ALBANY, NEW YORK
October 25, 1968
: a
Photo by Benjami
ABOUT 1,000 STUDENTS voted in the first two days ae elections.
Service Veterans
Speak On
Speeches by five war veterans,
each critical of US foreign policy,
were sponsored by the
Student-Faculty Committee to
end the War in Vietnam and SDS
as part of their “War Week”
activities, Wednesday in 1, R1,
The veterans, three of whom
claimed to have signed armed
forces security papers subjecting
them to arrest if they let out
factual information, often
suggested the possibilities of strict
press censorship and brainwashing
of both the public and the
servicemen.
The first speaker, Irving
Rosenberg, is a World War II
veteran who accused President
Johnson of being part of the
“military industrial complex.” He
also asserted that a statement
made by Woodrow Wilson in 1919
saying that WW I was fought not
to save democracy, but to make
industry profit, is now applicable
to the Vietnam War.
The next speaker, Dick
Simmons, is disillusioned with
military authority which was
demonstrated when he said, “I
spent three years in the army, and
I don’t trust them,”
Don Miller, a Naval veteran
who worked for American
Intelligence, suggestea incriminating
evidence concerning the Gulf of
Marine Officer
To Interview
Candidates
Lt. Newkirk Officer Selection
Officer will visit the campus on
Oct 28 and 29 between the hours
of 10 am and 2 pm to discuss the
Marine Officer training programs
available to college students and
interview those students
interested.
All Marine training in the
undergraduate programs (Platoon
Leaders Class) is done during the
summer with no interference
during the school year.
The Platoon Leaders Class
(Ground) and Platoon Leaders
Class (Aviation) programs are
available to freshman, sophomores
and juniors.
For the college senior, the
Marine Corps offers a commission
upon successful completion of a
ten week Officers Candidate
Course.
LAST DAY OF ELECTIONS -
Vietnam
by Barry Kirschner
To.nkin incident and the Pueblo
Affair, than could be found in the
New York Times. After staying
for five and one half years on a
three-year-hitch, he managed to
get his release from the Navy by
threatening to leak incriminating
information,
A Vietnam veteran who refused
to reveal his name stated that
atrocities committed by our own
soldiers would not get US press
coverage.
Nixon Here Monday
Speaks At
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) — Re-
publican State Chairman Charles
‘A. Schoeneck said Thursday he
has invited 62 county chairmen
to meet with Richard M. Nixon
during a campaign tour in Al-
bany Monday.
Schoeneck said the county
leaders have been invited to
meet with Nixon and Governor
Rockefeller at 11 a.m. in the
Executive Mansion prior to a
noon speech on the steps of the
State Capitol.
The -Republicans will discuss
MACABRE ACTION WAS the rule for the ‘Guerilla Theatre’ held
Faculty Gives Students
Voice In Policy Makin
A vote of the University’s faculty at their first
meeting this year granted students a formal voice in
policy-making at the University.
The Faculty Senate, which serves as the
representative governing body of the faculty, will
make students full members of its eight councils,
which are specialized groups designed to consider
Problems that arise within a particular area of
interest.
Undergraduates will be selected for membership
in the following apportionment: Undergraduate
Academic Council, four students; Student Affairs
Council, three students; Library Council, two
students; Personnel Policies Council, one student;
Council on Promotions and Continuing
Appointments, one student; Council for Research,
one student; and Council on Grievances, one
student.
Although students will be greatly outnumbered
by faculty members on the various councils, Central
Council President Duncan Nixon believes that “the
effectiveness of student members will be determined
by their contributions.”
Dr. J. Ralph Tibbetts, vice-chairman of the
Senate Executive Committee, introduced an
amendment to the Faculty By-Laws, which states:
“Each council shall include at least two members of
the Senate, one of whom shall serve as chairman of
the council, one
or more students,
and at least one
member of the
Faculty, not a
Senator. No one
High Noon
the final week of the campaign,
he said.
“I am pleased by the way
by Lynne Wager
may serve on more than one cdiincil, except as
provided by the Senate. Council members shall serve
on one-year appointments, which may be renewed.”
Action on student membership to the Faculty
Senate began late last May when President Collins
recognized sty:dents’ desire to have a voice in the
problems of faculty tenure and academic freedom.
A Senate meeting held on May 27, 1968, was
addressed by members of the Executive Committee,
who recommended that students be included on all
committees of all councils, Such a policy change
necessitated an amendment to the Faculty By-Laws,
which had previously provided for student inclusion
on committees of councils, but not on the councils
themselves. The amendment was passed
overwhelmingly by the faculty at its September 12
meeting.
It was decided that the student members of the
Faculty Senate councils would be self-nominated by
submitting their self-nomination forms to the
Student Association Office. After two weeks of
nominations, the cabinet-of the Central Council,
which consists of the president, vice-president, and
chairmen of the commissions, will decide on the
applications and submit their decisions to Central
Council for approval.
At its meeting on Thursday, October 17, Central
Council passed a bill urging the Faculty Senate to
reconsider the apportionment of students to its
councils. They pointed to the Council on
Promotions and Continuing Appointments as one
area which they feel they would be
underrepresented. The Central Council bill stated
that there would be no action taken on selecting
Cont. on Page 7
in
Peace, Freedom Candidate
Advocates Radical Action
the candidate Mr. Nixon has
campaigned in New York State,”
Schoeneck said. “It certainly
shows that he knows that New
York is a key state—a battle
right down to the wire.”
After his Albany appearance,
Nixon plans to speak in Syra-
cuse on Tuesday and then at-
tend a rally in New York City’s
Madison Square Garden Thurs-
day night.
outside the Campus Center by the Coalition for Anti-War Week.
by Gale McAllister
David McReynolds, the Peace
and Freedom Party’s candidate
for Congress from the 19th
Congressional District, discussed
“Revolution in the United States”
in a lecture which was a part of
the University’s Anti-War Week.
McReynolds believes liberalism
is not enough to change today’s
society. He advocates moving
beyond liberalism to radicalism.
Revolution in the U.S.,
McReynolds says, is being
initiated by the two oppressed
groups in today’s society: the
Blacks, and the middle class
community.
These two groups function in
the present on the basis of the
future. According té McReynolds,
this simply means that the middle
_ class and black people of the U.S.
look ahead to the future and can
see what conditions will be like if
present policy continues,
With this in mind, they realize
that they must act now, in the
Present, if the future is going to
be any better.
McReynolds believes that the
complete change of the United
States’ society cannot be
accomplished by studying the past
revolutions of people such as
Lenin in the U.S.S.R. or Gandhi
in India,
‘The revolution in the U.S. will
be new and different from any
other situation that has, in the
past, brought on revolution.
However, MeReynolds feels
‘that something can be learned by
reading about the revolutions that
have been conducted in the U.S.
by such people as Martin Luther
King and Eugene Debs.
McReynolds wants the
revolution to change present
conditions so that corporations
will be responsive to public
demands, the war in Vietnam will
be over and more money will be
available to initiate programs that
will help solve the problems that
the nation faces today, and
numerous other changes.
In speaking about the war in
Vietnam, McReynolds states that
the war is only an example of the
entire problems that the U.S.
faces today.
McReynolds mentioned, that
this is not the first time the U.S.
has been involved in a situation
such as Vietnam, but it is the first
time that the U.S. has been
beaten, and the government
doesn’t quite know how to cope
with the situation.
The revolution McReynolds
advocates will be nonviolent, He
believes violence exists only when
people become confused.
By staying in the U.S. and
resisting the draft by publicly
burning your draft card, by voting
for candidates for government
officers from the Peace and
Freedom Part, and by uniting
together in a unifies resistance to
the present government,
McReynolds believes radical
changes can be, and must be made
in the United States.
VOTE !
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
DOWNTOWN PRACTICES HERE 7777
Cushing Defends
Onassis Marriage
By JOHN RIGOS
ATHENS (UPI)—Aristotle On-
assis said Thursday he and his
bride, the former Jacqueline
Kennedy, telephoned Cardinal
Richard J. Cushing a few hours
after the Boston prelate defend-
ed her marriage to a divorced
man, Presumably they wanted
to thank him.
Onassis mentioned the call as
he interrupted his honeymoon
briefly for business in Athens,
and left his wife on the yacht
Christina with wedding presents
reported to include $1.2 million
in rubies and diamonds.
Paris fashion circles said the
jewels were fashioned into a
heartshaped effect and that
Mrs. Onassis entered “like a
queen” when she first wore
them at a family gathering on
the Christina after the wedding
on Skorpios Island last Sunday.
Loses Eligibility
In Washington, the U.S. Army
said Thursday Mrs. Onassis lost
her eligibility to be buried in
Arlington National Cemetery
when she remarried. President
Kennedy is buried there in a
special memorial plot. The
Army said the ruling would not
apply to Mrs. Onassis’ children.
The call from the Christina to
Cardinal Cushing Tuesday night
underscored the Roman Catho-
lic religious difficulties swirling
around Mrs. Onassis, 39.
Onassis, 62, was divorced in
1960.
The Vatican has announced
that Mrs. Onassis is now in an
“irregular position,” and may
not participate in Sacraments,
including Holy Communion.
Cushing came to Mrs. Onas-
sis’ defense in a speech Tuesday
to a Boston business group and
said: “Why can’t she marry
whomever she wants to mar-
ry?” Cushing, who married
Jacqueline and John F, Kenne-
dy in 1953, said it was “a lot of
nonsense” to say Mrs. Onassis
was “excommunicated or a
yublic sinner.”
eCardinal Cushing is Mrs.
Onassis best spiritual friend,”
Onassis told newsmen as he
flew into Athens for a business
conference with Greek Premier
George Papadopoulos on plans
for a $360 million industrial
complex Onassis will help
finance. “We called him on the
phone.”
California Students Angry
About Decision On Boycott
University of California
students, already angry about the
regents’ refusal to grant credit for
a course being taught in par by
Black Panther leader Eldridge
Cleaver. have been made even
angrier by the university’s decision
not to join a nationwide boycott
of California table grapes.
Eleven students, eight
Mexican-Americans and three
white coeds, were arrested
Monday (Oct 14) after briefly
taking over the office of
University president Charles
Hitch.
Hitch-had met with them for a
few minutes, but refused to
change his ruling that the
university will continue to
purchase grapes.
The striking United Farm
Play Of Absurd
At Golden Eye
“The Untimely Underworld
Demise of the Illusions of
Noman” will be presented at 9 pm
at the “Golden Eye.” The play,
subtitled, “The Day the Subway
Ran Over a Guy,” was written and
directed by William Frankonis of
the University faculty; it will be
acted out by students, the lead
role of “Noman” being played by
Daniel Barton, a sophomore.
The play is a farce-tragedy
dealing with the lack of human
concern prevalent in today’s
cities. The scene of the play is a
subway car, and the characters
are: Slag, a burlesque dancer;
Curly, a hack writer; a pregnant
girl; a minister; the subway
conductor; and the hero, Noman,
Admission is free. The “Eye” is
located at 820 Madison Ave. For
information about the play or
about the “Eye” in general, call
program director Walt Silver at
482-0255,
‘Topher’ Tells It Like It Is
JHE FUZZY BUNNIES
And They Are At Aerodrome
Tonight and Tomorrow Night
Are Great
M
STARTING SUNDAY OCTOBER
RHOTDOG
WILL DELIVER TO THE OLD AND NEW CAMPUS
DELIVERIES
DAILY 7:30 pm ——9 pm-—---10:30pm——-12midnight
SUNDAY 4:30 pm ---—-6 pm
MR HOT DOG'S FAMOUS "ALL BEEF HOT DOGS" with tHe works
ROAST BEEF SANDWICH on « ToasteD SESAME ROLL
| KOSHER STYLE CORNED BEEF SANDWICH on rye or ROLL
HOT PASTRAMI SANDWICH on ave on ROLL
i TUNA FISH SANDWICH
THICK SHAKES
SODA — MILK
POTATO CHIPS
MINIM!
ORDE!
ELIVERED $1.00
1/4 POUND GIANT "ALL BEEF"' HAMBURGERS on ToasteD ROLL
1/4 POUND GIANT "ALL 8EEF"' CHEESEBURGERS on Toasted ROLL
FRIED HADDOCK FISH SANDWICH
VANILLA — CHOCOLATE ~ STRAWBERRY
13th
1968
25¢
79¢
79¢
79¢
55¢
65¢
49¢ |
49¢
39¢
20¢
15¢
call 463-4619 for: fast: service
Workers, which is made UP shout 20 students, most of them
pickece sad mostly MezitenAmeiem, "vw, ©
J : Hiteh’s office to try and see him.
Mexican-Americans, have called (,e2? waiting all day, a delegation
for a boycott on buving and of five was admitted to his office.
eating grapes until the growers When he refused to change his
recognize their union. Positon a number of other
Their strike and boycott have students entered his office and
won wide support among nea
California liberals (including Annee ula bes Estas al
recent endorsement of their . -
demans by the San Francisco City At about 6 p.m. university
Couneil), but they are opposed by Police arrived and arrested the
tach Conservative as borerae, eleven who were still in the office.
Ronald Reagan and. Senatorial ® crowd of about 100 students
candidate Max Rafferty, pothbad gathered by the time they
Republicans. were finally brought from the
Scott Wilson, purchasing agent Duilding. The students did not
for the university, had announced "St arrest.
last week that he would no longer ,, W@@nesday (Oct. 16) the
buy grapes for the school’s pormeley spurchasiag office
cafeteria and residence halls. nounced that it would not buy
President Hitch then issued an ae ae
order that campuses should not decision was mate win ones
“discontinue the furnishing of any of the boyeut’ wen eet
food product as a policy decision, avenw, tet Pecuaee
but only if there is not sufficient te are eroues including
demand to, make cuucent the Mexican-American Students
igs eooneeascal Confederation (MASC), had
londay’s arrests came after_ griscied to’ the purchase of
The Yellow-Billed Wordpicker
doesn't write words.
It helps you remember them.
ordpicker is a marking pen
that pinp james, gleans words, and
highlights them all in bright yellow. You don’t
use it to write down the words you have to
remember. You use it to write over them.
The Yellow-Billed Wordpicker.
It reminds you how smart you should be.
And for 49c, you shouldn’t have to be Sas
reminded ‘Oo buy one..
Bagre
“HOMECOMING QUEEN, MARY Mencer, was asked
winning ballot for the September Lottery by the State Tax
Department.
Father Smith Speaks
About Birth Control
by Debbie Hummel
“The split between the official
teachings and conscience is not a
happy affair for the traditional
Catholic,” commented Father
James Smith on the implications
‘of the Pope’s recent enciclical on
birth control.
Father Smith’s talk on
“{mplications of Birth Control’
was part of a program sponsored.
by Newman Club, Friday
afternoon Oct 18. The unique
feature of this meeting, attended
by twenty members, was the
degree of student involvement in
discussing the issues.
“The question of authority and
how and where it comes from is
an issue of great importance,”
continued Father Smith. “In
establishing a teaching, is it
arrived at by the people it will
affect or just those at the top? Is
it a true teaching with Christ's
authority behind it.”
Questioning a statement that
the “truth will be discovered in
time,” one student said,‘We’re
living now. We want an answer to
these problems. Why can’t the
two camps tolerate each other
instead of trying to force
everyone to conform?”
Discussing human sexuality,
Father Smith stated that “the two
attitudes towards it, that of sex
for reproduction and for
fulfillment and expression, must
be present in a successful
relationship. Either aspect by
itself can be disastrous.”
Commenting on future moral
problems. Father Smith spoke of
asexual development, mutation of
genetic characteristics to produce
The following Councils of Faculty
Senate need student representatives:
Undergraduate Academic Council,
|Graduate Academic Council, Student
JAffairs Council, Council on Research,
Council on Personnel Policies, Councii
n Promotions and Continuing
ppointment, Council on Educational
olicy,and Library Council.
THE
AFTER-
DROP
JUST ONE
CHASES
AWAY
ANTISOCIAL
BREATH.
Binaca
N BREATH DROF
a child with certain
characteristics, and abortion.
“This interference with natural
process will present future
problems for today’s Catholics,”
he concluded.
English Majors To Advise
Department
A meeting of English majors,
held in the Campus Center
Assembly Hall on Monday
afternoon, October 14, has laid
the groundwork for a student
advisory committee of the English
Department.
Dr. Walter Knotts presided over
the meeting, calling the function
of the committee to “advise the
English Department on possible
Freshmen To Give
Halloween Party
At Mohawk
A Halloween Party on
Thursday Oct. 31 from 9-12 p.m.
at the Mohawk Property is the
next event being scheduled by the
freshman class.
The party, which is open to all
freshman and their dates, will
include games, refreshments, and
a hayride. Tickets will go on sale
Monday in the Campus Center
Lobby at $1.50 each,
Any freshman or group of
freshmen who would like to
initiate any type of class activity
should contact their class
guardians, Connie Valis in
Eastman Tower (4722) or Tony
Casale in Stuyvesant Tower
(7954).
Javits Refuses To Pledge
Senate Support To Agnew
SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI) —
Sen, Jacob Javits Thursday re-
fused to pledge his vote for
Spiro T. Agnew if the selection
of a president and vice presi-
dent is thrown into Congress.
If no candidate receives a
majority in the electoral college,
‘he House of Representatives
will vote on a new president and
the Senate will select the vice
president.
“I hope I will be able to sup-
port the Republican party can-
didate, but at this time I can-
not pledge myself to any can-
didate,” Javits told a news
conference.
Javits and Agnew have had
their differences during the
present campaign.
Last week Agnew criticized
Hubert Humphrey for accepting
the Liberal party endorsement
n New York State and em-
macing what he termed, the
varty’s “far out views.” The
statement was embarassing to
Javits who has also accepted
Liberal party backing.
Earlier in the campaign Jav-
its was among those who urged
STATE
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
NEW HOURS
MONDAY thru
THURSDAY
SAM to 8PM
FRIDAY
SAM to 4:30 PM
SATURDAY
“SAM to TPM
Agnew to apoligize for calling
Humphrey “soft” on Commun-
ism. Agnew, after confering
with the state’s top Republicans,
retracted the statement in an
appearance in Rochester.
a
©1060 BRIsTOL-NYERS CO.
at yo
Send for the Sit-On cn
changes in curriculum.’* Members
of the committee would also have
some say in departmental
problems, such as the hiring and
firing of faculty members.
Mr. Frederik Rusch, a doctoral
candidate, was then elected
temporary chairman of a steering
committee which undertook the
responsibility of arranging for
nominations and the election of
interested English majors to the
advisory committtee.
Those in attendance were then
faced with the task of determining
the size and composition of the
committee. They agreed upon a
committee composed of two
representatives from each class
and two representatives from the
graduated students for a total
membership of ten. The
committee itself would elect a
chairman from among its
membership.
Self-nominations of English
majors seeking membership on the
committee were to be submitted
to the English Department office
Curriculum
no later than Wednesday, Oct 23.
A list of nominees will be posted
this week on the English
Department bulletin board on the
third floor of the Humanities
Building.
Voting will take place by ballot
on Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday, Oct 28-30. The
procedure for balloting is yet to
be announced. At the designated
time: and place, English majors
will have the opportunity to vote
for two representatives. from
within their own class year.
Although there is already a
similar faculty committee in
existence to advise English
Department Chairman Prof.
Townsend Rich, students had not
been included in departmental
decisions prior to, this year. The
good attendance at the
organizational meeting and the
evident interest of those in
attendance indicate English
majors’ eagerness to have an
effective means of conveying their
opinions to the faculty.
Inten- Sorority
The “Love Minus Zero”
Friday,October 25
9-12 P.M.
Campus Center Ballroom Admission 50¢
Council Miner -
Save yourseat !
your first sit-in. 1
Name.
The trouble with a sit-in is what you sit on. And
that you have to sit on it so long.
Since our thing is keeping you alert mentally,
we've had no remedy for other parts of the body
that may fall asleep. Until we invented The Sit-On.
What distinguishes The Sit-On from an ordinary
pillow is a pocket for your NoDoz®.
Which means that now you can sit it out until
the wee hours. Alert from top to bottom.
|-want to save’my:seat. Here's my $2.00. Send me
The Sit-On. Send check or money order to: NoDoz Pillow,
360 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10017.
Address.
State Zip.
This offer expires March 31, 1969. Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery.
Page 4
ALBANY STUDENT PREss
Vuere Comes
ARSE mili hea
Feo issens
The Rhetoric and Public
Address section of the Speech
Department will present a
program on “Information in the
Disciplines,"* Oct 31. This
program Is designed to acquaint
the University College students
with the courses and
extra-curricular activities offered
to the Public Address or General
Speech major, and with the
choices of profession open to the
graduate in Speech. Assembly
Hall, C.C., 3-5 p.m.
Meeting to plan grape boycott
ralley by Faculty-Studemt
Committee for Equal
Opportunity, Mon. 8 p.m. in SS
146,
There will be a meeting of the
Junior (class of 1970) Social
Studies Teacher Ed Majors in SS
256 at 3:10 p.m. on Monday, Oct.
28.
Please be prepared with a list of
all of the courses which you
completed by August 31, 1968. In
additon, the requirements will be
explained, questions answered and
advisers assigne
—_———
The SUNYA Salling Club meets
‘on alternate Mondays (from Oct
28) at 7’30. Instructional classes
are held on alternate Mondays
(from Noy 4) at 7:30 and every
Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. All
meetings are in Physics 129. All
are welcome.
‘On Friday, Nov 1, there will be
a@ meeting for ail students
interested in Zetetiks--the
Philosophy Club, in HU 290 at 3
p.m.
Sign up in the Placement
Service (AD 135) for the
following two recruitment visits:
West Irondequoit School, Oct 31;
Temple University College. of
Education (for those Interested in
teaching or obtaining a master’s
degree at Temple) , Nov 1.
QUEEN MARY!
Letter to the Editor:
In answer to a letter to the
editor of the ASP (10/22/68),
“Queen Mary?”, I have the
following remarks to make:
As a member of Special Events
Board, I have an obligation to
help out on events other than the
one for which I am responsible.
At the first meeting of Special
Events Board this year, I was
appointed to be the chairman of
the Homecoming Queen Contest
by the chairmen of Homecoming
Weekend—Mike Gerber and Mary
Mencer.
It was understood at the time
of my appointment that I would
have complete control over every
aspect of the contest, and that I
would receive no intervention
from the co-chairmen. With this
thought in mind, I planned the
contest.
It is not necessary to spell out
how I planned the contest, but it
is essential to say that I developed
every policy which would govern
the contest. No one else helped
me in policy formation,
I decided how the contest was
to be managed.
I decided when the Queen
would be crowned.
I decided how many girls each
organization could nominate. The
co-chairmen of Homecoming
Weekend had NOTHING to do
with any of the decisions made
for the Queen contest.
I decided who the judges were
to be. The following people were
judges: Mrs, Lois Gregg, Mr. Dell
Thompson, Mr. Malcolm Corbiey,
Mrs.‘ Richard ‘Pierce, Mrs.
The following positions are still
open on subcommittees of Student
Affairs
Student
Council:
Gov't.
Committee on
and Org.. one;
International Student Committee, one.
Tri-City Mixer. C.C. Ballroom.
8:30-1 a.m. live band, ‘The
Candy-Goated Outhouse.” Cash bi
Admission: All Hillel members fre
non-merhbers: guys—$1, girls—$.50.
Area colleges invited.
Election Forum for People
25, at 8 P.M. in Assembly Hall, C.C.
Josephine Harris, Mr. Joseph
Silvey, Mr. Richard Wesley, Miss
Sharon Rock, Mr, Anthony
Casale, Miss Leila Moore, Mr.
Peter Pavone, and Mr. Howard
Woodruff.
It is not necessary to enumerate
the reasons for choosing these 12
people.
I instructed the judges as to
how to rate the girls in the two
competitions. At no time during
the contest was it ever announced
what organizations the girls
represented. The judges were
rating the girls on what they saw,
and not on the organizations
which they represented.
Mary Mencer did NOT have to
withdraw her name from
competition or resign as
Co-chairman of Homecoming.
Mary Mencer had absolutely
NOTHING to do with the
planning and execution of the
Queen Contest. Mary Mencer
deserved the title of Homecoming
Queen 1968 because she fulfilled
every single requirement that the
judges were rating upon, Mary
Mencer scored a great deal higher
on both evenings of competition
than any other girl in the contest.
Any girl or judge of the Queen
Contest will tell you that the
entire contest was managed with
the utmost taste, dignity, and
style. I pride myself when I say
that no other event on this
campus has ever had as much
“class” as this contest had.
If there are any more questions
which arise concerning the Queen
‘Contest or any other Special
Events Board function, please feel
free to come to any Special
Events Board meeting.
Kaufman’
Modern
Academic
Function
A modern function of the university is the
training of people to meet immediate social
problems. One of the most pressing problems today
is the plight of the lower socio-economic classes in
our nation’s cities and rural areas.
Although in the State University system there are
schools, like Old Westbury, that offer intensive
courses on the social problems of our society, there
is no reason why the other branches, especially the
University Centers, cannot institute a lower level
course that will survey the problems of the lower
socio-economic classes.
The university is usually the place where students
first question the values and practices »>f their
society. It is that place of learning that should
provide answers to those questions.
The few years at a university are the most
Concerned About Peace, Friday, Oct.’ formative years for the individual’s mind. If at this
TAKE OVER?
To the Editor:
I am dismayed by the recent
alliance of several student radical
groups for the avowed purpose of
getting control of the student
government (Albany Student
Press, October 18).
It seems, from events this
summer concerning the tenure
committee, that leftist elements
wish: to use student institutions
as a base from which to force
wide change in the academic
@tructure of the university itself.
But even now the faculty is
admitting students voluntarily to
various councils of Faculty
Senate, and I hope Central
Council will appoint intelligent,
thoughtful persons to theseposts,
We ought to have a voice in the
academic direction. of the
University, but I believe we
should leave control to those who
have the professional training,
levelheadedness, and long
connection with the University
which can be the only adequate
preparation for this responsibility.
The combination of our rather.
progressive faculty and mostly
quiescent and conservative
student enrollment is not fertile
ground for another Columbia, But
if the radicals do manage to get a
majority on Central Council, the
present Council and that just out
of office will be much to blame.
ty :
mech
in the most eminent places,
however); but it has done nothing
to make elections anything more
than childish popu! contests,
point, the student has not faced the dilemmas of his
society, he might as well be dead.
It is the student who realizes the inequality
existing within our culture who would respond to a
lower level course that would perform a study of
current social problems. It would be'a course of this
nature that could train the student where to look to
understand a social problem and how to resolve it.
If a university cannot provide a means to answer
the questions of its students about the society
around them, it is failing this and future
generations.
Tf, in the study of current social problems,
Albany can be an exception in the State University
system, then let a school in the Social Sciences
design a 100 or 200 level course that anyone may
take to gain an insight into the socio-economic
problems of our country.
The University is modern in its
architecture; it must also be in its
academic function.
“The university should be
characterized by the joint venture
of students and faculty in
interests: the commissions, all Perceiving, understanding, and
fighting for tax money and improving the world.”—New
protection of their pet ventures; Patterns of. Undergraduate
and a private social club, reaching Education.
for glory.
The people in SDS do see
clearly that the Central Council ff The Albany Student Press
must be more than the province Wishes
of the reigning fraternity and the
selfish commissions; it must po Execs
undertake to be the voice of the Its Sympathy
students, all of us, in important To The Family
issues, instead of forever playing Of:
around with its own red tape,
The present Central Council
must try to reform itself before a
Con't top. 5
Dr. Cicero D. Mcintyre
The Albany Student Press is published tweb times a week by the
Seudeat Association of the State University of New York at Albany.
The ASP office, located in Room 382 of the Campus Center at 1400
Washington Avenue, is open from 7-12 p.m. Sunday thru Thursday
night or may be reached by dialing 457-2190 or 457-2194. The ASP
was established by the Class of 1918.
John Cromie
Editor-in-Chief
News Editor Jill Paznih
Arts Editor Carol Séhour
Sports Editor Tom Nixon
Technical Editor David Scherer
UPI Wire Editor Tim Keeley
Associate News Editor Tra Wolfman
Photograpny Editor Larry DeYoung
Business Manager Philip Franchini
Advertising Manager Daniel Foxman
| Executive Editors
Margaret Dunlap, Sara Kittsley, Linda Berdan
and
utterly nothing to get the Council »
_ out, of the, clutches.of the. vested ._
Communieations as. such expressions do not necessarily: Teflect i
Page 5
The Right Way
by Robert Iseman
BACK 0
FFI
By BUTCH McGUERTY
‘The following story was told by
ABC news commentator, Paul
ey.
SEE ies eaerentin eae
fighter, but he was a fighter.
The boy weighed a scant 95
pounds, The Y.M.C.A. sponsors of
the Golden Gloves Tournament
said there were no other entrants
in the paperweight or flyweight
divisions.
If he insisted on fighting, he’d
have to fight boys 30 pounds
heavier than he. He insisted. Frail
as he appeared, the lad had a
wallop in either hand and a
natural boxing skill.
He fought larger contestants
in his hometown and was crowned
its champion. He fought his way,
three and four fights a night,
through the preliminaries,
semi-finals, into the state finals.
The slight youth, his name was
George, was “edgy” before the
main event, His coach, J.P. Hanks
invited the lad to go for a walk to
“discuss strategy.”
Fist Fight
They’d walked about a block
from the “Y” dormitories when
they encountered a street fight.
Two young hoodlums were
pestering a small Negro boy.
This was a “tough” district in
those days. Besides, most boxers
will run from a street fight. Coach
Hanks grabbed young George by
the arm and tried to turn him
away from the row. But George
jerked his arm free and stepped
into the altercation. He ordered
the two hoodlums to leave the
Negro boy alone.
On His Back
Both hooligans were much
larger than George and the larger
of the two threw a punch without
Gon't from’p. 4
sincere but misled minority
attacks it—which they have
pledged to do. A good place to
start would be to increase popular
representation on the Council
And the point. should be clear to
candidates for Central Council
seats—they must tell us out here
what they think, so we can have a
real choice; and they must not
stop thinking once they are
elected. *
Name withheld, Class of 1969.
BEER HOURS
To the Editor;
I am writing this letter to
question the inane policies
concerning the so called
Rathskeller in the Campus Center.
To me there is nothing more
frustrating than coming back from
a date and finding our “beautiful”
new Rathskeller closed at 11:30.
Why 11:30 of all times; Perhaps
it’s because people go to bed early
on Friday. However, I doubt that
this is the case. In fact, the
“Rathskeller” does a land office
business on Friday nights. Why
Support
~
HUMPHREY - MUSKIE
Play A Part In
Their Victory
Call. M.J, Rosenberg
~ At 457-8722
warning, In an instant, George was
flat on his back and on the
sidewalk. In another instant he
was on his feet dazed but fighting
mad. He waded toward the two
toughs. The first curled over from
a pile-driver punch to the stomach
and an uppercut to the jaw. The
second was staggered by a volley
of blows to the middle then
finished with a broken nose.
Coach Hanks remembers there
was no need for him to help.
Diminuative George had knocked
two light-heavyweight toughs
unconcious within less than one
minute!!
Split Knuckles
“Your hands,” coach Hanks
screamed. But it was too late. The
boys knuckles were split and
bleeding, his wrists were swelling.
And the next day was the
championship fight for which he
had planned and dreamed and
trained since his earliest
recollection. He refused to see a
doctor, knew he would be
disqualified. By fight night,
George’s hands were twice their
normal size. So painful there was
blood on his lips when the coach
had finished lacing his gloves. He
insisted on fighting, Coach Hanks
remembers. “He could barely
defend himself, nothing more. He
lost that night, but I keep
remembering how and why he'd
won--the night before.
Brotherly Love
As I confirmed these details
with Coach Hanks and with
newspaper accounts of the
incident, I kept wondering how
many persons, now giving
lip-service to brotherly love...
kept wondering how many of
them, then or now, without
fanfare or photographers, would
pay such a personal price to
rescue a Negro boy he never
knew... as did that boy in
Montgomery in 1935. That boy,
George Wallace, grew up to
be Governor of Alabama.
Food Service, who the hell do you
think you are? Several people
have had their food cards,
confiscated because they gave
away some of their daily
allotment of food. This is unjust.
Food Service, you rule that we
may not transfer our cards to
others, that is unfair, but it is
YOUR business. But what we do
after we get the food is OUR
business! Remember that!
Peed
Soon it will probably be
proposed that no part of the meal
will be transferable. If this
happens, our best course of action
would be to make a clean break
with Food Service, and embrace
the cheaper, more efficient, better
tasting services of SOGA.
ee
So far this year, not many
students have been stricken by
food poisoning; come on Food
Service, get with it.
Invisible Man On Campus
by JIM SMALL
Why is everyone afraid to care?
Why need there be such a word as
apathy?
College students are touted by
the mass media as being the most
involved group of people in our
country, This generalization
flatters most college students.
The case against personal
involvment today is very strong;
apathy has a very good raison
d’etre—people don’t like to be
hurt. They like everything to be
favorable to them; happiness
should be their’s for the taking.
can’t it stay open later~say unitl
12:30 or so?
Another problem is the waiting
line to get beer. The entire
procedure for getting beer is time
consuming and leaves much to be
desired, To get one beer, a student
must 1) wait in line; 2) present
LD. card; 3) fork over .25; 4) get
receipt from cash register; 5) get
beer mug; 6) present receipt and
mug to the “beer man”; 7) get
one lousey glass of beer.
Meanwhile, the people are
“floating” in and out returning
their mugs and demanding their
I.D.‘s back. The result is
confusion and long waiting lines.
All this is totally unnecessary,
The cog in the machinary is the
necessity to present your I.D. card
for collateral for a mug. I ask you,
who the hell would want to steal
one of those gross, ugly things
anyway? Wouldn’t it be much
simpler just to pay a quarter and
get some beer?
Phil Haggerty °71
Quite often, to be involved
means to be hurt. When an
individual is hurt, he receives
negative reinforcement for the
formation of apathetic behavior
patterns. Hence, most people
eventually decide to do only that
which benefits them directly.
By the laws of Nature, this
represents a means of
self-preservation; a very laudable
idea. This isn’t the only method
though.
Has everyone tried to exist by
himself? Can it be done?
The people of Latin heritage
have (or did have) an eminently
more successful way of surviving;
they share the good and the bad.
People try to explain their lack
of involvment by their past hurts.
This explanation fails when you
consider what total involvment
means. Shared happiness becomes
happier, and shared sadness
becomes less sad.
When you try, and fail at your
first attempt, you can only
withdraw with a twisted and bent
viewpoint of the world. This
results in the formation of
prejudices and the closing of the
door toward greater
communication.
If you stick with it you receive
(as I was once told) joy and
SKI INSTRUCTOR
Weekend positions available
for skiers to instruct high
school boys and girls. Prior
instruction experience not
required. Good compensa-
tion. Excellent ski facilities.
SHAKER. hee
SKI GROUP
Write or Call:
ShakerRoad, New Lebanon,
N.Y. Lebanon Springs (N.Y.)
71-1255
ATTENTION
over fifty students in Albany,
MALE AND FEMALE COLLEGE STUDENTS
PART TIME WORK
Young executive of Collier-MacMillan Corporation looking for
students to do sales promotional work with Collier's
Encyclopedia any weekday evenings or any weekends. Hours
weekdays after training would be 4 pm &pm and weekends as
available. This summer we successfully taught and worked with
proven successful. For further information and
appointment call Mr. Squire at 434-7171 from 9:30 am to 2 pm
weekdays only. Transportation furnished. Part time student will
average $75 a week take-home, if qualified. You could earn much
more depending upon time available. y
and our training meth
happiness. It is not only yours,
but it is a greater jay; a shared
joy. Science tells us that Man is a.
social animal; when we admit this
and share our experiences, life
becomes more livable.
Living offers us (repeatedly) a
chance to prove our humanity. All
we need do is care for each other.
We get an infinite number of
chances; the more we take, the
more human we become.
Since we are the product of our
experiences, we should continue
to experience everything. If we
withdraw after badness, we help
perpetuate badness, By continuing
our involvment, we improve the
strain of our humanity.
Apathy is the mark of a small
stunted soul, a sick soul. Get out
of that rut and live; Life is God’s
group therapy.
Food Service claims it buys
only the best quality meats. What
it?
happens to it?
The security police have really
been keen this year. So far, no
cars have been stolen from the
parking lots.
ae
It has been confirmed that the
field by Colonial Quad is to be
used for practice at digging holes.
aee
Either the trees planted on the
infirmary lawn are part of the
aesthetic design, or the doctors in
the infirmary have been making a
lot of mistakes.
se
Twenty-three people were
admitted into the infirmary last
week, there were no survivors.
ee
The ground proposed for
Indian Quad is so swampy, that
the Quad Tower will sink two and
one-half times faster than the
other three.
Walt's
SUBMARINES
Call iV 9-2827
or 1V 2-0228
FREE
LIVERY
(Three Subs minimum)
Mon-Fri
8 pm 1 am
Sun & Other Special
Days 4pm-lam
CLASSIFIEDS
Just write your ad in the b
envelope in the ASP classifie
Campus Center Information
each five words.
indecent nature.
with the ad.
each small square, cut it out, and deposit it in a sealed
The minimum price for a classified ad will be $.15.
We will also accept no ads that are of a slanderous or
Please include name, address, and telephone number
Classifieds will appear every Fri.
ox below, one word to
d advertising box at the
Desk, with 25 cents for
~ Deadline Wed. noon.
For Sale
[Wanted —
|
Ladies Swiss ski boots size 7.
With carrier. Used twice.
Reasonable. Call Sandy
457-7762.
For sale, 1965 Buick Gran
Sport Convertible Excetient
Condition Call Reyna
472-5508 after 8 p.m.
For sale, fender jazz-master
guitar good condition. Call
Ron 438-0111.
Alumni residents vote for the
man who will represent you.
Bruce Leinwand for Central
Council.
ia
Girl wants to share app’t. Do
you have extra room? Call
482-0047.
{Personal
Mary is the Cooper goofy!
Dnah.
Ride
from |
i
"Ride" wanted
‘Schenectady 2nd semester,
slanet, Je mange la fenetre de
Hanniversarie! Love, Walter
Sorry, Bob, K. call, Susan,’
Plea
4: .Call 374-6522, .
MR. CARL BAUMANN is presently working on “Growth Patterns.”
“Lazarland” (right) and “Land: of
Oz” (left) are only two of the works that will be exhibited next month in Schenectady.
Photo by Murphy
FILMS
by Dave Bordwell
“To overcome the horror of the
bougeoisie, you need still more
horror.” In the words of a
character in “Weekend” Jean
Luc-Godard posits the approach
and justification of his newest and
most startling film. From the first
frame to the last, greed, lust,
rapaciousness, perversion, and
violent death flash across the
screen with almost cynical
casualness. In colors, voluptuous
enough to touch, the camera
travels over an apparently endless
traffic tie-up, where overturned,
flaming cars, blood, and mangled
bodies are glimpsed as if by
accident; sadism rape, and murder
are normal behavior; and although
people are killed off right and left,
we’re more pained by the
decapitation of a chicken. Which
is to say that ‘‘Weekend” is
Godard’s view of the apocalypse
of our society.
In “Alphaville,” Paris is called
“the capital of pain,” and it’s
partly Parisian pop culture that
haunts the youths of ‘Masculine
Feminine.” ‘‘Weekend” traces a
retreat from Paris, a
back-to-nature rhythm that we
might expect to result in a
renewal of man’s ties to life
forces, and perhaps even a comic
resolution. Godard ironically
takes the opportunity to display
against the sunny greenery the
reductio ad absurdem of
bourgeois behavior. :
At the very beginning, on an
apartment terrace, we watch a
husband and wife, aided by each
‘one’s lover, plot the murder of the
other; meanwhile below, on the
street, making a bright tri-couleur
pattern, a scraped bumper
provokes a vicious mauling.
Immediately we confront the
film’s themes-hate, distrust,
greed, sex, and casual violence in
the context of automated,
beautiful people 1968. When the
couple drive off to murder the
rich aunt, their weekend begins,
runs on and on, until the trip
becomes Godard’s metaphor for
hell.
“The whole fabric of society is
torn apart, layer by layer, tissue
by tissue...Violence, destruction,
vilification, blasphemy,
perversion.,..’’ Henry Miller,
writing in the ’30’s of Bunuel’s
TAge Or,” describes
“Weekend” very well too. Godard
not only displays a Bunuelian
anarchism; he is, in “Weekend,”
moving recklessly close to a
Surrealist vision. With its
deliberate shock effects, its theme
of life’s absurdity, its dreamlike
flow, the mysterious, grotesque
imagery, the contortion and
eventual obliteration of time,
“‘Weekend’s ” method is that of a
reckless spirit trying to jolt us into
a wider consciousness of reality.
And yet I found “Weekend”
the least interesting of any
Godard I’ve seen. First, its assault
seemed to me mainly puerile and
overemphatic. There is in
“Weekend” none of the rich
reverberations of other Godard
films; its grisly spectacle may or
may not horri, y you, but there’s
no sense of a sharpened sensitivity
intuitively exploring a situation.
The film’s monologues, long
takes, strained effects are (oddly,
for Godard ) too precise, too
thing and one-dimensional, piling
up with almost numbing effect,
they lack the ambiguity of
Godard at his best.
Secondly, while I realize that
the “human” element is exactly
what must be excluded from this
tapestry, it seems to me that the
sort of attack Godard wants is
more effective using characters or
situations that engage some
audience interest. Bunuel and
Hitchcock know this; they have
ways of gradually drawing us into
The Lighthouse
Delicious Htalian
aes Dishes
All State Students
& Student Groups
Welcome
67 Colvin Ave.
Phone 482-9759
Psycadelic World Of
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Thurs. Nite -
Thurs. - Sat.
Admission $1.50 _
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their nasty situations by means of
all sorts of manipulation of
audience values. For them, the
ultimate cynicism is to outrage
the spectator while you're
entertaining him.
And really, there’s nothing in
“Weekend” that isn’t implicit in
‘‘Masculine Feminine,’’
“Alphaville,” and “Deux ou Trois
Choses...”; but paradoxically,
these themes of violence,
automation, sex, et al, take on a
range of overtones by being
placed in the narrower context of
a developing human situation.
“Weekend” has no situation; it’s a
series of visions, some harrowing,
some uninteresting, connected by
thematic but not interpersonal
tissue.
But, see “Weekend.” Where
Godard can go after this “film
found on a scrap heap...gone
astray in the cosmos,” I wouldn’t
dare say. But how appropriate,
that one of the most nihilistic
films ever made closes with the
words, “End of Story...End of
Cinema.”
“‘Habitat’’, a
moving
mechanized sculpture composed
of aerylic plastic, by Carl
Baumann was purchased by the
University in February of 1968.
Baumann was inspired by the
Habitat at Canada’s Expo °67.
Baumann says of this work, “I
was thinking of some futuristic
community in space. I formed the
piece in a spiral for two reasons:
the genetic form of DNA, the
basis of life, is in a spiral, and the
spiral is aesthetically pleasing,”
Baumann was born in 1926 and
has been interested in art since he
was a child, though he didn’t call
it his true profession until 1963.
Having graduated from the
School of Architecture at
Syracuse University, and having
Penny Lang
To Perform
On Campus
Next week the Coffee Hou
Circuit will present the second in
its series of performers, Penny
Lang, accompanied by Don
Audits and Frank Hioblich, has
played the circuit for five years at
notable places like the Bitter End,
Gude’s Folk City and two
consecutive years at the
Philadelphia Folk Festival.
Her material consists of folk
and blues with a major emphasis
upon unknown contemporary
writers. Among the artists she
cites as influential in her style are
Bob Gibson, Buffy St. Marie
Penny Lang will be appearing
on the coffee house circuit from
Monday October 28 until
Saturday Nov. 2, There will be
two shows nightly at 8 and 9:30
Monday through Thrusday and
three shows at 8, 9:30 and 11 on
Friday and Saturday.
Baumann’s ‘Habitat’
Stands In Library
cont. on p. 7.
done graduate work “te from
1960-1962, Baumann is very
interested in art and its various
applications.
“I am fascinated by the areas in
between; between art and
architecture, between art and
science, between art and
philosophy and religion. I am
fascinated by the edge which both
separates and holds together the
two sides of the coin—the light
between day and night—the
twilight zone.”
The model for the sculpture,
“Box Fugue,” stands in his studio.
The actual size of the work is 20
feet by 4 feet and can be seen in
the new Civil Service Employee’s
Association Building on Elk Street
in Albany.
Baumann feels that “abstract
visual art should be looked at the
way music, which is also an
abstraction, is listened to. It
should be judged by what it is,
rather than by what it is supposed
to be.”
He is presently working on a
called
sculpture “Growth
THAT'S
THE CRISP
FRESH
TASTE OF
ee
so ea
ne
Scenics
a ; :
ali exciting!
alittle more g GENESEE
es,
= yet Ee i ly
GEN. BREW. CO.,ROCH.. N.Y.
“ Ml
Students On Faculty Committees Cont'd.
students for the Council on
Promotions and Continuing each council. It is intended that
Appointments until the Faculty :
Senate raises the number of he Faculty Senate, the Executive
students for that council from one Committee will ask for a revision
to four students or offers an the number of students to be
explanation as to why this cannot included in Senate councils will be
be done. substantially increased.
‘At the October 28 meeting of In explaining the rationale for
from Page 1
in the number of students for the number of students on each
council, Dr. Tibbetts stressed his
view that students ought to be
involved in all types of University
decisions, not just those dealing
with tenure. As a full voting
member of a council, a student’s
voice will be able to effect the
outcome of decisions.
‘Habitat’ Cont'd.
from Page 6
Patterns” which also embodies the
main idea behind. “Habitat,” a
typeof futuristic community.
Though partially finished, one can
see that it is an abstraction of a
city plan.
“Habitat” has won a number of
prizes. In 1967, at the “State Fair
Show” in Syracuse it took
“popular prize” and “sculpture
Pam?
prize.” At the 16th Berkshire,
Annual Festival in Pittsfield,
Mastachusetts, it again gained
recognition, “Habitat,” which
can be found on the second floor
main lounge of the library, is only
one of the many artistic purchases
made by the Art Coordination
Committee.
Baumann’s next exhibition will
take place at the Unitarian Church
in Schenectady from Nobember 9
to December 6,
The 5 bill
Funny how big you can get and still remain virtu-
You may even live in one of our tele;
on dollar corporation
you probably never heard of.
phone company
ally anonymous.
Somehow we've managed to do it.
Were a group of over 60 companies, making every-
thing from microwave integrated circuits to color televi-
sion. And we rank number 9 in the top 500 corporations
areas. We operate in 33 states.
So here we are, 5 billion dollars strong, growing all
over the place, and looking for engineers and scientists to
grow with us.
Why don’t you think us over with your Placement
in the nation.
Pretty hot stuff for a nobody.
be the name Sylvania rings a bell.
It's one of our companies.
But though you may not recognize our name, may-
Director.
Incidentally, we're known in the communications
field as General Telephone & Electronics,
. Pssst.
Pass it on.
Photo by Potskowski
DESPITE SCORING FOUR impressive goals, the Albany State
Lacrosse Club was unable to overcome Union’s tough varsity squad.
Lacrosse Club Drops
Match With
Under the direction of coaches
Joseph Silvey and John Morgan,
the Albany State Lacrosse Club
has been active this fall in
teaching new men the techniques
of the game.
For the past three weeks,
interested men, both upperclass
and freshmen, have been working
out, learning the approaches to
this new game. The Albnay
mentors have used the philosophy
of “learning by doing” in the
teaching of the game.
Fundamentals such as catching,
throwing, scooping, and shooting
have been stressed, using last
year’s veterans as examples.
Strong physical workouts have
not been stressed because there is
no fall schedule for lacrosse,
Other aspects of the game have
been ‘highlighted by controlled
scrimmages.
Last Saturday, about thirty
players journeyed to Union where
the Albany club was pitted against
Union’s combined freshmen and
varsity teams. The controlled
Union 8-4
scrimmage game was proposed as
a learning experience, but this
idea was hampered due to wet
weather, a muddy field, and no
spiked shoes for the Albany men,
Albany was the first to score
with Bruce Sand putting the ball
in the net with only about a
minute gone in the first period.
Sand received an assit from
dakaway, but this was Albany’s
only high performance play as
Union stormed back and the
churned field became increasingly
muddy.
Alll members of the team played
often as coach Silvey gave many
players their first oppotunity to
tast lacrosse action. The final
score was Union 8, Albany 4, with
Jakaway Barlotta and Turow also
scoring Albany goals.
This spring, the Lacrosse Club
has its work cut out for it, as
scheduleq ppositon includes
Army, Hatwich, and Castleton, all
varsity organizations, Practice will
continue until November with a
tentative rematch with Union
slated for this Saturday morning,
Waterbury Defeats UFS
InLeague I Competition
by Dave Fink
Waterbury Hall and UFS met
Tuesday in a game which,
although it did not drastically
alter the league standings,
apparently meant quite a bit to
both teams,
UFS received, but on their
second play from scrimmage,
quarterback Denny Richardson’s
pass was alertly intercepted by
Barry Friedman of Waterbury.
‘The men from downtown, getting
the ball deep in UFS territory
could not score, UFS taking over
on downs, They did not hold onto
the ball long, however, as a bad
snap from center flew over
Richardson’s head and out of the
end zone for a safety. Thus,
Waterbury led 2-0 at the end of
the first quarter.
The ball changed hands three
times before Waterbury drove
deep into UFS territory. UFS held
on their own three yard line and
not being able to mount a drive,
attempted a punt from their own
end zone. The kick was blocked
and was fallen on by a big
Waterbury lineman for a safety,
‘upping their lead to:4-0.
Waterbury received the free
kick and promptly registered a
touchdown on a long pass from
quarterback Pete Monte to split
end Dave Kutel. Waterbury now
led 10-0. UFS did not give up,
bouncing right back with a bomb
of their own from quarterback
Richardson to Bob Yusko, thus
putting UFS back in the game,
10-6 at half time.
The second half showed both
teams unable to sustain a drive,
the only scoring being a safety
against UFS leaving the final score
Waterbury 12, UFS 6.
‘TOPHER’
Speaks With Straight Tongue
The Fuzzy Bunnies
at Aerodrome
Tonight and Tomorrow Night
Be There!
Albany Invitational
Saturday
For
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Set
Send Off
The second annual Albany Invitational Cross-Country Run. will be held Saturday afternoon October 26,
on the State University at Albany campus. Approximately 260 runners representing some 30 teams are
expected to compete in three divisions. The junior college race will start at 12:30, the freshman at 1:10 and
the varsity at 1:50. The first two races will be on the 3.5 mile course with the varisty on the five mile
course.
Defending varsity champion Springfield College, which swept the first six places last year, will be favored
of those six men, including three of the five who tied for first, are
to repeat, but not as easily. Four
returning.
Roland Cormier, Ken Klatka,
and Bill Tramposch set the course
record of 26:51 a year ago when
they and two now-graduated
teammates finished hand in hand.
Steve Smoth, another teammate,
followed them across.
Lou Ruggiero of Boston State
was seventh and Al Pastore of
Oneonta eighth in the 1967 race,
and both will be back Saturday.
Another Oneonta standout, Jim
Dever, missed last fall’s event with
illness, but should figure
prominently this time. He has
won 40 of 44. collegiate meets,
including 10 straight, and has a
4:20 mile to his credit.
‘The man to beat, however, may
well be Ron Stonitsch, a
sophomore from C.W, Post. Ron
won the freshinan event last year
in the course record time of 17742
and never has been beaten in
freshman or varsity collegiate
competition.
Host Albany’s top four men,
Larry Frederick, Pat Gepfert, Paul
Raoy, and Don Beevers, have the
potential to push the leaders.
Great Dane coach Bob Munsey
who is coordinating the meet,
feels certain that, given good
weather, the course record will be
broken Saturday.
Looking briefly at the varsity
teams, Springfield has lost to Holy
Cross and the University of
Connecticut this fall, but has the
depth to rate the favorites role.
Four teams figure to battle the
Indians for the top slot, C.W. Post
(8-0), Oneonta (7-1), Boston State
(7-3), and Albany (6-2). Other
entries include Siena, Trenton
State, Plattsburgh, Potsdam,
Stony Brook, and _ possibly
Rochester Tech and Bentley
(Mass,) College.
Albany’s Dennis Hackett,
unbeaten in six duals meets this
year, has a shot at individual
honors in the freshman meet. The
Dane pups are 3-3. Most of the
freshman teams will come from
the same colleges as the varsity
entrants.
Bowling Season Opens
EEP, UFS Victorious
AMIA opened its League 1
bowling competition this past
weekend with two teams
registering four points. Both UFS
and Potter Club shutout their
opponents on Saturday.
Standings after first week:
won/lost
EEP 4/0
4/0
3/1
3/1
3/1
1/8
1/3
1/3
0/4
0/4
UFS
Shafts
Choppers
TXO
APA
Steinmetz
Bad News 5
ALC
KB
The Shafts recorded the high
game single with a score of 884.
UFS scored the high game set
with 2562 pins.
Bert Devorsetz scored both the
high single (236) and the high
3-game set (580).
The top ten averages were:
Bert Devorsetz
Ron Romano
John Burke
Tom Guzik
Paul Dayton
Gary Behrns
Bob Eichorn
Dave Craig
John Brandone
Joe Hleboski
RACKET STRINGING
Tennis—Squash
Gut & Nylon
Call 436-1307
WORK FOR JAVITS.
HE’S WORKING FOR YOU.
The war. The draft. The upheaval in our cities.
Senator Javits knows the problems that are troubling
American students. And he’s working toward solutions.
The War: In February 1967, the Senator split with the
administration’s war policy. Since then he has been
working for a halt to the bombing in the North, a cease
fire on both sides and a speedy de-Americanization of
the war.
The Draft: This year, the Senator introduced a bill to Con-
gress to change our antiquated draft laws. In part, it
would give us a lottery system. One which would subject
a man to the draft for only one year. Instead of eight.
The Citi
: Senator Javits is the man who founded the
Student Coalition for Urban Action. A group that will
become directly involved in solving the problems of our
problem-ridden cities.
The future of America will soon be in your hands. Yet
many of you, too young to vote, feel that your hands are
tied. Senator Javits disagrees. If you're old enough to
have an opinion, if you're old enough to speak out, then
you're old enough to work for a man who shares your
opinions and who will speak out with you,
If you'd like to know more about Senator Javits’ accom-
plishments of the past and plans for the future, you can.
If you'd like to help work for Senator Javits, you can.
Either way, contact Peter McGinnes at (518) 463-2532.
And remember, you don't have to be able to vote in
November to make your opinions count.
WORK FOR THE SENATOR.
RE-ELECT JAVITS.