "the boys" have a good night out
last night? Is Ian still the winner?
Donny
Are you still looking for the "little
princess"?
Kathy L.
After all, tomorrow is another day.
KC
Dear Pops,
Have a fun weekend and be good.
Love, Mich
Dear Nancy,
Have a fantastic and memorable
birthday.
From Suite 304 and 1.
Terry,
Have a good weekend too.
Dear Marcia,
Innocent huh? naive huh? Happy
Birthday
Don't forget cookies and
milk at noon.
Love:your roomie.
Apt. C 2,
We missed you last weekend. Looking forward to a repeat performance.
Arbor Hill Police.
Nancy,
Have a Happy Birthday and clean
up your room!
Board of Health and Fran.
From oneshnooktoanother... AHappy
Birthday!
The Lizard.
Nance,
Do you have a guilty conscience for
not driving your roomie?
Guess Who
"What's
Up
Josh?"
IMiTilllllllHlllllllllirillMMIIIIII
loft hop* our problems or* over.
Here's to the futurel
lave, T*ddy.
Dear Nancy,
Happy Birthday and I love you.
Your fiance, Sean.
Enter the State PhotoDetails at
297
SUNYA Camera Club
State Photo
Ontario St. lPhotography Contest -Stuyvesant Plaza
Albany
482-9797
2 Blocks
from
Alumni
Quad
BUT THE CARDS ARE STACKED FOR YOU!!!
PAGE 8A;
T-shirts.Original hand drawn pictures
on tie-dyed T- shirts ready made or
made to order. Call Fran 7-3382 or 73272. S i ,
WIN A BRAND NEW SLR
This
Is Better
Than Any
Record A Offer!
*cv$U>
5th SUNYA European Ski Tour Schritat,
There it a Walk-In Tooele* on Hudson
Aurtrio front Jan 4,1974-Jan 14,197*.. Avenue.
;
$449, all induilvo. Contact John
lev.
Morgan ot 457-4831.
Here ii voir very own persond
Typing
l t d . Pickup-delivery,
Happy "21". Moke H o winner.
reasonable. My Homo. Catl Pot at 765Dear Nancy,
36».
Sweet eighteen. Happy Birthday
French tutor; experienced. Qualified
and...*
all levels. Available afternoons and
love, Mary Ann.
evenings. Coll 377-7491 after 5 p.m.
Abbott de 106 Delancey,
Bassist seeks musida.it. into Yes, HenTu ores un marlconl Buenoi noches
drix, Electronic music, Stanley Clarke,
mi buena amiga!
and original work. Call Basic Fred at 7Con mucho amor, "The 106 Delancy
5167.
Frat".
Jeff, Green Bay is the bestl
Joel,
Hope your last night at Vinnies was
the best.
Psi Gamma
To the U.B.'s
How are the shirts? What is the.
answer to the questions—when is the
next U.B. Day?
A.CW.
Happy, happy, happy 20th day
birth Annie! Much love and happiness
for many more.
Love,
Lisa and Joyce
S B & La,
An inhibited nymphomaniac and a
kleptomaniac lesbian! Mother never
told us college would be like this!
Much love, Mary Ann 8. Nancy, Liz.
Interested in meeting nice young men.
Please contact Rodney at 7-4723.
Ehhhh! The Fonz says 703 is COOL1!
Believe itl And I don't give a MWA-HAHA who knows!!
Love from the Moose Laugh!
Dear Pre-etcetera,
Happy 18th Birthday.
From all us other etceteras and so on.
Dutchboy,
Come home by back door.
Cuddlebug and Bluebird are lost but
12-A still hast, '*asket. This Lone Wolf
is hungry so com«- quickly.
Love, T.
Unisex haircutting and styling. Special:
trim and shape scissor cut $3.50. Al's
Hair Shop, Ramada Inn, Western
Avenue. Phone 482-8573. Open til 8
p.m.
Eve (BR.)
Happy Birthday honey. I love you.
Adam (BE.)
IMIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIUIIIIIIUIIHIIIIIIPIIIIIIIIII
Jewish Students Coalition-Hillel
SA funded
GENERAL MEETING
and PROGRAM
Sunday, Oct. 26
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
8:00 pm
CC315
PAGE NINE
gold. If there was a government at all, it would
•bout how the new bar is responsive to
take a complete "laissez faire" attitude. The
students' needs and desires arid drinks are
Libertarians would remove the US from the
"much (ess expensive" than they ire in other
UN and NATO while eliminating all foreign
bars around the 'city. That's taken from
policy.
Elizabeth Freedman's account of the new bar
This "Ayn Rand" philosophy presented by
in last Friday's ASP. Dearest Elizabeth, (I
the Libertarians is a welcome change around
think I've said that before) You have got to be To the Editor:
kidding me! I will cite some examples.
There's a new political party around and it's my home. I believe they are on the right track.
Have you ever been to Frank's down on starting to penetrate the SUNYA campus. The US must turn away from socialistic ideas
Quail Street? They charge a buck for a drink. They are the "Libertarians" arid I think it's if it is to avoid communism in the future. The
best thing for the economy is for it to be
But the one minor difference between Frank's about time.
To the Editor:
and the Rat is that after 4 or 5 drinks at
The "Libertarians" don't hold fancy cam- naturally balanced out. Forcing people to pay
ln"FSA Power PlayCritidied"(/4Sft Oct.
Frank's I find it sometimes difficult to walk, paigns nor do they invent catchy slogans. They taxes is sort of a paternalistic notion giving a
17) Steve Dzinanka makes it appear as if I had and if I do say so, I can hold my liquor rather are a group of people who believe in"frcedom government the right to tell each individual
acknowledged a trade-off between student
well. Comes from a lot of practice you know. at all cost." They want America to be as it had what to do with their money. I think this is
representation on the University Senate and a
There are other bars that serve much better been after, the Revolutionary War. What totally absurd and is an insult to the instudent majority on the FSA. In fact, I had drinks at the same prices as those in our own Americans^ wanted most then was their telligence of most people on the Albany camstated that the threat of our removal from the
SUN Y pub. Washington Tavern averages 80- freedom after having freed themselves from pus. The argumentbroughtforth by the liberals
that "everyone benefits from taxes paid" is inSenate would not keep us from attempting 90t for a decent drink. Sutlers' mixes a potent the hands of the English.
majority representation on our studenthighball for a buck. Across the Street makes
They believe "tax is theft" and it should be sane. Why should a sixty year old woman livsupported food service.
an average drink (better than the Rat) for eliminated. They arc, therefore, against all ing alone have to pay for a youngster to go to
Students will never lose their interest in the around K5c. On top of this, all these Bars have forms of government subsidy, welfare, un- school unless she wants to? Or, to relate this
Senate as long as it has the potential to im- some sort of a happy hour during the week employment insurance, and food stamps. editorial to SUNYA, why should a student
prove our education at SUNYA. This year I with reduced prices resulting in reduced men- They would turn over all public utilities to have to pay a tax to support athletic teams if
believe the student members have taken on talities.
private ownership and would close down the he doesn't benefit at all?
t his role responsibly (i.e. Pinal Exam Policy). I
Furthermore, keep in mind that these bars government postal system. There wouldn't be
For me, libertarianism makes sense and is
hope a majority of faculty members will have
have been around lor awhile, so obviously any public police department or fire depart- very logical. Think about it and if you get a
the vision to return us to the Senate for next
they aren't going broke. What docs that have ment. There wouldn't be any type of govern- chance, read Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand.
year.
to do with the price of eggs? Well, you don't ment intervention in business affairs. In fact, You may sec the light.
have to be a computer brain to figure that one they would eliminate money and go back to
Rick Mcckler
Harmon Skumik
out. They arc making a profit (probably rather
SA Vice President
substantial). And. (here comes the climax) if
dear old FSA keeps the prices on drinks jack- '
cd way up without improved quality, they arc
going to be profiting also. Profits unjustly
made off of students who are their basic
reason for even existing.
To the Editor:
So c'mon FSA, Norbert Zahm, and all you
Upon reading Ms. Rosen's article (Oct. 17)
- by Keith Graham •
about freedom of speech in South Korea, or big guys, have a little heart, will ya? What is
In the past few years, I have only heard criticism of blacks on campus. Many blacks are
lack of it, I too am thankful for our rights as wrong with a shot and a hall or two in a drink?
You know the old saying about "the more, the indifferent towards whites, but whites shouldn't criticize blacks because they are partly to blame.
U.S. citizens; granted in such as the Hirst
merrier" don't you? Ease up on those Some whites have attitudes towards blacks that tend to make some blacks develop low opinions
Amendment.
bartenders loo. Let them throw a free drink
of whites.
I am also grateful that wc Americans alive
once in a while to some ol the regulars ortheir
Many whites up here feel that blacks have a bad general attitude towards whites. In student
now have never had to experiencetheextreme
mothers if they happen to be around. Let's
politics, whiles feel blacks cause problems by wantingto run their own programs This campus is
tragedies of war in our own country, that we
make it more like a bar. not just another FSA largely white and doesn't have much to offer blacks as far as st tident activities arc concerned. Can
have not been occupied and suppressed by
fiasco ( r e m e m b e r the Barbershop, you reasonably expect whites to look out for black interests in planning activities for students?
foreign powers, and that wc have not been
anybody?.'?).
SA doesn't look out for blacks and other minorities in planning their budget. They try to act like
forced to rely on other countrys' goodwill
simply to exist in even an uneasy peace.
I don't want to he thought ol as a complete they want to look out for everyone, but you can sec that they care little about helping certain
cynic. The bar is a definite impovement in the groups. They would like to get rid of EOPSA and control the activities of blacks and other
Unfortunately these arc or were conditions
present in Korea, which make for quite some atmosphere of the Rathskellar. However, minorities. Last year's episode shows us that SA was attempting to cut EOl'SA's budget
tension today. I am in no way justifying lurther improvements are needed. Hopefully, considerably. Taking into consideration the groups under EOPSA. you can question their
motives, in spite of their explanations.
they will be forthcoming.
various stringent measures taken by I'res.
Park's regime, but I do hopcthat we foreigners
I would like to end with some words of adSA puts down EOPSA for many things, one criticism is thai they don't look out lor all their
can consider the plight of the Korean people
vice directed towards l-SA taken from a song members. Well no group is perfect, especially that group with all the money, SA.
and their land itself. From personal ex- wrillen by one oft he most prolific, intellects of
Blacks arc accused of not wantingto gel involved in campus politics and activities. I question
perience t here I know t hat t hey bot h are lull of our time. Grace Slick. "Either go away or go whether or not blacks are really welcome to participate in campus polities. With all students
beauty and warm hospitality which could be all I he way
voting in elections, blacks have little chance of gaining a representative faction of the black
devastated in the event of war. The South
Vaughan Martin population on campus. The blacks on councils now have little chance of getting their ideas
Koreans arc highly instilled with a sense of
across.
national pride, and will strongly resist any
Certain campus activities aren't really open to blacks on a representative scale. Groups like
attempts to reunify their country under ComWSUA, certain clubs, and the /Li/'lack enough blacks to fulfill the interests of blacks. Some
munist rule. But I believe that they need supwhites, in these groups, say they want more blacks but saying you want blacks and actually
port; not necessarily militarily, but in
seeking t hem are two different things. To do things designed to satisfy black interests qualified
To the Editor:
economic aid so that the millions of poor peoblacks should be put in positions ol" power in campus groups. Obviously, blacks can't dominate
In languages other than English, like
ple can look to issues other than daily food
activities geared lor whites, hut they should he represented in these activities.
French, German, Russian, Latin, Greek, Perand shelter. And moral support from other
Socially, you can't expect all whites and blacks to get along. Differences in culture make il so
sian . . . there are at least two genders, and
countries who treasure their freedom and
certain blacks and whites can't get together, in this respect. A problem though, is many whiles,
when stating a word it must be in either one or
representative government could not help but
who can't get along with blacks, expect blacks to respect them, there are many blacks who hate
the other gender. So when talking of a specific
inspire them to continue their fight in preserwhiles, but at least they don't hide their feelings. These whites who hale blacks, try to act like they
profession as regards a woman, the word is
ving these ends.
really want to get along with blacks. It's called subtle prejudice. These whites think blacks arc
automatically (and grammatically ncccssarilstupid and dishonest and that blacks don't really belong here. If you think a person is inferior, il
The welfare of South Korea may not be ly) declined into the feminine gender, and vice
cm come out in your behavior, regardless of your intentions. Black and while social
close to your hearts, mi nds, or backyards now, versa.
relationships aren't really a major problem here, but they can lead to bad relationships in other
but world events may cause us to locus our
Since English does nol have this distinction,
things. II blacks and whites hale each other socially, then it can carry over to thecampus political
attention on her in the near future. Please let
a term like "man" must necessarily be a generic
situation.
us keep our hearts as warm as our heads have
term and general in nature -i.e., not denoting
traditionally been clear.
Blacks aren't treated right by faculty and staff, who are supposedly there lo help all students.
Ihc male sex. Therefore, "mailman" does not
Everybody has trouble dealing with faculty and staff, but when you have black skin, you have to
Donna Morehouse mean a male mail carrier, hut a human mail
lliink in terms of prejudice, because many whiles feel that blacks in EOP are worthless students
carrier and applies equally to a female mail
who belong in the street, All blacks suffer from the EOP image. Nol all blacks arc on EOP and
carrier. The possible connotations oftheword
not all are bigcity types. Whites tendto fear that bigcily blacks areeilhcr going to rob ihem or do
do not legitimate an alteration of the language
them physical harm. This attitude is ridiculous, but it's real and all blacks have to deal with il.
at a time when the educational priority should
Blacks aren't trealed fairly in sports, especially in basketball. Blacks tend to have more speed
be teaching English to the millions of illiterate
and leaping ability and are more gifted athletes than whiles. While coaches though will unfairly
English speakers, rather than altering already
To the Kdilor:
cut blacks and leave less talented -.niles on certain teams. The object is to win and you can't win
long-accepted convention.
Over the past two years here at SUNYA, I
(win big like Ihc NCAA's) wi'.ii your best players on the sidelines. Here SUNYA basketball is a
There arc a lot of advances to be made in the
am beginning u> realize that I have been living
good example. I )oc Sauers is supposed to be a good coach. The rap against black players is that
field of women's rights and social problems
under the mistaken impression that FSA exthey are loo wild and can'l blend into a team. Sauers is a good coach, according to the players,
and restraints, but I think that changing the
ists for the benefit of the student population.
and should be able :o blend these players into his team. Other coaches do it and they have no
English language is counter-productive,
Once again FSA is pulling some shit on Ihc
trouble wilh bheks. Many colleges win in the NCAA's (something Sauers wants to do) with
irresponsible, and a misehanneling ol energy
students. I refer to the outrageous prices on
blacks, evin southern colleges lhal were known for racist actions againsl blacks. Many blacks
which could be used elsewhere.
mixed drinks sold ul the new rathskellar bar.
come ..ere expecting lo make the team and come away disappointed, knowing they were good
Marc l.eve
Let me ask you students this -Is 75c-$l,Ou
enough lo muke il. This leaves them wilh a hitler attitude towards whites. Blacks respect good
(depending on your choice of poison) for a
white basketball players, but most of the whites on the team are just average players.
The Albany Student Press reserves the
poorly made, one-shot (if that) mixed drink,
Basically, what I have been trying lo say is that black and while attitudes could be belter on
sole right to print nr edit letters to the
served in a thimble-sized plastic cup an examthis campus. Whites, because there are more of them and they have more power, should makean
editor. Submit letters
nPKWKITIKN
ple of catering to the students, who comprise
effort to help blacks live comfortably up here. Whiles shouldn'l expect blacks lo respcel litem
to Albany Student Press, CC329, Htm
around 95% of the rathskellars' business? Cerunless ihey deserve il. This applies to blacks loo, hut whiles have to do more. Blacks will have
Washington Avenue. The ASP will not
tainly nol. I.specially if you are u confirmed
better attitudes towards whites, when Ihey are treated belter. If you hale blacks, don't HCI phony
publish unsigned letters. Names will he
ami serious drinker like myself and my
because it shows. Above all, you can't really critici/eutiiludesyoiijusl see on Ihe surface without
withheld on request. Keep those cards
cohorts, or lor that matter, just a "social"
understanding why they exist. What I have said may confuse both blucksnud whiles and anger
and letters coming in, hut remember1
drinker.
some of both groups. The main point is we all have to live together, so we all mighl as well try to
'Brevity is the soul of wit.'
Now, I have been hearing all kinds of crap
get along.
letters
Partying
Quote of the Day:
"For a jpng time in the Senate, I always regretted that so many senators always thought it
wasn t sufficient to be a senator and wanted to be president."
QI /comment
Retired Senator J., William Fulbright
Appearances
As students have realized that their college education will not guarantee them a job,
concern about the choice of major and courses has increased. Academic advisement
should be as helpful as possible, and some thought should be given to improving it o n
this campus.
Colleges traditionally place advisement in the hands of the student's major
department, and though the sheer size of modern universities complicates this, for
most students this is the best method. However, while some professors are very good
advisors, some are not. The principle
Plain English
Rat Bar Rip-off
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
OCTOBER 24, 1975
of faculty advisement is quite solid, but it's
application could be better.
A short course in advisement may be useful t o some professors, or at least some
formal discussion wilh trained counselors, so that they may be better prepared to deal
wit h t he st udcnls they have under advisement. Since it may be diffiuclt to send or even
suggest that u faculty member work on his advising ability, maybe department
chairmen could simply bring a professional into a staff meeting.
II it I % Or Campus
Korean Experience
PAGE TEN
Advisement Advice
Training of this s o n for teaching faculty are not unknown here or elsewhere, and
obviously time and practice can improve advisory ability. There arc professors who
devote a large amount of their time advising both their own advisees and other
students. Students can spend many hours a semester discussing nol only career and
academic goals but the direction of other parts of their life with them. Some students,
in real terms, do receive their advisement from a professor other than the one to whom
they arc assigned. It's n naturally flexible process
friends, family, faculty and others
often play a role.
Counselors in ihc University College are advising freshmen and sophomores. Some
DC advisors arc pursuing their profession, others arc trained graduate students.
Undergrads often complain that their advisor is no help, just as they do about their
faculty advisors. While it system t o match advisors with students in the best possible
way would be unwieldy, some adj ustments can be made so si udents can switch advisors
with relative ease.
Solicitations Policy
Faculty
should
bring
enthusiasm
and devote
systems chairmen and administrators can devise.
and the
time
to their
advisement
responsibilities, and this should be encouraged and helped with any training, money or
Student feelings about advisors
should be sought a n d be Ihc primary force behind assignments, hiring, a n d firing.
Many students belittle the advisement process because it is useless to them. It shouldn't
be.
Campus Marketplace
Once again the Student Association is extending itselt into an area where us presence
does Ihe student bod) more harm than good.
Our student government is engaged in one ol
government's Invorile and most dangerous
imstiines regulation ol the press.
I his is being done through use ol the I'J?'
solicitations policy. I he purpose ol Mils pohc>
is lo protect Ihe siudcni body Ironi undesirable selling techniques and merchandise
ul an inleiior nature. Bin ihis policy does mil
dillcrentiiitc between selling newspapers and
selling anything else. I his is an inherent deleci
I hill renders Ihe policy unworkable wilh
respect lo ihe press. Il is impossible loeall inn
newspaper interior. Protection ol ilns son we
can noi stand lor.
SA Services Director Richard l.ipsoii calls
ihe policy lair under ihe rationale that with a
multitude ol outsiders".-it could become too
commercial." I Ins thinking may apply lo
jewelry and clothing, bin ii makes no sense in
Ihe area ul disseminating inlormation and
ideas, I he more people there lire mi ilns campus aclively expressing iheu views, ihc more
likely il is thai eventually nieaningliil debate
will become more a miiller ol course around
here,
Groups, are issued permits 011 Ihe basis 111
whether or not their presence will benefit ihe
university community, I hank you very much,
bui I lliink I, jlisl like everyone else, is capable
of deciding lor him hersell which sources of
iiilnrmiilion will benelii me. Mr, Mcckler can
find more coiislruclive uses lor his time. I
hope.
We me dealing wilh II very singular markel
;: by Gordon Kurp
ZWW^^^'X-VWWKW
here, the markel place ol ideas.. It. more than
an) ollici markel tan stand no government
regulation. II wcniegoingiohceoineihinking
people, we me going lo have im> ulu.ilc ..III lie
inlorimilioi! wc can. and decide which ol il is
worthy ol influencing inn opinions.
Willi regard lo selling techniques, harassment is illegal. Individuals ginliy ol n can be
prosecuted, uudci Ihe law and university
regulations, wiih.nu a Siudcni Association
solicitation!, policy.
One has lo u mulct il iiiiolhei group was
employing siniilai techniques whether
students would Iccl lhal ihey were being
harassed. II someone siood in Ironi "I their
lahlc in the Campus ( enlei lobby, wuh a
leallcl in one hand and a cup in Ihe oilier, and
asked you as you passed. "Would you like lo
contribute iiilhe I lined Way?", would you go
iiiiining and screaming harassment'.' Harassnicnl. really is independent ol the political
philosophy ol ihe salesman involved. Student
Association is. as is typical 1011 hem, oveneiieling.
you eiin'l leiyouipohiical hillsloroi against
ilns group cloud ihe issue. Belore we determine how ilns solicitations policy should he
interpreted wilh respect to ihe press, wemusl
lusi have a policy lhal nines ihe inherent
dillerencc between peddling clothing and exercising Ireedom ol Ihe press, So lei us hope
our leaders return lo the SA sandbox lor a
while and return wjlll II policy that gives ihe
press the consideration they deserve. When
I hill policy is promulgated, then we can rightly
discuss how poorly il is being interpreted.
)
'—
£BBk
JsW^ •
•
•
ALBANY
I STUDENT
PRESS
I.IHTORIAI. IMAM)
hlMIOH IN c H i l l
MANAI.INI; IDIIIIH
N l W S M1IIOK
AssocI.VII: NIWS unions
1'KIIIH ( I MIX SIANAOIK
Assoc IAII. I'Miini ( IION MANAGERS
LllllOHIAI I'ACII IIIIIOH
Ams ininiHs
Asm is unions
SPORTS mucin
ASSOC IAII SMUTS
on
A n W I t l l s l X I , MANACIHS
( l ISSUIin-CRAIrlll MAXACitR
III SIMSS MAXAI.IH
D A N U U . CiAIMS
SUSAN COI,HMAN
SlIII'llliN D/.INAXKA
Bum SHUN. DAVID WIN/.IU.IIKRG, RAMJI foi.iai
PATRICK Mt'Cil.VNN
I.inisr. MAUKS. CAROL MC'PIIISRSOX, EU.ES FINK
A N l)«i: A H l B / I U H(.
HII.UKY KiltiilCK, Si'tso: KAOOIO
NAM v ALIIAHUII. MII IIAISI. SENA, NAOMI I:KII!|)I.ANI)I!H
NATHAN SAI.ANT
MICHAEL I'IIKAHSKI
IlKHV ALIlRlfCIIT, l.l.S Z l C'KLUSIAN
K l N N I i l l l Colli!
IJANN* O'CONNOR
siAii Mi:suti:i<s
A.i>. Managers: Matthew Kiiulmttn. Kim Sutton
Preview: Joyce Teiyenliaiim
Circulation Manager: Nancy I'illci
lulling Accountant: Susan Donirus
Technical Editor: Snrnli Hliimcnsuiek
I lead Typist: Leslie fusenslein
Composition Manager! Ellen rjoisen
Production: Jllilcl Adler, Patty Ahcrn, Carol Burger. Donini Burton, Joun Ellsworth, Debbie
liliek. Kelly Kila, Vieki KiinVnuin, Judi lleiiner, Kuihy Lam. Miehele Upton, Philip Molter,
Debbie Kcigcr, Jeanne Suicwil/, Karen Sclilnsberg, Joun Silvwblalt, Tanya Levy
Advertising Production: Lisa lliuiido, Dick McKobcri, Jell Aronowiu, Heidi Bush
Assist mil kill/or: Marc Weigcr
Administrative Assistant: Jeiclyn Kuyc
Pliotugraphy: supplied principally by University Phoio Service and members of Camel a Club
the Allium Sunlt'iil Press hpublished every Tuesday and Triday duringlite sellout year except
holidays. Main ii/JIce: CC J.'v; telephone,' •H7-HSV). Funded by Student Association. Address
mail to: Albany Student Prtss, CC J1V. 14011 Washington Avenue. Albany, New York /.'.'.'.'.
"•
ARE YOU PAYING MORE
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itlatchei
Helena Kamisher (number two tingles) demonstrates forehand return In recent match. Kamisher
was unable to participate In State Championships.
who later won the consolation
doubles. Covin and Bock were placed into the consolation matches to
beat Corland's "H" team, hut lost to
Potsdam's "A" team in the second
round.
finding the season with seven wins
and two losses, Coach Mann is optimistic as to next year's team.
"Although we'll be losing three
seniors to graduation, the lour
freshmen on the team will form a
good nucleus for next year's learn."
said Mann.
I he three graduates will be:
Covin, a lour year veteran, usually
playing 3rd singles, Sandy Horn,
who moved up from J.V. this year,
and varsity member Present.
"We'll have a good season next
year il they continue to play as well
as they have, said Coach Mann in
reference to the younger players.
The remaining players consist of
freshmen Paula Suusvillc. Colleen
Joyce, Jane Maloy, and Helens
Kamisher. Next year's captain,
Lcnchan. a junior, is one of the
better doubles players, along with
Hock and Barbara Zimmerman.
I
I
I
hal.
Tennis Coach Peggy Mann, center, giving advice.
BERN'S CAMERA STORE|
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i what s
up
Josh?
songs,music,dance and her favorite stars
at the Palace Theatre
Monday Nov. 17 8:00 p.m.
A 8 G BICYCLE SHOP
346 CentAal Ave.
Tickets
1 0 1 OFF on Bicytlet,,
* Paxti 8 Labon
Unidentified Albany tracksters setting their own pace.
WSUA 640 AM
Israel sends you her best....
1975 I9M€LI CHrlSSIWC
SONG f GSTNfIL
jWORK SHIRTS, WORKSHOES, LEVIS, SPORTSWEAR, 8 CASUALS
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STORE
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Cortland Colleges. Maloy was
stopped in her tracks by Mary Seldin
of Syracuse University, who later
went on to win the consolation tournament.
Donna Present, Albany's No.2
singles entry, replacing Hclcne
Kamisher, who was unable to attend, lost in the first round to Cortland's No.2 player. After putting on
a good show beating Cobelskill,
Welles, and William Smith Colleges
in the consolation rounds, Present
lost in her 4th round to Ithaca's No. I
player.
Along with the two singles entries,
Albany sent the two doubles teams
of Colleen Joyce and Terry Lenchan
and Captain Louise Covin and
Mary Hock.
Albany's "A" orfirstdoubles team
of Joyce and lenchan beat Niagra
University, but then lost to Cortland's "A" team in the second round. In the consolation tournament,
the doubles team ousted Herbert
Lehman, the Brooklyn "B" team,
and the Brooklyn "A" tea m, losingin
the fourth round to Potsdam's "A"
team.
The doubles team of Covin and
Bock look much the same route.
Alter losing to the Ithaca "B" team,
I
.1
I
COSTUME JEWFLPf
KUPE9PF.RGS LADIES
WEAR
113 Centnal Ave.
by Christine M l a i
While the majority of us were
fighting monsoon rains this pest
weekend, Albany State's Women's
Tennis team managed to keep their
heads above water at the New York
State Championships held in Cortland.
' Beginning herein Albany in 1972,
'sponsored by Albany's women's tennis coach Peggy Mann, the States
were initiated to provide the various
state and private schools in New
York State a form of competition on
a smaller scale than that of the
Eastern Collegiate Championships.
According to Coach Mann, the
singles and doubles enterics did
"very well."
"Wc did very well, we came out
7th of 28 schools, where last year wc
were 8th, so it looks like we're moving up!"
Albany's No. I singles player, Jane
Maloy, won her first match against
the Universityof Rochester 6-2, 6-0,
but lost her momentum in the 2nd
found, losingtothcSt. Lawrence entry.
Automatically entered into the
consolation tournament, Maloy
made it to Ihe-third round, beating
'ivcrs from Herbert Lehman ?~*
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Nonthtmy Hall
Student Association
Women Netters Seventh
$3.50 J S C members
$4.50 w / tax card
$5.00 w / o tax card
For info, and tickets call:
Steve Shaw 489-7466
Eric Gurvis 7-5354
OCTOBER 24, 1975
ASKS YOU SOME VERY IMPORTANT
QUESTIONS:
1) What radio station broadcasts all Great Dane Football and
Basket ball games, home and away?
Albany State will not host another
tournament like in 1972 because the
court surfaces need to be rcfinished,
according to Mann. "As they exist
now, the lines arc unsafe," she said.
Harriers
Second
continuedfrom pa%e .sixteen
Ryan. Jackson and Kit/row.
"Ryan has been coming along a
little bit each meet and can be better,
Kit/row and Jackson have faced the
fact that t hey can do better, and did,"
said Munsey.
Munsey believes his team will be
really psyched for the ninth annual
Albany Invitational scheduled for
Saturday. A women's race of three
miles will begin at 11:15, the J.V.
race will start at 11:45, and the Varsity will start at 12:30. The women's
race is the first of its type in Albany
Invitational history.
Defending champion C.W. Post,
three-time winners of the meet, will
be led by Mike Butynes, who finished second last year. They will bt
pressed by strong learns from
Springfield, Kecnc St., and
Millersville (Pa.). Colgate ana
Albany, who have never finisher
higher than third, hope to act a.
spoilers, according lo Munsey.
Outstanding performers frun • •
year's meet include Hutynr n ..._•
Mason, and Dill Parker ol CHI;....?
(fourth and scvcnih), and /L'..'>> ..
Carlo Cherubino and Chris Bures
(eighth and ninth). Last year's ord. i
ol finish was: C.W. Post, with 4 7
points: Pittsburgh State (who is
not returning), 80, Albany, K7;
Colgate, 90; and Keene Slate, 110.
NEW VISTA
TRAVEL
2) What radio station keeps you informed with several news broadcasts of and about SUNYA every single day?
3) What radio station features such special programs as "The Saturday Night of Gold", "Earwitness News", "Group of the Week",
"Album of the Week", and "Sports Rap", plus many others?
(4) What radio station invites all Albany State Students to "buzz alonn
with us?"
Jan. 15-19 roundtrip air,
Holiday Inn, breakfasts,
Game tickets, golf, transfers, all tips and taxes.
l i h e Answers: I) WSUA, 2)WSUA,3)WSUA, 4)WSUA.
And only WSUA.
'We program exclusively for you, the Albany State Student.
SAN JUAN, P.R
$22*
airfare, hotel, tips, taxes
and transfers. 8 day/7 nights
So tune in at 640 A M today and get in on one of the belter tilings
this campus hal to offer.
WSUA
Post Office Hdg.
35 Fuller Road 4M-2SM
We keep you listening in spite of the buzz.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGETHIRTEEN
mwmwww^m
^1***!*W
MBA Flag Football
JV Gridders Off To Tough Start
Present Standings
kyMksSaeJtli
'
: Albany State students—your
school does have a J.V. Football
team. The reason you haven't heard
much froth these underclassmen
pigskinnerssofarisforthe first three
weeks of their season Coach Mike
Garcia's Danes (boldly) picked on
three NCAA powers who, after all
the touchdowns were totaled, left his
club 0-3, homesick and scrambling
for the words to "Do You Know the
Way to South BendT
Although Notre Dame somehow
managed to escape the Danes on
Albany's suicide schedule, for
openers the J.V.s visited Green
Mountain' country, home of the
Dartmouth Indians, king of the
Ivies. New Hampshire is beautiful
this time of year, but the Danes enjoyed only the foliage, j
"We played damned good considering we were over our heads,"
said Garcia speaking on the short'
end of a 21-0 score. "The game was
much closer than the score indicated.
Three long touchdown runs did us
ia"
O.K., coach. The team needs a
breather after playing a tough Division I school. But the mad scheduler
says you take your traveling show to
Ithaca in week two.
"They beat us 14-8," Garcia said.
"It was simply a matter of breaks.
The ones they got and the ones we
didn't get. Our defense played super.
It was a real physical contest."
Breaks or no breaks, a six-point
loss to the number one Division III
football team in the nation is no disgrace.
Week three Garcia brought his
team to West Point, home of the
Army. The same Division I Army
squad which plays Stanford, Penn
State and Nebraska.
"We were outclassed, 41-8," the
coach said. "Not much good
happened bit the scoreboard, yet we
got a lot of valuable experience
. against the Cadets we couldn't have
gotten anyplace else. It was a brutal
lesson" —
- G a r c i a ' s observation about
•' lessons and experience points to a
success story of a peculiar nature.
True, an 0-3 won-lost record is not
very pretty and there will be no Top
Ten listings, Chevrolet Scholarships
orRoseBowlsforthisteam. ButJ.V.
Football coaches are not paid to run
up scores against the Swathmores of
the football world.
"Our J.V.s are developing a
toughness through game experience
against class opponents you can't
teach with chalkboard X's and O's,"
explained the coach.
"Sure, it's nice to win games, but
it's good for us not to get used to
blowing out weak teams and padding, point spreads. This way our
kids don't become complacent,
they're always trying to improve,
and most importantly, when they
join the varsity they're hungry for
victory."
The coach's formula worked last
week, when Albany won its first
game of the season, 7-6, over a
Middlebury team which beat the
Pups last year, 66-3.
"We're just starting to come
together," said Garcia. "It's very
hard for the kids because we never
practice as a team. We simply make
out a list of who's playing J.V. on
Thursday, count heads on the bus
Friday, and play football with
whoever we have. We live with the
fact we make all our mistakes in
game situations, not in practice."
there ire a number of outstanding players on the squad.
"Start with Jose Vidot," Garcia
sajd about his star .defensive tackle.
"He's quick, vicious, and has good
wheels. Unlimited potential."
1
"Quarterback Fred Brewington is
getting better each week," according
to Garcia. "He runs a very sharp veer
and is a better passer than you'd
think. Tony Matyszch, our halfback,
is a breakaway threat who scored the
winning touchdown on a 60 yard run
at Middlebury. Mike Mirabelli, fullback, is a good, strong runner
who also blocks viciously."
"John Pollack and Dave Mathias
are both quick ends," said Garcia.
"They've made freshmen mistakes,
but are learning like everybody else.
Tom Copelli is a super-strong
linebacker who was quick to learn
his position.
"Our kids have handled the
pressure well," Garcia said. "It's
hard for everybody in the beginning,
with a new system and new surroundings to worry about. We've been
pleased with our Captain Dave Sullivan, potentially the best player on
our team. Also Bill Ziemann and
Chris Smith, who both have what we
like to call a nose for the football.
Smith has good football sense and
good field speed. And then there's
perhaps our best athlete, 6'2", 215
pound safety, Gus Fadwoul. Gus
runs the 40 in 4.7. When he gets
started he's like a locomotive."
Union Next
Friday at 3:00 p.m. Union comes
to University Field to match muscles
with Albany, as the Pups seek win
number two.
by Gary Greenwald
(as of Oct. 21, 1975)
League I
Colonists
Derelicts
Butts
Tower of Power
Potter Club
STB
W
7
3
3
3
3
0
• Reduced Class Size
• Income Graduated
Reasonable Tuition
• In Depth Discussion
of TM Principles
Free Public Lectures
_ Hyatt House
8 pm Tues. Oct. 28
W
5
4
3
2
1
Robin St.
at Central Ave.
Albany
PRESENTS
Friday and Saturday nights
OPUS
Fine Country Rock
Great drinks at affordable prices
And best of allyou can see our front door
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A mandatory meeting for anyone
interested in officiating Association
of Mens Intramural Athletics
basketball is scheduled for October
28 in Campus Center 315 at 7:00. If
you will not be able to attend, you
must contact Gary at 457-7783 or
Lloyd at 457-7715. .
Rosters are available for Floor
Hockey and Volleyball in CC 356.
The Captains' meeting for AMI A
Floor Hockey is scheduled for October 27 at 3:30 in LC 3. The
Volleyball captains' meeting is
planned for October 28 at 3:45 in LC
19. For any additional information
see Dennis Elkin in CC 356.
In return, the Sonics will getalarge
amount of cash - reportedly $1.5
million-and Eugene Short, a 6-foot7-inch rookie forward from Jackson
State who was the Knicks' No. I
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This coming ski season's trips
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by Patrida Gold
and the Fumblers. and a segment of
In this week's Hag football action, this game will be televised on
Vinnies downed Bleeckcr-Van Cor- WAST-TV Channel 13 News.
tland! IJ-Oto register theirfirstwin
Rotter* Due
of the year. Halfback Mary Regan
Basketball (both leagues) and
scored two touchdowns for Vinnies.
volleyball rosters and Sit) bond
The Jockettes defeated the money are due no later than the captumblers I9-0 as Nancy Caff rath tains' meetings, which arc Oct. 29
and N o r i n c Karsi scored and Oct. 28. respectively. Last year
seventeen learns participated in
touchdowns.
WIRA basketball and six in
The lust game ol the season will he
net ween Bleeckcr-Van C'orllanijt volleyball. I'ick up rosters in CC 356.
Photos
j;|:
IN STOCK FOR Med c, WOM€N
Jockettes, Vinnies Triumph
Passport
of FRYE BOOTS in the country! Our Driftwood Boot, it is •:•:
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of
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.State.
choiceinthisyear's National Basketball Association draft,
Haywood, 26, is a 6-foot-B-inch,
224-pounder who has made the AllStar team in four of his five years
with Seattle.
The move culminates New York's
•:• long search for help on its front line,.
:i search which actually began with
the retirements of Willis Reed and
Dave DeBusscherc before the start
of last season.
gs^UouNG SHOES***8"!
3
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City
hole
Great D i n t * (Mack jerseys) are rushing Into Saturday's game In quasi of fifth win.
K n i c k s Get Spencer H a y w o o d
SEATTLE
(AP ) Spencer
Haywood, for five years the essence
of the Seattle Supersonics franchise,
was traded to the New York Knicks,
Thursday.
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backs Sam Pizzimenti and Don
Brown for the workhorse duties.
"Both Pizzimenti and Brown have
very good size and speed," Ford said,
"which gives them an excellent inside
and outside running game."
Quarterback Nick Bonvino is
credited with having a good passing
arm.
Defensively the Cadets are noted
as an aggressive hard-nosed team.
The line is anchored by Vince Arduini, a 67, 210 pound tackle and
Bob Moylen, S'9, 190 pounds. The
linebackers, John Eburn, Bob Sylva,
Mark Bcrthold, and Kevin Earl, are
very suitable for the 4-4 defense.
They plug well against the run.
Norwich was surprised by
1'lutlsburgh 7-6, dropped their
opener at home to AIC 31-24, and
were defeated 20-3 by Coasl Guard
before picking up their 13-9 win over
Tufts. The Cadets will be coming
into Albany following a 6-0 defeat at
the hands of Boston State.
fiqued waflnur, and Burn! chestnut.
The Famous SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR
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by SUNYA Sports Information
Dept.
The Albany varsity football team
will host the Cadets of Norwich University Saturday.
The Cadets, under first yearcoach
Barry Mynter, are 1-4 coming into
the Albany contest.
"The record is sub-par for the
Norwich team," Albany varsity football coach Bob Ford said. "They
have been riddled with injuries since
the start of the season." (Starting
quarterback Walt Houghtaling has
been out since the season opener
with a broken ankle, and fullback
Joe Lusardi underwent surgery
recently for a knee injury.)
"When Norwich is healthy," Ford
continued, "they can be a very competitive team. Their gamctwo weeks
ago against Tufts proves their
capabilities." The Cadets outslugged
the Jumbos 13-9.
Norwich runs from a wishbone
formation and relies on running
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Tonight.,,,
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PAGE FIFTEEN
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
The PalaOe Box-Office
"
Slat* Uni¥«|fty of New York si Albany
October 24, 1975
I
Booters Wing Cardinals
SASU Favors Support For
NYC At Weekend Meeting
Come-From-Behind 3-1 VUsbory
Albany Tied For Fifth in State Rankings
by Nathan Salart
wall and floated into the upper right
Second hall goals by Chepe
corner, j ust out of reach of Cardinals
Kuano, Frank Sclca, and t'aul goalie Matt Ellman.
Schiesel led the Albany State Great
Schiesel added an insurance goal
Danes varsity soccer team to a come ill 17:23 on John Rolando's sixth
from-behind, .1-1, win versus assist of the season.
Pittsburgh. Wednesday.
"It was the finest team perforRuano tied the game at l-l six
mance, of the year," said Albany's
minutes into the second hull, alter
varsity soccer coach HillSchieffclin.
Schiesel won a drop-kick (similar to "We were without Pasquale Petrica faceolf in hockey and used when c i o n e ( r e c o v e r i n g from a
play is st opped lor the safety of an i n- hemorrhoids operation) and Arthur
jurcd player), and passed to Sclca
Bedford (midterms), and we played
who led-fed Kuano in front.
an exceptional game."
Replacing Bedford was freshman
Tom Harrigan gave Pittsburgh's
Mark Wen/il, promoted from the
Cardinals a 1-0 lead at 4:45 of the
junior varsity earlier this week.
period on a Id-yard shot.
At 12:33, Sclca lofted a free kick
"Wen/il did a line job in his first
from twenty yards out which sailed
varsity start," said Shicllelin. "Our
over the host Cardinals' defensive other fullbacks. Ricardo Rose and
Pcpe Aguilar also played very well;
I n fact, it was Rose's best game of the
season by far."
"We took advantage of our
speed," Schieffelin continued. "Our
fullbacks kicked the ball long, enabling our forwards to outrun their
defense and forcing many one-on-'
one breaks."
Schieffelin also said the midfield
play was the best of the season.
"Carlos Rovito, Carlos Arango,
Simon Curanovic, and Rolando
played strong games together for the
first time," explained Schieffelin. "I
was able to rotate them in and out
because the four of them only had to
fill three positions on the Held."
"We showed a lot of poise,"
Schieffelin said. "It's our second
come-from-behind win in our last
four games, and that has to tell you
something about the character of
this team."
"Our opponents seem to believe
(hey can key on Sclca (the Booters'
number one scorer with 14 goals),
but we've got seven or eight other
guys who also put the ball in the net.
Ruano, Pctriccione, and Edgar Martinez each have live goals, and with
people worrying about Sclca, they
and others will be scoring with even
by Cynthia Haclnli
,*ttt£K *
goodman
Center Forward Frank Selca raises h i * a r m * I n the air In celebration
alter (coring a go-ahead goal in the second hall ol Wednesday's
soccer game.
greater frequency."
Albany is now 7-1-1 and tied lor
fifth in the state rankings with
Binghamton. Hartwicktops the poll,
followed by Cornell, Adelphi, Army.
Albany-Binghamton, Colgate, Cortland, Oneonta, and St. Francis.
More importantly, the win keepsthe
Booters very much in the runningfor
the State University of New York
Athletic Conference championship
and an NCAA Tournament bid.
Albany is in second place in the conference, behind undefeated Cortland
and Oneonta.
The Booters' next game is Saturday, at Cienesco, in another key conference game.
Harriers 2nd In SUNYAC's
by Jon Lafayette
goodrr
Booters (In Mack) control tht play In llrtt hall action Wednesday. The
Albany Great Dane* cam* Irom bthlnd to win 3-1.
Albany Stat* Varaity Football
ALBANY
GREAT
DANES
vs.
NORWICH
CADETS
Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
Although nine teams competed in
the 1975 State- University of New
York Athletic Conference Crosscountry championship, the meet
proved to be of a dual nature, as
Plattsburgh State came away with a
convincing 32-54 win over second
place Albany State.
Albany coach Bob Munsey said
"the best team definitely won as
Plattsburgh, who would have taken
a dual meet 21-34, put on an impressive show on their home course
and in the rain."
Plattsburgh senior, Bruce Teague,
led the field of 74 runners for the second consecutive year, notching a
record time of 24:17.7, which broke
the record he set last year.
Willie Bauza of Gencseo was second, eight seconds behind Teague,
as he improved on his ninth place
finish of a year ago,
Albany's Carlo Cherubino was
third as he regained a spot onthe All
Conference team (he was a member
in 1973 thanks to his fourth place
finish). He finished eighth last year.
Plattsburgh's Brian Dodge, John
Evans, and Norman Goldwire
finished fourth, sixth, and eighth as
they surrounded Binghamton's
Robert Daniels and Oswego's Bill
Orlando. Brian Davis and Chris
Burns of Albany sandwiched tenth
place finisher Mark Spinkle of
Brockport.
Oneonta's Jack Callaci was
twelfth and was followed by Brian
Kelly, the filth Plattsburgh Cardinal
to cross the finish line. Tom Ryan
finished 14th for Albanylollowed by
Mike Painting of Gencseo and Rich
Saxon of Brockport. Fred Kitzrow
closed out the Albany scoring, coming in seventeenth, overall. Other
finishers for Albany were: Eric
Jackson, 19th; Keith Benman and
Don Shrader at 26 and 27; and Kevin
Burnett, 33.
The final score of the meet was
Plattsburgh 32, Albany 54, Frcdonia
127, Brockport 132, Binghamton
and Geneseo 139, Oswego 155,
Oneonta 175, and Cortand 220.
Munsey said the performances of
Cherubino and Davis were excellent,
and was pleased with the running of
continued on page thirteen
mm^mM&MMM
Unlvtratty Fiatd
goodman
Albany is ranked sixth in the Lambert Trophy Standings
Albany'* harrier* streak Into action I n recent meat. Runner* llnlshed cecond out o l nine »«*m»
competing I n 8 U N V A C * .
In a bid to prevent New York
City's default, SASU (Student
Association of the State University)
called for SUNY student lobbying
action directed toward Washington
legislators. This resolution came at a
membership meeting held at
SUNYA this weekend.
SASU President Bob Kirkpatrick
predicted a gloomy future for
SUNY. Hereferredto State Director
of the Division of the Budget Peter
C. Goldmark's recent statement, "If
New York City defaults New York
State will follow within 30 days."
"It is likely that the demand for
state resources will be so great as to
further reduce the bare funds
allocated for the University," said
Kirkpatrick. "Ihis would mean
drastic program cuts, large scale
retrenchment of faculty and staff,
dramatic increases in all college fees
and very possibly the shutting down
of one or more state campuses."
Nine Courses Of Action
Kirkpatrick recommended nine
courses of action, some of which
would be performed with other
groups (i.e. National Student
Assembly, National Student Lobby,
t h e U n i o n of
University
Professionals). They were accepted
by the membership.
The courses of action included the
utilization of SUNY trustees to demand federal intervention, the
education of students and faculty
through the use of SUNY campus
media, a letter-writing campaign to
state and national legislators and a
one day moratorium on classes to inform the university community on
the issues involved.
Student Lobbying
Andy Hugos, SUC Purchase
delegate, suggested that students
lobby in Washington us part of the
campaign. "We've got to let these
people know we're hurting."
The tentative date set for the lobby
is Tuesday, November 18. While
there has been some question as to
whether such a plan can be organized by state campuses in such a short
time, Kirkpatrick spoke with optimism. "We're capable of makingit
come off, but everybody has to do
their part."
Hugos estimated that 300 people
would be needed to fill up the steps
of the Senate. He suggested that, for
optimum effectiveness, students (in
groups of IS) "should make it their
business to personally accost every
Groups Knock SA Double
Stub Ticket Arrangement
S A S U called for student lobbying t o help drum u p rapport tor N e w York C l t y l n l t s financial crisis.
New York State congrcssperson
while in Washington."
He feels that legislators in D.C.
will be impressed because, "It's been
so long since students have been in
Washington."
SASU, which is composed of
delegates from 25 state-operated
campuses, has been in existence for
five years. Its primary objective is to
provide a forum for campuses to air
and deal with problems which affect
individual campuses or the SUNY
system as a whole. This meeting was
highlighted by a party given in honor
of SASU's five-year anniversary.
While the New York City budget
crisis was the major focus of this
weekend's meeting, other issues were
also discussed.
Several hours on Friday evening
were spent in deciding whether ten
newly-elected third world delegates
should be sealed with full voting
power. Ihc debate centered around
the question of whether or not this
would be in accordance with SASU
by-laws.
A motion to seat the third world
representatives was propsed by New
Pall/ delegate Alan Hahn and
Hugos.
An amendment to this
motion was added by Fred Hoy and
Paul Perlinan, both from Oneonta,
stating that "Ihese delegates shall
have lull membership rights until the
majority of the campuses of the third
world caucus meet to elect regular
•delegates." The motion and amendment were both passed by a vote of
the delegate assembly.
Angel Berrios, Albany's recentlyelected third world delegate, was
pleased that the seats had been established. "We wouldn't be satisfied
if we were seated in the back," said
Berrios. "We wanted to be where it
counts. Even though we are mostly
representing the interests of third
world students, our goals are for the
overall student population as well."
Caucus Conference
A motion to organize a statewide
conference in order to form a
women's caucus was passed. Lisa
Chason, Binghamton delegate was
appointed to organize the conference, which is to be held some
time before December.
While Chason was pleased with
the idea of a conference, she
appeared to be disturbed that the
motion lo establish ten seats for a
women's caucus at this membership
meeting had been defeated.
"SASU said it wanted women to
come in, but they haven't followed
through," said Chason. "I'm afraid
it's It he women's caucus] going lo
gel caught upinstructural problems.
I hey're already saying we brought it
up at Canton and Oneonta. It's los-
Stu Klein is bewildered at the opby Edward Moser
Representatives of both the position to the new plan. He agrees
Freeze-Dried Coffee House and the that "it is hard lo come up with a
various school film groups have fool-proof system" but he feels that
complained about the new'double- now he gets "a belter fix onthe cash"
stub' ticket procedure, under which taken in on the various campus
groups must hold on to a part ol each events.
A 'better fix' is necessary. Klein
liekel they sell, count the stubs, and
keep a record of this I'm SA. This explains, because "guidelines say we
new procedure is part of an overall must have an audit at least once a
effort by SA Controller Stu Klein to year." and because sloppy records
lighten the accounting methods of helped prevent a lull audit ol SA
finances last year.
SA-t'unded groups.
In regard to the attacks on SA's
"SA is continually passing down
mandates Irom above." said Bob alleged increase of power. Klein
Wong of International Film Group
continued on pane two
(ll-(i), who was angry that SA
started the new system without first
&*^i!i!i0:%Mffi!$$$$$£it&' ' ' ^ "*
consulting IFG. He fears that SA is
getting loo powerful.
"Ir, SA there are no checks and
balances . . . if I have a grievance,
there's no Ombudsman 1 can go to,"
says Wong. "SA watches groups
closely, but who watches SAT'
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) An inWong admits that under the old
surance company has offered the
system someone stationed outside a
teen-age driver of the car which
cinema might lake a moviegoer's
collided with President Ford's
money and wave him inside the
limousine last week $600 for auto
theater, and then pocket the cash.
damages and other costs.
Yet he thinks that previous losses
James Salamites, 19, of Mcriden
were minimal, since "if a person
said a claims adjustor late last week
stole, he would have been hurting his
made the offer to cover towing
own group."
charges, other costs and damages to
Jell Aronowitz of Albany State
a 1968 Buick owned by Salamites'
Cinema calls the new system a
mother.
"useless pain. . . the old way was at
Salamites said the car was
efficient. We kept for the last two or
purchased two months ago for $480
three yeurs exact records of the
and was unusable after the accident.
number of people entering our
He said he and his mother had not
movies."
decided whether to accept the offer
made by the Insurance Company of
Aronowitz feels that a dishonest
North America Corp. (INA),
person may keep his ticket stub and
use it at a future date to get in free.
An INA spokesman said an offer
And he wonders about the ticket
was made to the Salamites family
rolls which are stored in the SA of- SA Controller Stu Klein I * taking ( t a p * t o w a r d * tightening the but refused to confirm or deny the
fice: "Someone can come right into
amount. He said he did not know if
financial accounting practice* ol S A - l u n d * d organizations.
the office and rip them off."
the firm was negotiating for title to
ing strength each time; it's being
worn down too thin." '
Chason qualified the need for
more women in SASU with various
arguments, which ranged from, "the
need for additional people to be involvedinSASU now" to "the need to
incorporate more women in student
government."
"Women have something to offer
to SASU," said Chason. "They're
used to being cut back and therefore
are experienced in dealing with and
avoiding it."
When asked about his overall
reaction to the meeting, Kirkpatrick
said, "This has been one of the most
satisfying and
productive
membership meetings. It was the
first meeting sincel was elected to office and it gave me confidence I really needed. It made me reaffirm that
we're together."
Referring to SASU's new focus.
Dan Hugos commented that, "Six
months ago. the delegate assembly
could not identify with issues that
affect students and the university,
the way it did today. They finally
realized the university is notunivorv
lower and that it is affected by
default, depression and economic
crisis. In the past wc addressed
ourselves to narrow student issues.
Now we're making links with all
segments of society."
Youth Is Off^cd $600 For
His Presidential Smack-Up
the car.
Ihc limousine is leased to the
President for $ 10,000 a year by Ford
Motor Co., a company spokesman
said. Ihc spokesman said INA
covers the car for property damage
and personal injury.
INDEX
Art*.
Classified
Columns
Editorial*
GrallM
Letter*
New*
Newsbrisl*.
Sport*...,.
Zodiac
7
9
12
11
•
.'.
10
1-0
,.2
13-19
S
E T S T e * t * Examined
see page 4
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