Albany Student Press, Volume 59, Number 8, 1972 February 18

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PAGE 16

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

by Carole Gaelick

Four plus two (don't ask what it
stands for) is more like a big home
with lots of kids than a typical
Albany State dormitory. Anyway,
it is what a dorm should be like
and whether this is because of the
physical layout, the individu
involved (the attitude of one par-
ticipating in a dorm coordinated
for the special purpose of getting
along with others), the very con-
cerned R.A,'s who have been in-
volved in seeing that the dorm
gets off to a strong start in its first
year or the naturalness of a coed
dorm would be hard to say, But in
its second semester four plus two
has gotten itself together and
looks like it's picking up speed,

Social Activity

At first, residents will tell you,
people were slow in coming out
and becoming involved in dorm
life. Now, however, people are
enthusiastic and there ix, much
sharing of uctivities. ‘This may be
in the form of a Chinese cooki
class, rts and crafts, a people
feast, or someone possessing a
skill and wanting to share it with
others, Often the activities sare
Spontaneous: a beer party being
planned in three days, the iden of
a classical _musie concert coming
up at a qathering of friends, oF i
wroup of kids singing and playing

Indian Quad

Social Success

guitar outside on a cold, snowy
night after a fire drill.

A coordinating committee meet-
ing once a week consists of «
representative from each floor of
the two halls. Here, various con-
cerns of the dorm, ideas of the
programming committee, and
news of happenings on the quad
and outside the quad are discussed
and acted upon. Each month a
different floor is in charge of
programming andin the past this
committee has scheduled films,
invited speakers—including Presi
dent Benezet and Professor Gold-
man-and set up a first aid class,

At the beginning of the year
meetings were held with the two
hundred people in the dorm but it
was found that not much could be
accomplished that way and so
they switched over to the repre:
sentative system,

‘A regular feature of the dorm is
the coffee house which is held
covery woek-night with a different
person in charge exch night. This
tends to up the evening for
those who are studying and brings
people (gether,

First Birthday
The idew of four plus twe eame

resilt of the insight and planning

oo

//nouse Fue
LIKE me

k Patan Better social life within a dorm is the result of an Indian Quad

experiment.
of Bob Brody, the dorm's current
director, and Mike Freeman, last
year’s director, Brody was “frus
trated with the living situation on
campus” which seemed more like
life in a New York City apartment
house. He says he “was not sure
the University should be in the
dorm business" because “it is too
structured and people tend to
change their life styles to modify
the buildings.

What he did was to ask housing
to let him run the dorm the way
he wished, ‘This included having
no people assigned to live there by
housing so it could be set aside as
‘8 special dorm, ‘Then it was publi
cvzed, special interest meetings

held, and of the four bun:
dred people who applied, two
hundred were drawn by lottery to

be residents, Four plus (wo was

chow
put together with the idea of
getting people who cared into a
close communal living situation.

“Sense of Community”

People living here seem happy
and healthy and this is the healthi
ness which results from iying con
fortably in a warm piace with
others you feel free to be yourself
with, The sense of community is
strong and this feeling exists with:
in a group where each person is
unique and different

Next year Brody and the R.A 's
will be teaving bul they've no
worry for the continuance of the
dorm, Already twenty residents
have applied for the position of
RA. and these were students who
have seen the dorm off toa good
start

McGovern Needs Wisconsin Primary Victory

By Carl P, Leubsdorf
AP Political Writer

In a fashionable living room here in New Hamp:
shire’s largest city, Sen, George S, McGovern was

speaking to some 100

al Democrats, while a
mobile twirled lazily above his right ear

know it isn't going to be easy to score a
McGovern landslide in New Hampshire," he said,
“On the other hand, it wasn't easy for a liberal
Democrat like George MeGovern to win election to
the Congress in Republican South Dakota 15 years

ago.

“1 won by hard work,” the South Dakota senator
added. “I won by telling the truth, and I won by

taking positions that I stuck with
unpopular, and 1 won the respe
my state,"

even when it was
of the people in

IL was the 49-year-old McGovern at his best,
talking earnestly but low-keyed to a small audience
committed to his liberal point of view, His words

drew repeated applause.
Less than 10 hours liter, Met

funds outside the al Electric
workers: hurried

industrial Somersworth, As th

ern was shaking

plant in

through a steady snowfall to report for the 7 a.m,

shift, the senator barely had tim
lot alone state his quest for the L

dential nomination, Recognition was seant

“Who Is It?"

to give his name,
murat pre

McGovern needs the inteth

“You're oul ently,” one woman said as she scurried
past. ‘Then, turning to a cluster of reporters, she

asked, “Who as 17

voters, despite his unprecedented dee
candidacy a full year before the

campaign,

Few politicians jive him a chanew to wir, but
MeGovern insists that his chances

nood.””

are “pretty

nnndidle of the pack
Warmly received by those who know ane share his Jahn V, Lindsay
long opposition to the Vietnam
MeGovern remains relatively unknown to many MeGioesca cal a ropurter

dhdn’t do as weit

(uals who flocked to MeCarthy in “68

andl ahwadl of New York Mayer
T would be very surpri

John Landsay an

Midwest “the

Wisconsin,

Crucial Fest

But the cruel test for MeGavery will come on
April 1 in Wisconsin, the fest primary it his native

concedes th Assess

He contends that Sens Edmund S. Muskw of ah an Itty ear sped acriss Craven New Hamp

Maine and Hubert 1 Humplirey of Minnesestic wilt
neutralize euch other, and that he ean defeat the
survivor in the California and New York primaries i
June As McGovern sees it, Ube question is can he

sustiin his own eaudidaey until U

shire one raneht

have to wine Wise

MeGovern saul, “E think we othe

What he hopes to de is combire support av rural

Wiscansin, where bhi man rival is Hemptirey, atl a0

In New Hampshire's March 7 primary, McGovern the liberal university

hopes to overcome the heavily

personal contact, which often means driving ais hour

to shake 40 hands,

In Florida a work later, he hopes to finish in the

vared Muskie by Landsay and
populous Milwanker

Muskie

ner af Madmen, aver

ter aalfset” Muskie's lead i

Strong showings «(hese three primaries should, an

MeGovern’s view, solve his mast persistent problem

the lack of voter recognition which he sees as the
main reason for his low ranking in publie-opinion
polls

McGovern hoped his head start in campaign
would lift him into a clear fourth place, behind
Muskie, Humphrey and non-candidate Edward M
Kennedy but early 1972 polls still show him wking
only 6 or 7 per cent of the national Democratic
vou

On other fronts, MeGovern’s pre-1972 efforts h
been more productive.

While he has few backers among party regulars, his
work to reform delegate selection procedures for
the 1972 Democratic nominating convention has
resulted in strong support from the party's reform
wing - those who backed the late Sen, Robert F.
Kennedy and former Sen, Eugene J, McCarthy in
1968

“Best Organi

Financially, MeGovern has raised $1.2 million but
says he has spent more of it then he hoped. He alse
has put together what is generally conceded tw be
the best organization in both New Hampshire and
Wisconsi

After internal difficulties, his national organiza
tion has settled down under the Iradersap af Prank
Mankiewies, press seeretary to Robert Kennedy ans
an aude in MeGovern’s brief 1965 presidential bud.
and Gary Hart, 3) 31 yearold Denver lawyer active
m the 1968 Kennedy eampayge,

Jess, neither money nor erganiation hi:
ws har i solving MeGoverit’s most jpres

problem canvinemg voters that he as a serieus

FP oknow what the publeapaian pulls say
MeGovern suid that might an Edward) Fleisher’
Manchester living coum, the Lith stap ofa LLap
Pearaner day. “But at the polly had been ght an
167, George Romney would naw fe as tis thud
ear at the White Hote
New HLumpstire, he added, the L968 pre p
Hy yave Eugene: MeCarthy only 10 per
tian aby Fup wah 12 per cent
fern has tried to avoids specitie predict
Jay of campange
wee HL abe bet ty
MeCarthny
That caused consternation among fis mat
They would he happy to finish a elase second to
and well ahead of Mayor Sam Yorty of Lis
hy the conservative Ma
chester Union
20 per cent show)

State University of New York at Albany

Friday, February 18, 1972

Tuition Hike Imminent

by Vicki Zeldin
Capitol Correspondent

SUNY tuition will rise to $650 for freshmen and
sophomores and $850 for juniors and seniors next year
according to reliable sources at the capitol.

No official announcement on the hike can be expected
from SUNY Central office until the Board of Trustees meets
next week, but confirmation of these figures appears
imminent.

The increase reflects the dire straits that the university
system has found itself in this year. The Governor has
recommended a $471 million budget for the university and
has offered the system $408 million of that figure. It is up
to SUNY to come up with the additional $63 million, and
the increase in tuition along with a probable hike in other
student fees including room rents — probably a hike of
$100 — and admissions fees — probably from $5 to $15 —
appears to be SUNY’s solution.

SUNY was slated for a $150 tuition hike in September
1973 which was to follow the $150 hike experienced this
year, Currently SUNY tuition is $550 for all undergraduate
students from New York.

The differentiated costs between upper and lower class-
men was given support by SUNY Chancellor Ernest L.
Boyer earlier this year. He contends that a higher charge for
upper classmen reflects the increased cost of their educa.
tion.

At a Tuesday press conference, Governor Nelson A.
Rockefeller could not be pinned down as to whether the
above tuition figures were correct and he stated, “I am not
In @ position to recommend a tuition hike...” The Governor
did indicate that the state would have to increase scholar
incentive payments to meet a tuition hike. Calling the
incentive payments an “aid to those at the bottom,” he
stressed that aid formulas must be based upon the ability of
the student to pay

The Governor also said that the SEEK and EOP Programs
“must be continued and increased as funds will allow." Any
increase in the scholar incentive program or further liberali-
zation of existing loan programs would have to be the result
of legislative action.

While tuition is used only to pay SUNY construction
bonds, funds collected the first year tuition is raised can be
used for operating expenses. It has been estimated that a

$50 increase in tuition would generate some $7 i
million fc
the SUNY system. “

tudents Gear for Tuition Fight

-See Page Four
and Editorial

FEBRUARY 18, 197)

PAGE 2 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FEBRUARY 18, 1972

Slated to Speak on Counter-insurgency: My ae apis Squelched by Boyer?
Blanchfield Gives Views on World Events ey) Report Backs Schools

situation in South Viet Nam as one specific he was 7
by Ferris Enock most interested in. Blanchfield explained he had no &
Major Thomas Blanchfield, sponsored by the first-hand information about Viet Nam, but went on | ;
Forum of Politics, spoke to an audience of about to tell of his experiences in Korea. ge Campus School Report
one-hundred and fifty Wednesday night in the One student brought up the topic of “urban” by Vicki Zeldin
Campus Center Assembly Hall, He explained the guerillas and this lead Blanchfield to the subject of is 4 Capital Correspondent a
Problems of guerilla life, and outlined the objectives counter-guerilla warfare, which he was slated to UNY should “take a firm stand to continue present campus fo
of guerilla warfare. discuss. He freely admitted that torture and terror schools...” according to the report of an ad hoc committee appointed
Blanchfield first defined “guerilla” according to zation are used to fight guerillas, but emphasized Ue ren by BEY Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer to consider the future
Reng, soeig at 2 Neombatantforee exing veil that he had never uw such methods or had Rn OP ntecd a ue cat onoentee me narane
and later used the term to identify anyone personally seen them used. He told the audience unl her eee ane Coe ales peesite ces conina iy Uewen It
who was “an enemy of the United States,” that “every man in the armed forces is trained in felt by some observers that Boyer attempted to “sit on” the report,
He went on to deseribe the physical and mental counter-insurgeney.” because he wauld like lo dispense with the ten‘SUNY funded and
hardships most guerillas face, emphasizing the stress Kurlier in the evening, students opposing the operated schools that cost some $5 million a year to support, but the
report did not recommend this action, A cover statement from SUNY

placed upon the querille forces who are usually appearance of Blanehfield met to organize their
out-numbered by the enemy protest, ‘They held fogs made comments Central included with the report states that, “AL this Lime of fiscal
__ All queril ‘is stated by Blanehtiold, throughout the lecture, bat crisis, all programs in the University must be carefully reviewed,
support the population of the country Meveral Uinen dari Priorities must he set. ‘The future of the campus school is crucial
Fighting for, He outlined the principle personal opinions on subject a

ue aia The report claimed that the schools provide “essential prestudent,
luerilla warfare, naming ambushes ax the most Blanchtield and Viet Nam to the genera situation inf caching laboratory. schools." The document also ealled forthe

effective and most widely used attack. the world, The evening tually ten sl Pe e
i ! f id vening eventually. tu a campus schoo! utilization plan to cover the next five
Mler Blinchfield finished his prepared talk, he and an analysis of the cost of operating the schools to

invited questions fram the A student ¢ up, but dialogues Se f such costs are reasonable. The report concluded, “It is i} ‘t
Major Thomas Blanchfield’s speech on counter-insurgency Wednes cuential now that the State University of (New York" pcsording to the report of en ed hoc committee ‘appointed by Chancellor Boyer, SUNY “siould take a

asked bin to Hispere with generalities and hypo: continued as people left the Assembly Hal spec . now thal ue aly
wtical cases and talk about specifies, citing the i ¢ develop a policy regarding the role of its Campus Schools."*
i ting th day ended in the trading of accusations and insults between people in ia te sere ect, Albany’s Campus School - The Milne School - firm stand to continue present schools.” The 7th and 8th grades of Milne Schoo! (above) were recently

See Centerfold the audience, while Blanchfield slipped out a rear door of the Campus Principal, Dr. Theodore Fossieck sent a letter to the Chancellor last dropped.
Center Assembly Hall. More pix in centerfold. ‘month stating that it would be good for the University’s public image
if the Chancellor would make a positive statement about the campus

Some Notes on Re _ . schools, Possieck Clima thal he never received a response (a his letter j j
ome Notes on Residence Living Middle Earth onsor: The chinciortas madona poison encapasamos” Day Care Center Opens in Pierce
Evidently the State Dorm ‘They will install storm windows Pp Ss Ss Foamy be not vel ave & copy of ie ad hos comnts report;

matey Ka! MBER ME KE GRE OH Eke hee en Drug Seminars Saturday Tait ANY practicalities! Desryite Critical Lack of Funding

money, and when they have it, and will take them down in
they Haunt it, SUNYA dorms ire April, Where the man pow for] According to SUNYA Vice president for Academic Affairs, Dr.
slated far some much needed this tittle endeaver will come | by Vicki Gottlich totally community supported interest in what is a Phillip Sirotkin , « preliminary copy of the report was received here 2
Dee Rante nIBer pityaient from:lanet quite evertaen: Bul) Fil Haturday. a 10 “AMM ie ceenter: in the Brons>qorks eral the RA thie gltle POSE A te ae Ce ee Ge BA Bid pat favor = each child inscheduled in ordetto  Whan-good weather comes, the
alterations in the newe future the most interesting thing about our te ae ee Wield . Phasing out the campus schools terming them “invaluable for a conform to the needs of his par: children must be kept indoors, as
The gusty winds Uhit Tower thew alarm, winking aha dynamic educational system.” He stated that it was felt that the role en nae ee P i
residents have experienced will Gace they ust put ups aie] of the campus school should not be so much for student teachers ax
subside thanks to a few changes unsuspecting dorm resident wilt] Middle Earth will he sponsoring a be a panel discussion or the work: more workshops will he leu Soak erimentation and observation, He also stremed that the schools, determined parents, a day-care
Some work will be daneon the — find that ne ean't hin} heroin workshop open to the shop will break into groups, vi : , gf ete aren pene Ea ile ag Maia ie aay
’ can't open. hin KFOUPS. various other topics Sirotk n Albany committee that studied — downtown, in Pierce Hall. ‘The
recommended thal the seventh grade be eliminated next fall Center ig the product of a long ad
r f difficult struggle to secure such a
facility for the university com
munity
Organized by University Parents

lecture venter 1, heroin comes to political views on herwin use, of drugs. I it tea
p Liste cited Due largely to the efforts of ents. there is no safe place for them to
‘A great problem ties, however, play and no playground equip:

in the erying lack of funds. Stu: ment, anyway.
dent Association hax managed to ‘Thanks 0 the efforts of such
contribute about $3,000, mostly dedieated parents. ax Barb Bton,
an the form of scholarships" for Marilyn Burch and Jack Green,
prents who couldn't otherwise af the center was planned, licensec

ford i ‘The university helpy out and opened, ‘The paid staff mem

Albany State, AL that time, Afler the films, there will either helps to reduee student path

fans in the elevator shafts 90 windows. So from October to| entire university community and depending on the audienes's The purpose of the: workshop
rer erlienis el ihe able prit_doren livers ean evid to the general public. preference, Any student who feels to. share information It ‘

ry aga Dees Sat My ova ye teh ie | ‘The seminar ic scheduled to tat he hat a tol of Information to prone dee eta i Cee ee
dy days, Doors will te and. te thrawing toilet papee aut | alt murine aeud oft ; ux education, net p ned that experimentation was easier at the High School level a

irainlied At Choe Gad atthe! Wiwodten pap all ma afternoon and ax impart and wants to speak should vention, Middle Barth's jpsitien cut in grades would help to aid the basic mission that the P ty

hulls an the wen flan ‘This “"Anather” intersting mote | Meet People want to share and contact Middle Earth or come to makin infers versity has for the school, He also cited the problem of By, rove : Cetiiforoat a: bara afwrl Shel iad Pat Wiel

oun afore ‘Two films early Saturday moring. Coffee and not to tell people what tl Narain as. Or ie the cutbacks. Fossiec! ( for Day Care, a i prided token seal fe but much ok, are rep for his en

| will be shown, “Darkness, Durk- donuts will be served for hee heir t! IVA Peete Lear int ci care for pre-school children under more is needed ion in comparison to whal

Gas", GhIER: hliswn thes hue loalpand thewenen a 1A RAR: Thee alin "this: workshop: SUNYA President Louis ‘T. Bene the supervision of qualified stuff — While there isa supply of toy: could qet with their educa:

an shop will break teach what they know Fhe rept ruary 33, but at members, valuateers, and parents reat deal more a aveded to make tion, Both have experience in

contidential Ue did say that he had sen drafts of the report Tctenk Al ieedent, deere are Mie conten whial HW eMule OK Be ihelntiddeand are Tully quatiried

rated in Beubachwr Halt down | film depicting the ghetto views last semester during meetings with fare, mvervane atte receiving the final draft ' Hee. Teregurt wren head Tie al toys for the children, not to teers from SUNYA help out, ax do

mention at supplies sueh as Tinger parents of the enrolled children

ty pot q State Quad, | point. ‘There will also be guest people fram residence, the mnfir Benezet felt that the report was good because it challenges more, "The rama allated the day
no knowledge about the wdrig asa ayia at Speiik ne eure center are spacious and plvay paints, paper, erayons, sandal p p
7 eeoneamies trad tee be made samewhere that h clothes world be really asefal, as eenter LE anyone is interested in

will allegedly also help to eat about resdence
down on the drafts, How Albany's newest
uLting the cost will be forthe still unfinished de
sume 60 doors and the labor te "Tower will hi | middie claws view on heroin, and for Tuned heroin and ts gain the ke

children enrolled, and the fei

PATE Is UNSEEN IMITALIVE purpases Offices to | the award winning “Skezaye", a a for a workshop began” that others have tw ave Th
could accommodate many

With an even mare amcing dea as well ay others, will mave mt | speakers eepraenting views mary counseling, Student Aff see rH te
the tower 1 would seem then, | groups. ‘These peuple

that the dorm roomy on State H
capable and eathusnistie Time as

Tower East Cinema |_|" \""""' eee rial te | Lean Van Dyke and Gordon Van heroin problem pus in pi: 1 , h i
varie ety structured and activities are ear would a “homemaker set wath a

m the Community Keleral terms of preve f
" counseling, hha it
remdent did note that qed catia vontéalled gremp  phiy stave, stk and vefeqerator

enrolling
their services. or

prescuts offices will now probably be |
hind af a donation, they are asked

im Albany to discuss the and treatment. Sinee there is nie tenweal mete aun acceptance
Sine there isn " But even mare averssaty tsa real

veconverted ta dorm. rooms,
u ' Albany herwin problem; De David real drug edue wine cone at action, and Boyer could nat atinasphens which provides eyeet
NOSTALGIA [I]} 3 5 et tv seo | Many bern ps vse Dada dag raion un camp : NaC Tas aril jen antecpenal apron fe stir with anne dat ware aul 10 stop a Che evo on giv
doems for non residental pr & pharmacologist from was felt that people really do nat Attention! . Governor submitted: a bil that would have in effort jhe ehitdeen that has mace than two burners, them a call at 6-018), Everyone
Hriwerator they Dave as ants Weleame to visit the center and

poses, the stile will not recoive department of Nursing, to know what is going on, A way to away with the Campus Schools. The hill would have required Lennie RRA Th
te hold the huneh sup allare urged ta. do so.

featuring ihe $50 cata ewhtal Crum gasw | acting Ine eiscal preteand tbe hate” sole Therm: wl esa ra ing se ir sate t
: ant and eaconingtul | SUNY and CUNY non cane wi ye eh erie ry” soe ate Dl he I
MEWADIEAL UST AGE GAMA TLC hth service ab Miu Cost HO par pales amd mk On the subject af

-s student and will thus be sub: [effects of heroin: and Nora David information to studen i
THE suclizing rams. that and Jun Wertsanched tha 4 tudents, pam: | TONIGHT at 7PM in the Fireside Whidily chioDLCul ATA, ivy: sctinia disttietxowunldl. ante (th

an Hernandes from the phlets not always being thinbhe Atiaarheg hee Killa: Mea Tete Kania sacl fits. Ker this reasen, the fers iy init the ebildren must have: wa
eee sears ale es vd) Morn sack

LONE RANGER | set suppeve to subsidiee [Lincoln Park Community Drag. Won needed. Theseten yee fan nerased eut fe Ailsany. a saute $I 0000 he al
First plier the tune ef fesse nlet lo dieuss how their shop was set up to spuck penplers fic never enacted ante fav. (ieee "pen Monday

held to Sch ve day ‘The facility ay ter wath ther
‘ through Friday. in order ta save what milk there is
a sterile beer ues as nds (he eontinu 7:30 am, until 5:10 pam, and for lunchtime
suse af the campus sely cucrent level af fund

The Lost City
$3 :
Of Gold university concert board presents: MONDAY IS

gerald meboing R DON Mc L E A N & DOUBLE THE "STE" NITE

tweety & sylvester ~“D

bage bunny B O i ae

Ee BONNIE RAITT ia
f 1]

betty boop 5
BOC POOPY DOOR EVERY MONDAY 5 to 9 P.M. (EXCEPT HOLIDAY)
show lasts two hours ORDER 2 STEAK DINNERS AND SAVE
sunpay, |, Saturday , February 19 t inet me $975

2 Baked Potatoes oF

2 Ondors of French Frias 4.16 a
2 Orders Sizztor Toast au

FEBRUARY 20 « 6 3
LC-7 at 9 00 Ih the Gym i 2Edede Ine. tae

% 2 Beverages

7:30 & 9:30 $2.00 with tax card $4.00 without it “— FULLER ROAD *438-7646 A day care center has once again been opened in Pierce Hall at the downtown campus. The center

FREE i 00 ion from Student Assoc be f insufficient funding, has been
y received a $3,000 appropriation from Student Association, yet, because o|
with state quad card funded b: student tax

8.50 without] Sseseezs:

(Between Contral Ave. and Washington Ave. Extension)

- SUN.-MON. 11:00-9:00...FRI. & SAT. 11:00-9:30 :

See |

Proof of age required

PAGE 4

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FEBRUARY 18, 1972

News Briefs

International

Ecuador's military chiefs ousted President Jose Maria
Velasco Ibarra Tuesday night for the fourth time in his career
and sent him off to Panama, ‘The purpose of the coup
apparently was to prevent the election of a radical to the
presidency,

Brig. Guillermo Rodriguez Lara, who was rewarded with
command of the army after putting down an attempt to
overthrow Velasco lust April, declared himself president. He
said he would be assisted by a council made up of the three
service chiefs: Rear Adm, Renaldo Vallejo, Air Force Gen.
Julio Espinosa Pineda and whoever is named to command the
army,

‘The new president pledged to respect all existing interna:
tional treaties but announced no other plans oF policies

Terrorists dragged a bus driver away from his screaming
Passengers Wednesday night in Londonderry and execut
him in the getaway car. A British soblier was shin sear
Belfast, bringing Ulster’s death toll in 2% years af violence to
at feast 245,

In Newry, Bernadette Devlin and 25 ather Roman Catholies
Won a court victory by gaining postponement of a hearing on T
charges that they participated in illegal marches, Plucard
carrying crowds cheered the decision,

National

John N, Mitchell resigned ax attorney general ‘Tuesday to
take command of President Nixon's re-election campaign.
Nixon quickly tapped Richard G. Kleindienst, Mitchell's
deputy and personal choice for the Cabinet post

Senate liberals promised close questioning of Kleindienst, an
Arizona conservative, but early indications were that “his
nomination as the Presid
Senate sonfirmati
Mitetiel, one of Nixon's che
advisers, manag hie 1968 campaygn Hix rsagiat on to
diewet Une 1972 effort hil hen expected fo months, but

Slop local aadsisor woud gata

1 pers al ane pabisiedt

aparently wax delayed hy debate within th vdininist ation
hour his successor

Securny peeeautions for political campuntn headquarters aL
Leverigthie ned teaday
sof bombings whiel dhumaged the poliee ane tire

Manchester were WAThOre vey anivesty
ated tse

Latieons Wealnestlay
Oitiewals sai they wore Lakin “every jreeaution” afte the
Dambinigs and the seazare ot a ether sae hy the Peoph
Laberanin \emy which wndieated there aight he tuether
hae

HS very ditheutt to detec: whether this wes hin
AUY Gen Waren Ruchnan sant te

ail there Way er mnehieation That mvare han twee presi

Aub have heen mnivalyed, but the dvestasition Seeuld eaery
slinwst anywhere

A yenunit rian and at younie weaniane were aevesteal Wednesday
after tliree Iams slat
the nearby fire depar
hurt

wl windows al thie pesiew station and

WE headquarters Nec aftieers were

Publisher Halph Gineburg surrendered featay to begun
serving theee veur fedeeal prise
Hiveratere: theaugl the mals As he feral butting
he threw a copy of the Bill of Rights inti a nearby ast ean

In throwing away his copy of the Bill af Rights, he ad
“Every day L remain behind bars the Bill of Mighty isa
menningless plece of paper He said he was gory to prison
for printing “something E believed an

nzburg, the publisher of Lhe short lived quarterly ros,

Ns convicted nine years ayo of mailing what was judged to
be obscene material convietion way later upheld by the
US. Supreme

1 for sending abseene
ntored

A Democratic
legalize,
alcohol
Assemblyman Fras er of Manhattan told a news
conference Tuesday he ix reintroducing a bill which failed to
ist Year bul now bears some modifications
basis intent of the bill, however, is the same: to remove
fil ban on possessing, selling and using marijuana
chter said he is behind the drive “because of strong
dical evidence and opinion that marijuana is no more
harmful than aleohol oF tobacco
‘The current widespread use of the illegul plant, he said, “ix
wr to the situation during Prohibition" when sales uf
hquor were illegal

wants New York State to
sale of marijuana the way it does

Nixon Leaves for China

By Gaylord Shaw
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON AP - President
Nixon began his ‘journey for
peace” to China ‘Thursday - a
historic mission he said he was
undertaking for all mankind in
search of a common ground with
the longhostile and isolated
Asian Communist power.

‘As he embarked for the first
face-to-face summit meeting ever
between U.S, and Chinese Com-
munist leaders, he tempered his
words of hope with words of
caution.

“We are...under no illusion that
20 years of hostility...will be
swept away by one week of
talks,” Nixon told some 8,000
persons attending farewell cere
monies at the White House, ‘Then
he and Mrs, Nixon winged west
ward to Hawaii on the first leg of
his 20,395-mile, 13-day journey

“We will have great differences
in the future,” he said. “What we
y to see that
ss wilh

must de is find
» haw our differe
being
Before returning to the United
opemended series of talks with
Chinese leaders Mao ‘Tse-tung and
Chou Enlai, attend round of
four banquets in three cities and
visit the Great Wall and other
Chinese shrines and historie sites.

Nixon met for 45 minutes
‘Thursday with Democratic and
Republican congressional leaders,
giving them what House GOP
Leader Gerald R. Ford of Mich

n_described as ‘‘a realistic ap-
Praisal of the possible results.” He
promises to brief them upon his
return

‘Then, without a topcoat to ward
off the winter chill, the President
stepped onto the South Lawn to
deliver his brief farewell remarks.

The President recalled his state-
ment of July 15 - when he an
nounced that a secret summer
mission to Peking by his foreign
affairs adviser, Henry Kis
had set up the unprecedented
summit meeting.

Phat statement was, as you will
recall, that this would be a jour
ney for peuce,” he said. Nixon
noted, too, a toast offered by
Chou’ when Kissinger was in
Chin

“The American people ure a
reat people,’ ” he quoted the

hinese premier as saying. " “The

hinese people are a great people
‘The fact that they are separated
by a vast ocean and reat differ
ences in philosophy should not
prevent them from finding com
mon ground.’ "

Nixon said if his talks with
Communist leaders bring progress

rd finding that common

SASU and USS Affirm Right
to Free Public Education

In response to the Govern-

Proposals to the SUNY and

or's stated intent to raise CUNY student governments,
tuition at the State Universi- Mr. Borenstein stated, “It is

ty (SUNY) and impose tui- unfortunate that

students

tion at the City University will have to spend their time
(CUNY), the leadership of organizing and fighting for
the Student Association of no-cost public education, but

the State University of New without this fight,

public

York (SASU) and the City higher education in New
University Student Senate York will be destroyed. Only
(USS) have joined together through the coordinated ac
to affirm the right of every tion of both the City Univer
resident of the State to pub: sity students and the State
lic higher education at no University students, through
cost, Both groups favor the USS and SASU, can we hope

maintenance of a system of to be su

admissions which allows e

ssf.”
The joint statement marks

qual access to the college or the first time that SUNY and

program of

one’s choice. CUNY student organizations

They are convinced that crea- have jointly appealed to such
tive alternatives exist to meet broad policies which are ne.
the costs of higher education cessary to the survival of
in New York State. SASU their institutions,

and USS represent the com
bined interests of some
500,000 students enrolled in
SUNY and CUNY.

The joint letter, signed by
Mr. Richard Lewis, Chairman
of USS, and Mr. Mark Boren.
stein, Chairman of SASU,
grew out of discussions and
meetings in Binghamton and
Albany over the past two
weeks between members of
the executive bodies of both
organizations,

The two groups have asked
their respective constituen-
cies to respond to a draft
resolution on no cost public
higher education and to re.
search several alternatives
that could cut the cost of
higher education. They have
called for a joint SUNY—
CUNY student meeting in
Albany on February 27,
1972 to approve a unified
Position and develop state.
wide implementation  strat-
egies.

Commenting on the Point
statement and the suggested

ground “the world will be a much
safer world.”

And, motioning to the hundreds
of school children on the lawn
many of them chatt
ly as he talked - Nixon
he hoped “all those young
ren there” would havi
“to grow up in a world of p

About 200 Americans:includ
87 accredited news media pers
nel = are flying into. China with
Nixon, joining about 100 already
there ing
ments,

In the months prior to the slay
of departure, Nixon stress 1
peatedly that he had ne expects
tion of spectacular results. fy.
the trip.

He spoke after of increase ¢
munication between — matany
China and the United States
perhaps through an exchange ot
athletes, scholars, sci

JDL

WASHINGTON AP Nw
dewish Defense League ment

from New York, seeks tu ox
change Attica convicts for Jews

students,

imprisoned in the Soviet Un
spent part of the
hours in jail ‘Thursday after «
seven-hour sit in at the office ul
‘Ted Kennedy, D-Mass
Capitol Police Chief 4
Powell said six adults and three
juveniles were arrested when they
refused to leave the office about
Ls pam, five hours after the usual
closing time
He said all nine were hooked for
investigation of “unlawful entr
bly posted tutu

arly- morning

Some pres
and the others were
Thursday beewuse 1 ¢
pressed, Powell said

An aide tw K

shout 10 league mentee
the offies about {yin
sented a letter

rine prepe

he tea Labe
wrestys that shuns

Thee imate

Jno
The sx

United State

inside tea wall

Hoagie nicmbers cantonal

Ends Tuesday
February 22
A

DARING
RIP-OFF OF

AN ALPINE RESORT

Today—7:30, 9:30
Sat.—Mon,
Sunday—2:30, 4:30,
6:30, 8:30

HAN CLAUDE RELY SNOW 08

Prrhiced by Ema | Rasen
arn Ware ot A Kn

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The world’s greatest skier
1 his fist full length feature motion pictur:

)

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0

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forget ae “one rk tg ee

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

Dvecied by Gare Englund Panawsast laser ®

—_

Company

More Money Sought
For Environment

Legislative Bill:

Liquor Store Grass

A bill to legalize marijuana — with conditions —
has been introduced in the state legislature by
several legislators, including Franz S. Leichter’ of
Manhattan, At a press conference Wednesday, the
bill’s sponsors and Dr. Lester Grinspoon of the
Harvard Medical Schoul discussed marijuana and the
need for reform of marijuana laws, The following
are provisions of the bill:

1, Kstablishing a State Marijuana Control Authori-
ty which will license and regulate growers, pro:
ducers, manufacturers, and distributors of marijua

2. The Authority will enforce regulations setting
the strength of marijuana to be sold at retail and
will, among other duties, require a warning on any

Priority given to the environ:
5 1973 Fiscal budget request
puts” by the National Wildlife

Washington, D.C
ment in th

fore the Subeotamittes on
le Committee on Appre

5 testimony

Fisheries and Wildl

priations, NWF E
that the new budget looks bike “a patchwork

ative Director Thomas Kimball
ms PU Logether in respanse to pressures” He
added that deste obvious national environmental
nweds, i seems that the “graups with the greatest
polneal clout get the most attention when funding
time rally avaund, especially nan election year

fequest, released on dan 24,
netional categories for Candin.

Natural Resources and

ment” is listed at the very: bottom,

listed $5.5 billion for a space shuttle progeam and

us in other years, the national defense budyet ts
billion. 1

Office
ed for the Environmental Protection ; presen
sentially the same, five Br
ie share alloted to the thwart

highest at $78

mained
billion proport
however, dropped tu about ae per Preside
iso charged that what environmental whe
tion of

funds have been appropriated by the Congress and

Pot Commission Reports

Hy Carl © Craft
Associated Press Writer

Hatenal commigien may commesien, headed by fornwer
sheaus the privates Gat Ravationd Pf Shater at Pon

Iecmnyths whieh tempt ans packed by Nesott
Preps: tees Uey at anach ntl METAL He csrvnnalize po
eilic teenth ese mariucia an thy

esnnes while ahiscosiagiinng aise tay
089 to the | oT eure

ssNk Hoertysexo Hesnilit ions pine esther things erin
ap shed of endorsing tatal sitelias pubhe use, saurees say

Legale vont The panel abo concluded, the
The thrist af the report Sista sources add that “while excessive
fuse the margiana issue, fo Use may he harmful, ne etear
the away Heemotional mythal evidence was found that moderate
Sabon the drug. the sources ust had detrimental effects an the
man user "There was ne real evidenwe
Commision officials have de (hit miaryuane users are bean
tlied comment until Mareh gt spurred: by the drug to, coment
when the repart will he presented megan erie ar te go an te hard

te Presttent Nixon and Cy naccalies, they say

CLASS OF ‘73

info law have not been properly spent hy 1
ot Ma and Budget (OMB) "T

1 oractiee oF impounding funds by the ix
anch actually dupes the American pu

s the will of Congress,” he said

emt should inform (he Congeess when he

nets Funds, and why.” Kimball eited instances

package or container of marijuana regarding possible
ill effects on the health of a user,

3. There will also be established a State Non-
Narcotic Advisory Council to consist of scientific
and governmental officers, such as the Commi
sioner of Health, to get quality (strength) controls.

4, Marijuana may be sold at retail only in licensed
liquor stores. All present rules and regulations
stores and the supervisory powers

of the State Liquor Authority shall apply.

5, Marijuana will be taxed,

Dr. Grinspoon spoke at length on the hypocrisy of
the present “grass” laws and off
for legalizing pot, His statement, following, is
excerpted from press statement prepared by the
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana

“We must consider the enormous harm, both
obvious and subtle, short range and long term,
inflicted on the people, particularly the young, who
will soon constitute the formative and
of aur society by the: present

eonstitute «
eeitieal memes
punitive, repressive approweh Lo (he use of marija
fa And we must consider damage inflicted on bead
and ther mstituliony when young people rewet to
what they see as a confirmation of their yew that
those institutions are hypoerttiea! and inequitable
greatest pot Harm ties in

Of SO Many young people and the

maye that are direct pro:

duets of the present marijuana, laws, 1 we are 10
ving this harm reach the proportions of a

sl disaster within the next decade, we

must move te make the social use of marijuana

teqal

money had been alloted 10 various conserva:

forts, but was never released by OMB.

wud prwate
amuawinnig alan. bec swatieees sad
Leng (erin vanpact thas wet been
determued, they saul

tls earned that the s,

commsswan is expected te recum
mend decreasing, penalties far pos
sessing minima, and tht the
panel would call for retianing marina ee
ceammal penalties for dewing an
der the artluenee of the dea
Hawever developed

stich ansues ais whet her enim

for those who give marnaane ty jeatvnd, wand

would be ey
meehinism bo get al the guy whe

The commission sud that, «
cept for that found an
1 be confiscated
and that the drug eoutd be eon
Heated except an homes

Less (han one ounce mn puble acting on proposed changes in
would net be lbygal but at could
al penalties should be continued he controlled and wauld be eon

woudl be legal 8

pushes at, but they: disagree on
home, what te de weath castle
ehanges,”* the sures sid

The recommendations will yo to

s for consideration an

federal drug: laws, and ay su
ions for sumilar revisions an state
fone ounces leyistattires,

nuriniuina AM earlier 0 study
showed that million
Americans have tried marijuana
with 80 millon earrent users

They want a

Your senior portraits for TORCH '73

will be taken starting March 5th

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starting Saturday.

Day and night appointments a

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onto the Finest Stereo Equipment they Il thank
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as
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k 2M¢ our prices the country $ lowest We pass

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Sy

PAGE 6
eee
Editorial

Stop the Hike

Now it’s clear.

‘The secret has been unveiled, and we know that the SUNY
trustees are planning to raise tuition to $650 a year for
freshmen and sophomores and $850 for upper-classmen.

This cannot be tolerated, The financing of public educa-
tion is not a matter which can be shrugged off and met
repeatedly with tuition increases,

State universities since their inception have answered the
need to provide the masses with a college education they
can afford. The forthcoming decision of the trustees
threatens to destroy this form of public higher education in
New York, and deny the opportunity for learning and
sconomic betterment to thousands of young people across
the state,

With the increase in fees the cost to a SUNY-Albany
upperclassman living on campus will soar to the vicinity of
$2500 a year. This is an outrageous amount to ask students
largely from middle to lower income backgrounds to pay,
especially since there are no guarantees of sufficient
scholarship increase
the tuition hik

Some students who got early word of
dy seriously considering dropping
out because of financial strain
We agree in principle with the SASU and UCC platforms
of no tuition at SUNY, but feel it is economically unfeasible

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

AATS THE PROBLEM... EVEN THE ECOLOGISTS
ARE SQUEEZING THE CHARMIN ‘

at this time,

FEBRUARY 18, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

The Object is to Graduate

To the Editor:
A recent ASP article dealing
with the present S/U, P/F, A-E
grading dilemma brought to mind
a solution which a friend and 1
worked out a couple of years ago.
The solution involves the creation
of a university lottery, a credit
casino, and a credit stock market,
‘The solution is easily under
stood once one accepts the pre-
mise that course credits and
grades are academic money, What
remains is to disburse this money
way. This should

‘This could be simplified by using
quality points. Third: Establish a
Credit Stock Market. In the stock
market chips will be traded on the
basis of course, So, for instance,
two introductory science course:
might be exchanged for an upper
level humanities course

The object of the game is to
graduate, This may be done al any
time by simply fulfilling the re-
quirements in any of the Bulle-
tins, One need only organize the
chips in such a manner as to
correspond to one of the magic

+ GRADUATION combinations i

color, creed, natior

wealth, or other inherited eh
following all

is offered in hopes of updat

origin,

the
present archaie system,
First, there should
lished a monthly lottery of
courses and credits, Freshmen will
he initial credit so they can
There will be
ies; the 1-33
credit
credit

nter the buttery,
five categories of lott
credit, 1-6 eredit, 7:9
10-12 dL
lotteries, For each category the
player will submit a credit chip of
al category, and receive one in
Chips. will be color

c ncide with credits and
grades (on an A-E basis for Grad,

© in the history of

any of the major and minor fields,
ny of the bulletins,
NYA.
efits of this system are
No one is excluded.
wal of

as specified in

Thee be
Most professors will be fr
the burden of having to Leach
Those who still wish to may teach
those students who still wish Lo
rn. Those students who are in
the university for a degree will
have the opportunity to earn ane
using the skills of resourcefulness
ingenuity so necessary for
their success once they are out of
school, ‘Those students who are at
pass the time
ably mor

the university just
consid
exciting way of doing tt

tees to investigate FSA and the
Administration's management of
the whole affair, Staff personnel
could be dealers, brokers, tellers,
roupiers, ete.
On the Other Hand all of the
games could be eliminated with

LNS-Hard Times

DETROIT (LNS)-With two
price increases on 1972 cars,
‘American Motors has just announ-
ced a “good year ahead” to its
stockholders. AMC reported it

made $6.7 million for the first
quarter of 1972. It was. only
months ago that they told auto
workers not to ask for raises
because of “hard time:

the simple abolishment of the
degree in which case the only
persons left would be those who
wanted to learn, The converse of
this would be to give the degree to
veryone, but this is morally re-
pugnant to too many people.

Keith Nealy
Class of 1970

WHY?

So it goes in the courtrooms and
law schools of the country. as
judges and lawyers and pr
ny to with
Fendants and still stay within the
Mostly they are
waiting for some guidance trom] gi

the Supreme Court

Lessors}
cope rowdy de.

Constitution f°

To thy

nd some are] But

The Dispos

‘To the Editor:
‘The level of ecological concern
exhibited by the SUNYA com-
munity seems to me to be quite
high. The can recycling center, the
variety of courses related to the
servation of the planet, and the
extent of committment Lo de!
the environment on the part of
the individual students Ut have
alked to, are all very positive
signs,
However, 1
shorteoming, ‘Th

have noted one
snack bar in the

sable Era

Campus Center provides paper
trays, paper plates, and plastic
utensils, all of which are dispo-
sable, This is unnecessary wastag
If durable items were acquired,
not only would some trees be
saved, but some deserving stu:
dents could be hired on as part
time dishwashers, IL might cause
some inconvenience to patrons
and management, but 1 think it
would be better if the disposable
cra ended at the snack ba

John Fox

Liberties Threatened

SUNYA community

HW ix not often that Canadian
rqanizations request financial as
stance from American citizens.

during the past year, the

search, seize, arrest, and detain
without warrant, bail, or charge.
Indeed, dissi ewspapers were
confiscated, printing presses were
seized, and hundreds of innocent
people went to jail

circumstances in our county dave

ay did
been of a very special nature,

administration could be gi saying, Hany Kalvin of
nsibility Chicago Law School, “We're a
little puseled now as to why] 4,

defendants have behaved so well] ¢

Although the emergency powers
were finally revoked, they have
left an unhealthy residue in our
political and legal climate, The
Government has announced its
Intention (o enact new legislation
dealing with peace-time emergen-
cies, Indeed, it has referred the
matter to a joint Senate-House
Committee. Political leaders have
talked openly about compulsory
identity cards, surveillance on
campuses, and even periodic press
censorship

schools and so forth) and marked
with specific course numbers.
Chips shall have small holes so. the lotteries, casi
they may be strung ona chain,or FSA would of course
worn on a belt or necklace, thus "THE BANK in the operation, The
obtaining the proper respect from University Senate, together with
‘one’s peers. lesser bodies of faculty and stu-

Second: Thi shall bea Credit dent government, could suggest to

Maximum Utilization of Students

In New York State, maximum
Utilization of student time for

It is important, however, that the state at lease hold the

line on tuition and maintain present fee levels. As for the Henny: nea

sophisticated for the
student exercising his
work for his education
‘The problem of providing eduea tion, staggering the
tion beyond high school for hun- ' Plants should go hand in band would eli student
dreds of th ds of students in i” Solving the current problems at unemploy ms
New York State and of keeping both State and City Universities. where one's credits and (he administration improvements
the State, the City of New York, Instead of two fifteen-week terms grades may be gambled (on the and modifications of the system.
the parents, and the student them. each followed by one week of Of course, th basis of credits and grades only.) ‘They could also appoint commit
selves solvent in the process, is a ¢Xaminations, three equal fifteen of government
very complex problem indeed followed by one and the universities would be .
week of examinations could be dispensable to this pl q
instituted on all of most of the mum utilization of student tin
‘State and City campuses: January: and university facilities .
times for his ix usually sparsely popull
Very few lawmakers ever see th
in this chamber, Ofte
Waid aside be

mid-October of 1970, the
ernment of Canada invoked
the War Measures Act, suspending,
many of our fundamental civil
liberties. Throughout Canuda, the
acquired the power to

private colleges, we recognize that they merit some financial | ‘To the Editor : poles
Te aks

support for absorbing students who would otherwise be
Wak aah

in the past.”
adding co the burden of state univeristy facilities, Bue the |
first priority must be to hold down SUNY. casts, so that

SUNY, ais we know it, can continue to exist

police

Casin The New York Times

While the individual certainly beneties from
education, society benefits coo

his higher ull cooperation

Thus, we propose an excess industry. lbw

Profits tax on the major businesses and industries in this
‘The New York 1

state, They depend largely on the colleges, o
reuse They P me Bes, Often state | of January 19th, urging the State
pported, for the people who plan, manage, and contribute | to “eonteuet out" students not
ta thal uge earnings, presently on State University cam
uses lo the private colleges in
# percent levied on profits | order to Gill the 14,000 vncuncig
above a fixed level could raise millions of dollars that the | 2 existing inthe latter, is
wompuniurrsisutl be sound, rational advice in the direc
tion of maximum, utilization of

mes editorial mA
To whatever extent such mea
sures ean prevail in any democrat
Ww country, they area threat to
civil liberties in every democratic
couutry, As a matter of fact,
many politwal leaders und com:
mentators outside of Canada,
Amwricans included, —expresied
explain or move his bill upen approval for the palicws of
bly, voting thy yur Government during and after
bie deal. In thisl (ie crisis
President

‘April, May: August, September
December. In this way all students
could be in attendance two terms
‘and still have the opportunity to
work a full four-month period

Anthony M. Gisolfi
Associate Professor,

called se

often interrupted by the chairand be
During this sa

allowed to proceed until the — vote.
When
order is

A tax of just a fraction of Opinion
by Vicki Zeldin not

Romance Languages
Capital Correspondent chamber comes to order

S.U.NLY. at ba
=~? Joginstation must b

elusive
cause ils sponsor is not around Lo}

and if this
achieved 1 never Lasts,
The traffic low in and out of
chamber at times could rival Samm
y city, Only “Why no” ne

Kingston mE don't know why. En Femporary
ey Stein voting ne." Karl Beydges and Minority Leader] op this rouse ven tdiest

While more semened Capital ah: daseph Zaretzki usually notify the] (yy ptfarta to resin repressive te
hut then these servers chim that most of the au ty hinw hain facta (HL Yeraging in: Ganmda, have Implle

decided am AL per has voted. One Senator] jigns for evvil liberties everywhere,
and featauranta atier accusionully xox “yen andl phe Canadian Civil Liberties As
to the unteained oh “nay” when ac bill as being vated) joeiation iy ane af the few pres
That the on, uxually:tocentertna, the mei | suns groups inthis country: whieh
hers af the press who sit near him PT mantamed, from the ineeption of
Meaers «sf this fntise ales eat dttunteanalialgon
ses, Unik therr} ous oppasition ta these emergen
the Assembly ey: powers, Mareaver, we are con
mitted terday: to the waging of a
full seals campaign aygiinst the en
additional repressive

willing to pay inorder to keep the
. aw

graduates coming Aldo Rovere y Hi, what's ths bill do
Graduate Student, fly “Nothing good
and City University budgets is Romance Langua wes: tags fl
allocated to maintenance, food 8.U.N.Y. at Albany varie, one
services, administrative and library vote ya
work. So many of these functions Sheryl! Samo vie sad ty al
could be performed by well super Graduate Student,
vised students. There should be no Romance Languages "

work too humble nor perhaps S.U.N.Y. at Alban,
‘and a tuitionless City College for pie “

the intellectually elite are superse:

c veo the Gth: grade on

Further, we suggest a series of “discouragement” taxes | ‘the: present demand for open iy Une hee =

enrollment (ie. admission regard
less of prior scholastic achieve:
ment or economic status of stu
dents and their families) is a prob:
lem so new and radical that the
old concepts of scholarship aid

aimed at both raising revenues for education and dis

couraging certain practices which are detrimental to socie
This approach worked in New York City, where recent
toll hikes on bridges and cunnels resulted in an 11% drop in

sila prassilaly, decide: tes
1) must he one of
University and Ma

students on the
Senate or an Central Couned Ne, gut seem to pay any attention ty
was one of your New York what is gouge an '

hany’s. bars

men are usially surrounded by

State Asgemblymen,

ides who probably keep
dl uh

car traffic into the city, and a 70% increase in coll revenues,
Th really as quite a slick to learn several
that the chart you had to nea

‘Tolls could be instituted or increased around other cities in
the state, and parking fees could be established at all state
facilities, These are only a few of the possibilities.

appears that many af owe Mt appear
Lawmakers coud moonlight as biwmakers are never working. “Phe
clergy man

We: iid clear Hill Becomes Law? ry really any ecient ae
Chih ee aan eae et base comedians A who chambers usually convene only he erin, a

2-and perhaps older-are given : eh

most part not bused on parental
resources; the student should be

«week One im during the

would have te
mite

three times
think that they
1 lot of
sessions, fait they
acted aon
a5 th,
at mieten ay Lee
Axsembly

York's hi camer dehive

Vo fight fee inereases now, we urge the persons who pay

a one fe men send the Sen

Anse bly

: these
Puages out tor buy thea? food
ea he ident

tuition in cach student's family co write to che governor, the j
three
Very: fev

hurnnyg ae meeting and 1 see

“8 : E emens than a place where pecnil mente in the
legislators, and the trustees, and announce a refusal to pay Siete menial Reale Noe, ioe

any fee higher than the present levels.

‘We remind the state legislature on behalf of the 348,686
SUNY students and theie Higher eduction Thi sop
higher education. Thi opportune

and Fees are payable less than two months before this year's] © work (together. with. the
) Phasing out of the draft) would

‘mean the re-entry of young Ames
ans into the national labor foree
‘This would appear to fulfil a
basie need of the moral health of

bithean as divided up.

Production Manager Hise Assbrntly
warren wishart most fan The

inemabers ane cacely all tHaere at the

Editor-In-Chief
al senia

very dawn te only
would be comedian
Assemblyinan dames the a
itt allegedly

Hraunber as the ‘Siam

chatiber's 10 Anather

Joishetuon.

st umnpos
most Canadians

vernment

Hogrettably

setitoil
Peesenite
vdjourn Tuesday's

lasted 120 mu
yomintes behind sche

Lavcruakers Emery with

When thy
take thet

As interesting note about this
chamber ty the story behind the
Joyuslators’ chairs, When a membe
of the house leaves he buys his} personal co
Tie chair. ‘This makes | quite easy to] number of respected non-Can

determine who has been im thedans, our unpopular position in

nate for a long time and whe has undermined our finan

newer members h We have not yet
are red while older the Hinanetal losses

s house have chars} that we sustained during the erists.

News Editor

‘maida on ight
Associate News Editor
‘glenn von nastite
Features Editors
ohn faith
dabbie natansohin

Off-Campus News Editor
bob mayer

families that increased tuitio
ased tuitions Advertising Manager es after

wll rogers
Associate Advi

iy
Business Manager
phil an
Technical Editor the
dobine knee enw nh

Associated Pen Egitor “nny noses! Ea

danny res
phylrs pore

wens thusiastic support du

cad, Although we have ¢
gratulations of

fream anestedd Si
nivsstanee Wyman Km
Assemblynen whe fought — dute
Wynan's reappomtment. ‘The
whieh had ta be opened

Sergeantat Arms un the floor according to the alsa not ay
proved to be an ash Assembly: Te start with the

members a this chamb
finger, ‘The sa) there is proportionately less
potential for nose. Thess not to
say that Lieutenant Governor Mal
colin Watson

plush
ing Manager they usually « ny was come starting

election

4 much more

ut then Senate is

hes an sta sgannist

‘This editorial ws being run concurrently today by the ASP and Pipe
Dream, SUNY Binghamton, to demonstrate our solidarity in oppo

sition (o the tuition increase.
our nation,

. i whil ”
LNS-Great Spirits ae fee sounty where ny people Waa
ne die 50 fast..." Chief Joseph of the Arts Editor
ti be teeutedl as all other men ae finally forced tate eye ese Sree :
vated ‘ mare final forced inte a war with the sructrate kantow rattié y brisy hatha
tact ica seagiae Se cence | pin cea iat
home, have a he robbed of their fertile land san abbey i hey don't hear the request af the
lanes, Class Advertising Manager & 4 call vute
. F Photography Editors z vaconae
Nixon's Last "Surprise isan mt rex tion Wet
‘ Remember President Nixon's by pulleck
‘CUP fast TV speech on Editor
ir ogo where he ny 28 Oi
f you te «horse to t that a rn
said) that Sagan's. President
Make, do you expect he will wow ‘Thiew had agreed ter alle “tere
fue? Tf you pen an tdi elections, 4 tesgn une month
small spt before the elections and yenwraily
open up the he
South Vietnamese patitieal scene his "four ner
(0 the National Liberation Kant, cessinn, ne
Liberation Peont pe

to say to the In "Wolly thane. ee
Rope Well, howe of you whey dow't AY

suites, The jut sedate

presented.
trav consisting af a hand wath an only 57

hoof the chamber and will va
mibers of
have mellowed ty

yon aver the years,
becomes apparent to
even the most unseasoned obser
yer: the Jaws of this state are not
1 Senate or Assembly
Fee CUrIOUIS is LO

extended —amddte
Asseinblymen loved thts
singe of any legislation by

members pilease take their

4 frequent plee mate andee

Assembly
ary yea Unnfeertumatety

“All men were made by. th
same Great Spirit Chief. ‘The
all brothers, ‘The earth is th
mother of all people, and ull
People should have equal rights
upon it. You might as well exy
the rivers to run buckward as that
any man who was born a free m
contented pen

ner tts: ae we
‘ who nuns the show

visually tell

imest af the
miber, doesn't

inthis eh
admonish
thougl

That witnessed. You ean
when the chamber as coming to
Deeatise a lot of finger how

that you make finuneial
contribution so that we ean ins
vigorate the vital role that we have

in some his appeals f

result
leet the stand a

jevuse leader The
f ping ean be beard

thew way to any

forthe Sengeaat at Arms to “eleat
makers. to play,
ut thear seats,

hy snapping them fagers

Creulation Manager
Lae He appeals for courtesy among the

father than calling for

we sunt the

S at where
Exchange Editor

+ put on a good par ef! We would be grateful for any
restaurants Fegntribution you could make;
right alse [please ouker your cheque payable

find some answers by wandering fig th Chi Liberti

theaugh the Capitol building and dit to VRS
tyuslein the Varonto 290, On

Phank you for ¢

ve that it could be true wer soni haw seems unjust sinee they

on the Nixon
Vietnam Press, ‘

am war last

Mrsally tec any qed sane. ny recurde
‘i : and eather sant at Ams,

turnag thew ¢
efuamber, fit ther again
Panetuality torte of

hee Shite: Senators

Well as lp an dows as they rush out of
the chamber

Cnet estes atthe no ie Mast sessions

Campus Center 326 of the si at Ui ; i
1400 Washington ue, T lene
The ASP may be reached byt
: : 2 ad yay, ac
‘hiew reiterated ge tierra wt
s

wrth, and compel
y there, he will net be
contented nor will he grow and
prosper, | have asked some of the
Hreat white chiefs where they get
thei authority

dian that he

Assan legislative

h Mall
up to

Anseinbly wauht be aut

evangehst Billy Graham dehyered
the Senate's

un extensive delay tn starling part

Hivman is called upon te vote
Assembly ant spoke

fore ce
ah - ‘
alt water Sincerely,

a8) Mudanik
President

‘our state being tamed

4 shaw tall call vate ly because there wax) a quorum

he was

eallent ten
When bis name
consultation” and

1d a8 space permits and are sublect ily defaseredd amidst «cn

Bolicy of the Albany Student Press | un the chamber

As in its sister wing, the

ee wyparcbhe te Grand Central
s ned tes

AL rash hour Speakers ate deep ay

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FEBRUAm, 1972 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

“Sacrifice, Ten jeity & Respect”’

all quotes are those of United States Army Major Thomas Blanchfield

“please don't refer to me as Mickey Rooney or nice
endearing charms such as that.”

“The first mistake | made this evening was that I did not
wear my uniform but there is something that I would like to

“1 would suspect that we probably have some potential
say that revere and | respect this symbol of freedom, this

guerillas here.” -
: * Whe sa oung wand ch used to call State
traditional piece of cloth which so many have and are still ‘ Tat reve, annus neue ag

wearing with pride, and emotion, No other uniform so 4 Laverty sit een York at Allaaiys Alan: Nan, ane i
befits the democratic ideals which we cherish, A symbol of
sacrifice, tenacity. and respect. F would lke to show you my
uniform which everytime 1 wear fills my eyes to the brim,”

Universal! Soldier

He's five foot two anid he’s 91 tee
he Fights with missiles and wel oped

He's all of thiry one and he's only qyenteen

he's been a soldier for a thousunl dirs,

He's a Catholic, a Hindu, an atlest a Jain,

a Buddhist and a Baptist aul t

And he knows he shoulda’ kill wulhe knows he always will

kill you fe " # you.
‘ Gluing for France,

you want me to talk about reality, you mean get my
feet on the ground.”

“lw the little hamlets of South Vietnam our fighting man
has had a continuous problem,”

' “1 would like to make one thing perfectly clear, (asa very
Woman: “don't have a question, thave a reaction, don't eee

e said)” laughter “you people don’t scare
ow who the he sro cy me sicker e4'D nd he’s Fighting for he Russie apd he’s fighting for Japan smart man once said) mn
know who the bell in this ¢ Wi makes me sicker. That little \ of Ne orl) And he’s fight i ‘3 i é

prick up there (much laughter)... He stands here as a major and he thinks we'll put # that way

. fs fig " Is.
in the US. Army, L stand here asa retired Cirst lieutenant in +. Aer De And he’s fighting for Dennsctacs hfs fighting for the Red
the US. Army, of which Fant totally and completely { Oni es feat the

The says it's fon the pats
ashamed. 1 dislike intensely what's going on in this room He's the one whes unust decade she {10 live and who's toric

You find hie fanny, Lind hin obscene U.S. Aaieom And Fifty seoctlial IRCA Weal

J Huh’ dave condemned hint Dachau
Blaniehlield’ responses “This is ane of the few tintes in my
life when have ever been called obscene, immoral, and All Thei ly Retin

having a little penis at the same time,”

Bat without hin how i
Without him Caesar woukl Md alone

"y La He's che ani whi gives lis bed oe weapon the war

f
He's the Universal Sul illy ts to blame

Vhey come tron fiw
and brother can't yeu se

"all
awareness tht
lity; nob just 1
and mine, It is w
our youn: men ou! L
scorch the chilir .
Ne cee ei ywutt te centertold by bob mayer & photos by john chow

We are all particiys

Robert Francis Kennedy

bility t

marie and ser
t is our ol als
w bombs that level the

PAGE 10

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FEBRUARY 18, 1972

WHY NOT SEND YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
THROUGH CAMPUS MAIL?

Albany Student Prese

1400 Washington Ave, Albany, N.Y. 12203
CLASSIFIED FORM

TRAVEL HELP WANTED _ PARTIES

Ride wanted to Buffalo Thursday,
Feb. 24 of Friday, Feb. 25 to
Sunday Feb, 27. Call Robin
472-5278.

Ride needed to Boston Sun. Feb.
20 or Mon Feb. 21. Will pay. Call
472-8735. Please!

Ride needed to Ellenville on Feb.
18, Call Artie 472-7735.

Ride needed to New York City on
Wednesday, February 23rd, to ar-
by 7:30 PM for Joni Mitchell
Concert at Carnege Hall. Call Mi-
chele at 457-7821

RIDE WANTED: For two, any
place on L.t. Leaving Saturday any
time, Call Bronda, 7.8795,

HOUSING

Date(s), ad is to run.

tAd is to read as follows: :

H
4
7

Total no.
of words H

Amount to pay

TOTAL ENCLOSED
$ For each date $

Name H

Address,

Phone.

DEADLINES: For Tuesday Paper, Sunday 11:00 p.m.
For Friday Paper, Wednesday 11:00 p.m.

Costa Gavras who gave

us “Z” now gives us

. ves Manan
‘none Sighted

Saturday at 7:30 & 10 in LC-18
$.75 with tax & ID = $1.25 without BOTH

own bed:
roar busline

Roommate wanted
room, beautiful apt.,
cheap. Call 489-9432,

Roommate wanted: own room in
large apartment near Medical Cen
tee $60/month Phone 465-4684
evenings.

Female roommate wanted. Own
room, Furnished. Three block
from old campus. Open March
Call 438-1594,

Fomale roommate wanted,
$57/month, near bus, privacy. Cal
Lory, 489-4363.

Studio apartment and spacious

apartment for two available, 46
Willett St, directly across from
Washington Park, Call 459-7352
anytime,

Two bedroom apt, near bus line
twoded for next semester. Call Dan
ny 457-5036.

Beautiful House near
needs fourth roomm

uptown
eanpus
Call 482 6883.

rls, furnish
udded, Westorn

Apt, for rent, Thee
wd, wat
Aw, % block trom stop. Call Ar
mand days 489-2684.

ment, Fore

The BLACK WEEK
Students to display any Art

Waitress - Schrafft’s restaurant.
Morning shift. Call 465-8811.

Unbelievable Find!! 1 or 2 bed-
rooms, kitchen, bathroom, living:
room. § min, from Draper Hall. Call
day: 465-6161 and night

Nader's Raiders need volunteers
to work on an investigation. For
info, call David Smitas 457-8763.

Overseas Jobs for Students. Aus
Europe, S, America, Africa,
ete, All professions and occupa
tions, $700 to $3,000 monthly.
Expenses paid, overttime, sightsee:
ing. Free information. Write Jobs
‘Overseas, Dept. £6 Box 15071, San
Diego, CA. 92115.

Babysitter neoded Fri. and/or Sat
Call Cathy 7-4715 on campus. $
year old boy will be asleop,

FOR SALE

"68 Triumph Spitfire: $300 Needs
work. Call 472-9504

"65 VW Bus, excellent condition
Best offer, Call 355-3604 after 6.

Italian ten-speed  racing/touring
bicycles complotoly assombled and
with free maintenance manuals.
Cait evenings only. Bob 465-6959.
Ken 872.0699.

8-Track stereo tapes $3.00 each.
Fully guaranteod. For further in:
formation 472-6779,

'65 VW. Good condition, reason
able. Low mileage, Nick 436-7038.

1970 Duster 340 4b1, Some body
damage. $1250. Phono 370-1916

1963 VW Sedan, studded snows,
excellant condition, low mileage
1 Call Stove; 459-7073.

AVON
163-7960.

products. Call Glona

1970 Mustang, V8, automane
sMIssION, Powe steering, qroEH
with saddle vinyl root and

console, radio heater, 6

AND SISTERS

END COMMITTEE invites all Black

works they may have atthe

Third Black Cultural Weekend at Albany State during

B April With through the 16th,

pictures, posters, lithuies, «
relate to Blick people aroun

be shown, speculate if you

pieces should have a return

contact
Roger Mattoon on Bl
107 Capra Hall
State (uadeangle Bos

Hilephome. 497 1009

Please reply befor

1972. We

nies,

are interested in
nid pottery. which
nid the world. All picees will
wish to have them sold. All

address. If interested, please
Bell

6

dS 9470.

© March 20, 1972

Hot dogs and beer with Beta Phi
Sigma. Sunday, Feb. 20, at 5:00.
12th Floor on Stuyvesant. All
rushees invited,

Beer party at 9:30 PM Friday
February 18th in Brubacher
Lounge, Admission $1.00.

LOST

$200.00 reward for fender guitar
loft by State Quad. on Thurs. Feb.
10, Please call 457-3044.

SERVICES

Typing done in my home. Rea
sonable rates. 869-5932

Franch
957-8992,

tutoring. Call Mina at

Income taxes propared, student

toos 438-1315.

WANTED

Wanted: Lionel trains. All kinds.
Instant Cash, 439-5109,

PERSONALS

Lor.
You look great on the floor tied

toa table!
Smite!

Doar John Lotter:
Dear John,

Try not to sloop theu Telethon,
‘and don’t forget » you still ha
class at 9:00.

Minalek + “SM”

E! Dorado
Happy 20th Birthday
The Hot Mamas

To the four footoos:
{All our thanx and love,

Happy Soft Roll and Candie Day!
Mindy and Fran

Little Dow
The

s great having you back wher
you belong. Our wookend tage
will be rememberud always.

Honust
wallet: Yo

ftutlow who found my
sestor diel not roture ot
Rich 465 1014

HBBMP.FTEN.

FEBRUARY 18, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 11

enlists

GRAFFITI

TET:

PEACE & POLITICS

MAJORS & MINORS

Student Coalition for Soviet Jewry
will be meeting Mon,, Feb, 21 at 8 pm
in the CC Assembly Hall

Come to the National Student Anti--
war Conference Feb. 25-27. t will be
at Washington Irving High
School, 40 Irving Place, New York
City, Everyone attending has vate and

SUNYA Draft Counseling Hours:
Tues. 10-1, 7-9; Wed, 12-3, Thurs,
1-5, 7-9.

‘Anyone interested in forming an
‘Albany State Student Organization
tor John V. Lindsay for Pres. please
call Jay at 7-5068 or put a letter in
Political Coordinator's mailbox in CC
m6,

Support Life-Not Death! Federal
phone bill was

uted 10 support the wat. Don't
pay, The Alternate Lite Fund ot
to channel 1

Albany was institut
fused tax money upportinn,

activities, Send your money whore
hiked to swe your
gov't, pul it. Capntal Ariss Poacee Con
tee, 727 Machson Ave, Albany Mors

info at CC Into desk

you would havo

Anyone smerested ei canvassing tar
George McGovern is New Hanyosiin
any wawkend, please call Gi

MeNarwe at 4637727 or 766 3878

Anyone
McCloskey campaign
Honnings at 4726352. Volurnte

especially needed for thy New Hamp

ested an work th th

contact Harty

shire primary
Call the Gay Crisis-Intormation Line
nightly trom 7-9. of stop by CC 308
Phone: 457 7816, 7508, 7316, or
7509,
px! major anti-war demonstra:
ton is April 22 in N.Y.C. and L.A. By
the thousands we've changud the
course of the wat, By the rn
‘can ond it.

On Mon, Fob, 21 at 7-30 LC 20,
Peace Project 1s sponsiruy Bots
Eaton, who will spaak on ‘Resistance
and Beyond.” Bob Eaton just 4
from Paris, whore ho attended a Peace
Conference sponsored by various
world peace groups and PCPS. Oth
opies will be criminal justo and
fon wolenes, Durations accopted

So EES

PERE

Communtiy Service Students :
Group evaluation sessions have start
ed, Make sure to attend one of them
soon! Don't wait until the last minute,
Contact 457-4801

For all interested SUNYA. English
students, There will be a meeting on
Tues., Feb, 22 at 7 30 pm in LE 20 10.
establish ESAC- English Students Ad-
visory Committee to 1
obtaining a waice m curt eulom change
within the English Dept

purpow of

Philosophy and the Humanities Col
Joquim Prot, Robert
speak on ‘Religion and Enquiry into
Religion: Universities and/or Gurus?”
Woed., Feb, 23 1 HU 290 at 7 pn

Garvin will

The English Dept. will present Gat
way Kinnell reading trom his poetry
Thurs, Feb, 2401 8 pm in the
Hurranities Lousy,

The Center for Inter-American Stud:

405 vwovate, waturanted faculty at stand
‘The Maya of
Mysterious Ancient Mexico” oi Mii

tot 2 4, No

A yum ne 1H

Asian Studws Research Seminar «
Hag, Feb, 1B at 21 awe SS TAT,
Goest Wee i elas, History a
South Aswn Cov
‘An Englishman in 17th century Cey
Jon: Historical Relation of Robert

Knox.

Dr, Haber Hatin

Apphicaion torins tar thos wha
wish 10 apply for membership. in Pi
‘Mu Epsilon, the National Mathematics
Honorary. Fox details on
and where 10 pick up forms, see
posters i" the Lact Se Big. Com:
pleted applications must be returned
by Feb, 29.

12 wall Uae teeing a
uot Tene
Tues 10

Asta, on Hy HF yoo enn

17 wk?

To Mathematics and Science Teach:
ing Majors of the Classes of 1974 und
1976: A swe

x} wahrerastiay etn
Altay
fies Serene Teaching Progpant wall be
vid ot 7 30pm on Wed., Feb 23, #
LE I you have alewidly signed up as
arheapant an the praject as HOt
my wo attend tus Februany
tn al ane wer

BRASS

“INTERESTED FOLK _

Attention all interested £.0.P.
‘Students! There will bo a Big Brother
& Big Sister orientation meeting
which will be held in LC 22 on Feb.
21, 22, & 23 from 7-9 pmeach nite,
You must attend these meetings to be
interviewed for your little brother or
sister. If you absolutely cannot attend
theso. meetings contact Randy Gam.
ble at 457-7551

We are organizing a Kosher Sunday
Night Dinner, For into and reserva:
tions call 457-4056 belore 11 pm on
Thurs, Feb, 24,

The Italian-American Student Alli:
ance (LAllwanza degli Student Halo
Armericani) will sponsor a lecture by
Dr, Dwight Smith on the Mafia Mys-
tique’ on Thurs, Feb, 24 a1 B ym in
HU 290,

The Mohawk Campus prosentiy has
@ 25-passorwer bus which is available
for rental by Univ, groups, Bus reser
vations may be made by contacting
Frexd Cook, CC 137, 457-7600,

Kappa Bera
Beverwyck Hi

all rushwos kegs watts
Tih floor Stuyvesant

09 pvr Thats, Feb 24,

Tw SUNYA Christian Seronce Or-
gamzation wll prusont

Charles M. Gare of N.Y, Citys Lone
‘Why Be Fenced In?” wy Mon,, oh,
2b at H poe an CC Asserndity tal

China and the Third World. Phi
nn caster wal stew shih and na
ber dane Fee Fol 1At Z pen ay LC

4 Sponsinea ty BSU and PROLE.

ata tt Chins 1 wal

Ail nembers: of dust Us then will be
4 suhoarsil 10 prepaee for our telethon
performance, on Sun., Feb, 20 at 7
pm an the Indian Quad U Lounge.

Hong your dinner, Be there!

1 Zero Popul
tnenthity

The Albany Chapter
tion Growth will Wild
progam on Thurs, Fab, 24 at 730
ppm a loom 194, Humanitas
Collowe, Br Edward: Ransh
oF economics at SUNY A, wll bie quest

Spring track & field candidates
sani) selaedulas for the 1972 spray
1 progam will be outlined at
Feb. 21 at 8 pm
big, Practiens coin

trian on Man,
126 ot P

The Fight tor Sight committee i

sonny) haskell urna! woth te

Harlem Laugh-Ins on Marchi 24 Facul
ty stall interested a playing against
tam should contact

Stew Newdlornan, 78730

his. comedy

SAAS

y NORMAN MA LER

on his new film

(and anything else that comes up)

Monday, February 21

7:30 in the CC
FREE with tax
$.50 without

PDR

Ballroom
& ID,

albany

cinema"

a ESS

eseieremrecnesre sie Cas HRN ESE

TASS

‘Student NYSTA is having a meoting
on Feb, 22 at 7:30 pm in ED 123, 1t
will be a multimedia program by Dr.
‘Margoles of the education dept. Fund-
ed by student tax,

The Riding Club will hold its horse
show Sun., Feb, 20 at Dutch Manor
stables % mile west of Stuyvesant
Plaza from noon, We will be com
peting against Skidmora, Admission
tree, Funded by student tax,

La Voz del Pueblo (P.R. Newsletter)
is now being professionally printed,
People interested in writing articles
and poetry please leave them in the
P.A, studies office, SS. 111,

‘Shabbat,
Feb, 18
Rotresyme

@ Day of Delight’ Fri,
7.30 pin in Chapel House,
Oneg Shabbat,

Colonial Quad residents may still
purchase tax cards by calling Alice at
7.8961, Good or discount on all quad

11 we are to have a Kosher kitchen
‘on campus next yaar, It will be neces
sary for several people to spend some
time in working toward our goal.
you feel you may be one of those
people please call Sam Bogen at
457-4983 bolore Fub, 18, 1972,

SUNYA mayazinw of the visual arts,
Observation, noeds wt Bring your
Paintings, drawings, sculpture, etc. to
FA 215, Mon
and phone number on back
yew Observation

Fri Pluase put sane
aides

attactwd, Thy
via) metudes y. eritictsm,
sand deseriptive analysis an what's
happening othe visual arts a
SUNYA, Bring your manuscripts. 10,
FA 215 by Feb, 25, Include your
and phone number

Fundod by student tax

Middle Earth Drug Program will
sponsor a heroin workshop teaturing 2
‘Skoezog’ and ‘Darkness,
Darkness’ on Sat., Feb. 19 at 10 am in
LC 4. Spoakers trom various involved
agencies will lead an open discussion

foe tien,

From the Chapel House: The Lenten
Mass schedules starting Mon,, Feb. 21
will be as follows. Mon 7 30 pm,
Tues. and Thurs, 11:10 am, 4 pm,
Wed 1110 am, 7.30 pm; Fri 12.10
pm, Sun, 9:15 am, 11 00am, 6 pm, B
fbi, Places can be found wn the Can
pus Clipbowd,

| xtubiy of Chinese paintings m Carn
us Contr Gallery From Feb, 28 10
March 28. Sponsored by Chinese
Cub,

Bahai Firesides Every Sunday at 8
mn in Waterbury 337. For into call
Wendy 28730 or Debbie 7 293,

Fight Cancer with Pantyhose: Mon
Wed., atid Thurs—Pantyhose in the
CC lobby For Rosoarch at
Hadassaly Hospital

Puerto Rican Weekend vs comng on
April 24, 29 and 30- Watch or att

Saw) the cluldin! TELETHON “72
Fob 28 and 26, froin 7 pan to 2 pn

Important wtieuy for all those whe

sur ntenestend an wvcth agp ch ae tL

TELETHON ‘72
tae, te)

tial
Coorg loatts, setting the
Mewtinuy wall be hota at Mon, Lah, 21
at 7 pris th pantie oat Lastrain
Tew, yeu canmat inake

sto in holping owt,
Ml David 457 4691 un Gary

Hue mwoting will be 10

wane
uy but ate ate
hows

4b) 4143,
discuss tines you vain 1 work.

WHAT TO DO?

Feb, 18 in the Dutch
‘Quad Flagroom. Admission: $.50 with
SUNYA ID and $1.00 without. Atl
the beer you can drink, Live band and
Hight show from N.Y.C

Roberta Flack in concert Fri,, Feb,
25 8:30 pm at Proctor’s Theatre,
Tickets ($3,25 for Union students,
$4.25 all others) may be purchased at
Union College, Proctor’s Theatre
(State St,, Schen'tady), Troy Music
Shack, and VanCurler’s Music, Al:
bany,

Tho Music Dept, will present the
concert Classics of the 20th Century
Sun,, Feb, 27 at 3:30 pm in the
Recital Hall of the PAC,

Hor of Stuyvesant tower, Rushees
come up and meet us,

Beta Phi Sigma and G.O.I. girls
gotting together on Tues,, Feb, 22 at 9
pm on 12th floor of Stuyvesant, All
rushees invited,

Coffee House prosunts Laraine Ein.
binder this Fri., Feb, 18 from 8-11
pm and Sat,, Feb, 19 trom 9=12 pm
in the CC Cafeteria, Sponsored by
ECG, ane Funded by Student tax,

Tobogyan Party «itu oi) APA and
Chi Sig in toboggaming at the Albany
Municipal Goll Course on Sun, Feb,
20 at 2 pan Linger in APA section
iest~ Clinton Mall)

Cafe International, 22 Willwt St
Albany. Prosnts Joany Mullin on Fri
Feb, 1B playing Spanish and Arwrican
folk songs, Admission $,75,

Peace Project \s having » Pot Luck
dinner and nweting on Sun., Feb, 20
‘a1 6pm in the Chapel House. The film
‘The Automated Battlefield’ will be
shown, Everyone is invited,

Hove you huard? Things went bodiy
in Westphalia

Carnevale \s tho pre-Lentin {allan
festa celebrated throughout the Latin
world traditionally, The Jeallan-Ameri-
can Student Alliance colobrates, Car-
hhavale this semester on Sun,, Feb. 20,
Contact Gina 472.4789 or Dom
457-4759 for more info,

Special campusonly silo of tickets
for ‘The Great American Light War’

arting Mon., Feb, 14, General sale
starting Mon, Feb, 21, $2.00 general
$1.00 with tax

An Italian wine tasting party will be
hold on March 9 sponsored by the
Italian-American Student Alliance

Mako reservations. now with Gina
472.4789 or Dom 457-4759, Admis
sion 1s $2.00 por person,

OFFICIAL NOTICE _

The Graduate Student Assoc. has
won notified of mania dulays con
corning the GSA Studont Membership
Fee rotorondum, As a wsult the rotor
eoduns ballot totum date wall be
extendud 10 February 28, 1972

The University Council «i \Ns nwet
ing on Dae, 21, 1971 changed Part IV
Section 1.2 at Student Guidelines 1

wt as tullows wuts

Htivitua
Counter problents of a personal ature?
Ut nay have

upon the individual, but upon other

tipact Hot only

tmombors of that community as wll
Av acetone community must devel
oy 4 philosophy relating to suet probs
ons and piocedures for attenyting

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

‘FEBRUARY 18, 1972

ASP SPORTS

Danes Drop Pair to Oneonta

Matmen Fall 33-17

by Ira Mozille

‘The main element prevailing in the gymnasium Wednesday night was
surprise, The Albany State grapplers met a forceful Oneonta State and
us Coach Gracia gradually observed their strength and talent, the
Danes fought 1 hopeless battle.

“AIL L can say,"" Garein commented after the Dane's loss of 1-17
“is that Onconta was in the best shape I've ever seen them, ‘There's no
question that they were reudy."

“tn the 118
followed at 12

ight class, ‘Tom Hull accepted a forfeit. Rex Cary

and was pinned by Octavius Jones in 6:03. Following,

he ional spirit of Albany, Cary did the hest he could with i

ad bruise. Larry Frederick was also pinned; the time was 1:21

Freshman Larry Mims fost a decision 12-7 at the 112 weight elas by

Brian Carlton, Albany suffered another defeat directly afterwards
when Jeff Albrecht lost to Sal Perranna 120 at 150,

‘The matmen’s tuck began to change in the last few weight classes,
Phil Mims beat Lou Chiodo at 154 $24. "Phil just
recovered from a bad knee, and we were pleased with his win,

said, Mims qreatly adds to that incessant spirit displayed by the t

me up with a draw of 1-1 at 167, Doug Brauer created a
ray of hope when he pinned Joe Keyser at 177 in 1:29, AL Mercer was
then pinned by Larry Brown in the 190 clays in 143, Finally, Walle
Glod pinned Jack Well in the heavy spot 1:53.

but it way too hate,

Tom Horn ¢

The Albany record is now f-5eL. ‘Their goal iy to beat New Paltz on
February 2 and brewk the 500) mark, In last week's triangular match,
Zoweh Gareia'y wrestlers showed that they have the potential a go all
the way in the championships. disappointment in Wednesday's
moet will hurt, but determination and that ever present spirit ace
Factors that will benefit the team

| Used to Be a JV

fx PICTURES in collaboration with
ROBERTSON ASSOCIATES presents

CLIFF ROBERTSON...

CHAALY

«vm CLAIRE BLOOM
TECANICOLOR  TECHNISCOPE

TOWER EAST CINEMA
Feb.18&19 LCZ 7:30&10

$.75 with state quad card $1.25 without

Font 4 ena

Mermen Sunk 64-41

lost again Wednesday night by the
score of 64 to 41 to Oneonta,
even though they were not out-
manned as usual r
Albany was outmanned only in
the diving competition as
Oneonta had two divers to Al
bany’s one, Five times throughout
the meet Albany had a two to one
events Albany
at least’ four
they lost
meets first place is|
five points; second,
and thied, one. With two
Albany had a great chance
ng points but they f
awe ‘They lost a
point in Hay they failed
to witt vised the adv
tage when they had the extra man
finishing one-two an the (wo
diving events and added 11 points
tar thee lead

On the good side, ther
Lwo individuals who
Albany, Mare Eson was the first
Albany swimmer to win with a
vietory in the 200 yd. freestyle,
ne early in the
y still had a

‘The victory. ©
mwet when Albi
nice for vietory
‘he Dane swimmers’ second
Bill tart in the
His vietory,

vietory
200 yd

was by
hucksteoke

by Bill Heller

AV. basketball
player or, the ballad of Stove
Sperling or, “Where have you
gone Vie Cather? To: state: the

Hoffman

fused to be

sate, there a
the AV
Cun Woadeaek
Hruee Davis, and Be
yeu addon the
fnew on th
hav

Gears Moore
my Hyehe, If
men thal were
town this year, you'd
of seventeen

of players came toa
1 painful end List Sat
urday

Dane Pups (now

playing an exeetbont

trailed by

ly one pont
three minutes to go. 1
1, who had heen moved
down from varsity, w
a bog Litt lion Hyehe
and Curt Woodeurk fouled out
and) Mbany found itself playing
with just four

last ounute
anes lost by seven, and
as wasted be

cause "oF substi

tutes, “The question one must isk

is "Why!

Coach Bob Lewis hits heen in hts

a ree

RIDING CLUB
HORSE
SHOW

Sunday,
February 20
12:00 - 4:00

Dutch Manor
Stables

admission: FREE

funded by student

(effort
of the abst

LIPS LS rere

LLLLSLLLLLLLLLLLSLLSLLLLLL LS

pre

coupled by Mare Eson’s second,
gave Albany its biggest score of
the meet. Eson will probably step
into Bill Hart's shoes as the Lop
backstroker when Hart gradual
this yeur

Les Puretz added another big

he Albany team record by

swimming the 200 yd. breast
stroke in 2:36,7. But the Oneonta
swimmer broke the pool record
and beat Puretz, who finished
second,

Albany's only other vietory was
in the 400 yd. freestyle relay but

by then the verdict was certain
y's two stalwarts Issie Wilson
en Van Ryn had off meets,
Wilson finished third in both
diving events while Van Ryn
could only finish second in his
match showed sume
from the big
d the big defe
year. Gr
hoped for

last weekend

Onvonta last

improvement is

1d when the Aquamen Uke

J Stony Brook at

Stony Brook, Last year the Danes
Stony Brook 67:45

Player...Or!

profession for twelve years,
the first time anythi
wed to him,

this 1s
ut Like this,
haw hapy All told
there have been twelve men that
have left the team, OF the twelve
eight quit at varius times of the
talking Les the
after talking te

the cach, one was forced to leave

for aeadamie reasons, and one was
dropped after
and coming bi
Conch Lewis gare me a brief
history of the JV Only
twenty three players (ried out for
the squad, eight of whom were
freshmen, (However, derry Hoff
man told me that many peaple
didn’t know about the tryouts.)
men were picked for the

ke it

to the first yume, Ray Scott and
Alan Shaw just didn't show up

being suspended
ch for a while

played high schoo! ball

played ional school, and

one played his juntor year of high
wok Coach Lewis: said,

didn’t fully

meant to le on the

undeest
man eted Lewis, saying,
ey Knew what ot wats, but they
ust couldn't handle the ade
mands Steve Sperling comment
ed, 'L play beeauwe Te
mg I have
eel than the
artially because
werk

y play
myself a yreater
responsability: te

The players w
# week varly
Lew Mizine
ty the

Sperling, and W

show ap. Add te this Kel Sasportian
quitting and Vie

dropped, and the te
to five men, ‘To compensate
Lewin added Nate Walliams,
Hone Kelethiad, ant tinue. Lee

Collier being
was down

jeshian prac
two weeks,
james, but didn’t play

When Mel Brows

forced ty leave fur academe

about dressed

ps, iL put the team where it is

fh Lewis cited two reasons
and ruled out a third for this
phen walkouts, “The
players that quit couldn't make i
total commitment to bsket ball

Sperling questions if basket ball
des

Personally, [feel th
sary if one wants to have

iL is Neco,

tral.” Lewis diseou
ly factor, saying

had feelings to me and there really
wasn't »sity between the
Sperling, Huffman, and
Brown all agree to the first part
and. ba

fond part

Brown pi

“here were no

misunderstan
players, but it wasn't important
y, there is the pr

ning five

lem el
who have
shown a lot of guts and hard work
wy sticking this thing aut. ‘They
have all Hews

1 foot

pruse, but is this enough
that the players that quit the
cheated ther teammates, 11
their couch, and possihly them
selves too. It asa Lough, ndivutuat
deemion to quit a team, When one
makes this demon, hie musi «
sulee the comequences of
only hamself, hut
Leas

He team abs
i the Lean without consult
tie the coarh shows none ol the

consideration

but litte ean be done
eof this artivle

some light an a rel

known situat

The put

wan tis heal
wwely litte

ve the

MN, hep aaetbaceens geennal

hopes at

FEBRUARY 18, 1972 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 13

Danes Stricken With Traveling Blues

by Alan D. Abbey
“Some of the players, the more inexperienced
ones, need the cheers of the home crowd ringing in

their ears.”

This was basketball coach Richard Sauers com:
ment after his Danes were drubbed, 86-69, by Utica
College, in Utica, Tuesday night

“Perhaps they're not mentally tough enough to
win without someone rooting for them, Maybe it’s
my fault,” Sauers said, “It is probably some of the
sophomores, they are less experienced than some of

the other players.”

Sauers also said that the 90-mile bus trip was not
so long that the team was tired out, although the
Danes’ 37-27 halftime lead quickly evaporated from
the scoreboard in the second half, “We were
outrebounded in the second half, and we made
some ball handling errors when they started pressing
us," said a disgruntied Sauers. “Byron Miller wasn't
shooting that well, either.” ‘These reasons for the
loss probably can all be traced back to the fact that,
the Danes were playing on unfamiliar territory,

‘There were reports that the officiating was deci-
dedly “home-court,” that is, slanted towards the
home team, Utica. Sauers dismissed this saying,
“The refereeing didn’t help, but it didn't lose the
game for us,

Bob Rossi, the Albany backcourt man, had 22
points, Tuesday night, and it seems ax if he has
finally hit his stride. He has b
more each game, and has been justifying Sauers!
faith in him by responding with big games. He has
been taking up the slack left by John Quattrocchi,
whose point production in the last two games hi
been nearly imperceptible (for him that is),

“We blew our chances for an at-large bid to the
NCAA's, and we now have to win the SUNY
Conference to get in,” said Sauers. The Danes will
get another chance at the SUNY title this Saturday (Antin) they are 20% to 30% better,” said Savers,
night as they take on Cortland in a division game, Another big plus for Cortland is their home court
awa’ advantage. While the Danes have been run

‘This game should prove to be a crucial contest as
Cortland has been steadily improving ti
with the return of their top player.

straight home court wins this season, they have wun
only. thre
advantage at home, and even though they are only
4-9 overall (2-4 in SUNY Conference), they aro a

of eight on the roud, “They have a big

AMIA Basketball Playoff
Begins This Weekend

by Bruce Maggin February
Fourname
This tourney

AMLA

Three mnths age, he
birsket ball
fram all leaanes, The

the top

with [he it team
Albino Shatee stu

AAMLA conf

members of the nyehiule

dent body “This aie
eludes tts seinen

AMA nvsket Tull wars
inter tour difte

dhivuled
ot levngues with and the
League [having the

while Josague LV hie

22 the Commi
beyans comp
shows. aff
AMIA teams

Hes tap twe
eh divisen of bw HH, wins
est cach division

League IV
In ather AMA Bases
allies wor the volleyball chin

action,
Albany
Fram pu
Fournament will

ships,
Thre purpese ot the Athany Meas
Tateamueal Agsuenation as to give
tudenis at Mbany State
chance te eompete al thei awn
level ‘hese AMA event

thes fant of the anne

of Lasayue IL re fe

Jeswer tilent Hawever, all beaeites

play serv exedtang haskell
AMLA ens sty 1YT) 72 basket

ball season the

with ats
plus the

wort
Commusuner’s ‘Tournament, The
Lacaguve U ywanner has all ready been

Prophets heat

nuon there iy AMEA,

ab the university
at 11S
dames,

Phere au
intramur
games involve te

11, Ut and 1V.

will be determined by playoffs all
day tomorrow.
Monday night the Finals for
§ those three league championships
E will he held. The L
Bpionship game I
off at 6:15, fotlo
H1U’s championship game at 7:15.
AU #15, the feature game of the
evening pits the semifinal winners
of Leauell for the championship.
‘The following ev Tuesday

Bells
Blue Meanies
GpXx
Coronas

how

Kid Delmar

d by League

LGA

‘oo Commuters

+ Playoff for Ist plac

Final AMAA. Lewgie L Stance

Prapherst
ADAS
JAmes
REPS

Khony
Nady

TKO

Soul Hustlers,
STB

kop

+in Commissioner's Tournament

LOUB

Liberators
‘The Who
Dalanes
Gametes
Mouskutoors

Embryo
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PAGE 14 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FEBRUARY 18, 1972 FEBRUARY 18, 1972 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 15
A T T. ae fi z LA
ense Tale of “Confession

by Steve Aminoff

a?

In terms of coherently taking the energy of a political ideology and
putting it on film in an intelligent and personal level, the Confession
may be the most exciti

by David Taffet film you'll see all year

66 °
‘Those who have accused the Broadway theatre of being irrelevant, An nner t
maybe dull, have obviously missed the latest effort of director Tom
O'Horgan. In the past few seasons, O'Horgan has contributed Mair,

Lenny and Jesus Christ, Superstar to the Broadway stage. His latest
venture is a minor masterpiece entitled Inner City and this, | believe

99
is his greatest work to date M t
Inner City opened last December to generally mixed notives, though Wio I 1er ( 7oose

some critics did rave, During its first few weeks it floundered and in
an attempt to help the akzw survive, the producers lowered the price
Of all tickets to $3 for one week during Christmas. It was for this

ason that 1 went to see it, | went expecting to see a show inferior to
an's three previous works, To my surprise and delight, the Performe
show dazzled, the stars sparkled, and 1 was enchanted,

Inner City, based on Inner City’ Mother Goose by Eve Merriam, is a

collection of poems about New York City, Music by Helen Miller and
direction by Tom O'Horgan brought the book to life. The most

beautiful music on Broadway and the most emotional acting I've ever
seen made this a most worthwhile experience on Broadwa

If you enter the theatre expecting a traditional play with a y

traditional plot you might be a little disappointed with the first few
scenes. It might not be until the end of Act f that you forget your
previous conceptions of Browdway and take the story to heart. The
story is not one that is developed through plot as we have becon
accustomed to, The story is developed through song (there are 56
songs) and a minimum of dialogue. What we are given is a grand view People of all a
of city life, with scenes about education, government, poverty, police the ovation as well as the two nuns sitting in front of me. It is a show
and other aspects of life in the inner city. ‘The scenes build and when that doesn’t offend yet doesn’t tend to be naive, The ticket prices are
still the lowest you'll find on or off Broadway, Before accusing the

The sume creative spark that director Costo Gavros ignited Greece
with in

gave rise to this terrifyingly authentic story about those

purges in Hungary the resentment to which marked the valiant effort

of the Hongarian people in 1956

litical candor, this is a tense and gripping tale whieh we

wie prevented with on the sereen, Yves Montand as the highly

idealistic, only shybtly middle-aged Hungarian Party Member dehvers

an unadulterated view of what i was to go through the purge of the

Hungarian Party leaders in 1952, Simone Signoret is wondertul as

wife, mother and Euithtul member of the proletariat

Much of the action takes plige 1 various prisons and “questioning”

Toons asa police foree of sorts, whose identity only becomes clear to

us liter on 1s viiously attempting ty

Het a “confession” from out

protagonist. Cleverly mtercut

© seeniey taken from the present

(1969) of Gerald (Yves) recounting the mightmare af it all, The "Twas

there” nod was nist effectively presented

the techmeal effets were quite nes

Gavtos does uot ty to use
everything an the hook qst to he artsy bach fade. jump-cut. and

cloyeup were there tor a speeitie purpose, Gavins performs a nedt

stunt whereby he can Zoomman on a subyeet while the background

performed by the entire cast and count only nine people on stage that
you realize how versatile each one is,

appears constant, on Met-out of the Zoom, The effet as to distort
es filled the audience, Old and young alike joined in

S pereeption ghoul yy given situgiion sand to lend a tele of

Hluustonian yereality

Ti a tility done really well it’s very easy te lose sight at the vartous
taken asa whole present a compassionate view of city |

: components which made the tin “work an fiver af just being
Linda Hopkins steals the show, though the rest of the cast is n0 less theatre af being irrelevant, a trip to New York's Ethel Barrymore waippedsap me the story, Gavioy did seh intense qab that this
than superb, When she sang about her broken home, | ented along with Theatre would be most worthwhile. : ’ :
; ke review ts (eally hall as lone av it should be, See what F mew Satwday
her, and when she sang “I's My Belict” the audience stood up to The sound system is another asset to the show which is worth nipht nn LC 18
cheer for her, Wevet before have | seen an audience so aroused by a mentioning. Shows in the ‘past got away with the use of no oe

wince ay to ive a standing ovation duri

number, demand microphones and much of the dialog
and continue to cheer through the test of the scene, For

the reminder of the show, Miss Hopkins was cheered each time she
Hed Lo the stage

J music was lost. Shows

such as Jesus Christ, Superstar go to the opposite extreme by placing a
microphone down the the

of each actor allowing the audience to

hear the gurgling of the actor's organs and an accompanying gatbling
A cost of nine appeared two ot three tuttes the size because at eaptd of words. AIL of this 1s most unpleasant to the eats. A rich yet
costume changes nvolved in the various roles ewel actor played. I

isn't wat you look aside your Playbill, motive

DON*T FORGET!
NORMAN MAILER’S FILM MAIDSTONE
THIS SUNDAY NIGHT

moderate tone comes from the speakers of daner City and only added

To-Night at PAC

song is bemg to the total experience

Don’t let another weekend go by!

Make a Date
with the Patroon Roor

ns will appear in songs, the stories in them and the (he scene fram them by the
IPL. Field House world around them dirwetness and strength of his solo
8, 1972 at Whereas many musicums reinter- performance

turnaliy Pret songs bY surrounding them — In 1962, at the height of the
Weekend sponsored by the Rens With symphony — orchestras, folk music revival, Richie turned
selaer Union swamping them with thousend: to music. “) began hearings ban
Hichie Havens has a way of strong choirs, Richie's method is Chandler and Dino Valenti and
sin people exactly the opposite. Using a Paul Stookey, They mspired me
aw if they've never Minimum of sidemen, accompany’ to ry singing." Richie's anor
hewrd them before. ‘Taking ay his tnx himself with his chythmicand thodox open E-tuning, whieh
diterial his own songs and the forceful guitar technique (for enables him to manipulate chords
pusitions of 14 irewlest Which he uses an unorthadex on the guitar not possible with

All the food you like to eat

at special savings to you!

$1.50 DISCOUNT with meal card... LER IO GUS Ie cA Neen WONG Ge Re Utectee oaimdyrtluglumne langle
inside the meaning of them, inter aeross. And it works. Richio hay For the next few years Richie

prety them im a way that cor followed up some most sing inthe Village, gradually qin:
ponds exactly to the way he (electronically) po rock ing a fervent underground fol
and his audiences feel about the groups in the world aud hay stolen lowing but paid, for the most

part, only by contributions to
passed basket, 1 wasn’t until he
wed his first album, ‘Mixed:
117, that Havens began ta receive
serious attention outside the
Village,
i

good Tuesday thru Saturday.

SUMMER STUDY AB
FOR CREDIT

ROAD

For reservations, : On March 17, the ASP publishes its

memes | Annual Spring Issue.

onsale at all
and at the
RPL Field House for $4.00, and
$31.00.

|
East European Seminar
Study in France |
Study in Spain |
1
I
i
t
'

Tues.—Fri. Saturday featurnag 4

featuring poems, photos and essays

Lon the then of Sprint
ail on the theme of Springtime. 5 pm-8 pm 5 pm- 9 pm , =

ELECTRIFYING NEWS!

4 credits each

write to: Intercultural Center

= Iwill be contaned th the reqular ASP.

~ BIRTH RIGHT
Effective ulternative to abortion

Anyone wishing te ceatribete la any wey, Anyone wishing to contribute in any way, RRA
se contact Jeff Rodgers CC 334 or 457 2190 hows: Mon-Fri 91 & Wed 6:8 p
quatet deff Rodgers, CC 334 or 457-2190. — — ‘ i

It will be contained as an insert with the regular ASP.

a+,

1
or phone 270-2332 Troy, N.Y, 12180}

PAGE 16

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FEBRUARY 18, 1972

“Steel Tower of the Year”

by Paul Bachman

¢ aestheti
was onee nominated

the American Instit

few of us realize the important fu

aspects of this impressive dome, For si

tower can tell time, Really, the dome houses the
speaker system for the carillon which really isn’t
located on the tower afterall, Where is the carillon
located and what is it all about?

Carillon: a set of fixed bells soun’
ded by hammers controlled by a
keyboard.

During the consteuetion of our new campus, the
alumni Association ageved to finance the installment
Of» earilon for the enjoyment of all the campus.
Now, those alumni had class b
nothing hut the best for oue campus (and for U

6,000 Wet's hope they got it,) ‘The
carillon was manufactured in California and during
ind of 1967-69 wi

Ly the inhabitants of Duteb
the tune af the 8 aan, bell
and racked to some af the tunes echoed from its
speakers, The earition hay been known to bet rip
with such golden oldies as "When dJohnay Comes
Marching Honw Again” and Home Sweet Home
(Home Sweet Home’ on campus?)
But iP $25,000 seems ke an outhindash price fora
carillon, you might discover that Albany State got
est af the bargain if you note the eamplexities
tures af the Lower (ane anflation), asf said
1 you observe the golden frame on top of the
tower, you only spot the
browdeast the sounds from the
is housed ana room in
Wx, AL first yhinee, the carillon is almost

1 ronsple Bat what's so umeae

ample, Fone
wishes Lo play a song which changes keys 9
Limes throughout the ecampositian, he has only te
Php the appraprute lever which will automatically
change thw key into the desired one,

Not only will the carillon change key, but abso, 1
will produce the appropr
for each individual note that o played

The system by which the
sound is quite interest

illon produces its
For each note thee isan
individual rod and hammer whieh strikes fo produce
the desieed effect, ‘Thus, we hear a fine quality
sound whose volume is enlarged}

G60 watts, ‘The

Installations in the

Drew Hartzell of the Muste Department is the
offiewl curilloneur of Albany State and ayersees the
Operations of the eurillon, Although thee iets are
presently learning to play the caritlan (ane has only
to fp a switch to keep the sound confined to the
room), Hartzell would like more people to valunteer

tie play roles similar te 1
A nobody: wishes to play at ny

portant te be non p
Ln our everyday life, tunes devon of
or relutious connotations are to by
whe knows, perhaps we'll soon hear
Revolution” by the Beatles permeating From the
lower
Although the most interesting function of the
lower un by far the housing of part of aarillon
system, nevertheless, the (ower pravides several vital
servicus to the campus, Basteally, the towers
nie for 200,000 gallons of water
ant to the President for
ment, said such a reseevesir ty
ded to stublize the pressure for the water

'

Hutt

distribution system for the campus te provide
enough pressure te drive water to the top of the
quads in © fire. During morning and evening,
fis at a peak, the water lower
burden of the

he tower I
one of the speakers of lights of the Lower ever
requires servicing, the repairman will eequare the ase
eof these states,

The next trae you ghinee at the water tower
contemplate nat only the beauty of it, but alse the
fimetions of it, After doing se, you'll probably
arrive at the conclusion that ¢
the water tower will once
Tower of the Year"

next elections,
he voted “Steel

ASE

Vol. Lx. No. 10 Tuesday, February 22, 1972

ya

Norman Mailer Speaks

Interview With Cooke

NYC Anti War Conference
Slated for Next Week

\

in Ballroom ...page 16

and Stein...page 3

.. centerfold

a

Photos hy John Chow

s

at,

PAGE 2

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 197)

WSUA Granted FM
Funds in Council Vote

By Ted

For over a year the possibility of converting WSUA to an FM
station has been discussed, Central Council last Thursday night gave
the station an initial appropriation of $5,424.50 to begin broadcasting
on a ten-watt educational band, commencing towards the end of the
Fall '72 semester.

The actual ground level exploration was conducted by « special
committee established by President Lampert in the beginning of the
Fall "71 semester. The issues of amount of listeners, cost and controls
were extensively researched

‘A ten watt band, as explained in w report by doel Lustig, Asst, to
the President, has several advantages. It is less expensive to obtain
involves fewer legal dealings and is easier to operate, In Lhe future an
expansion of wattage would be possible, ‘The initial work has been
done and in w matter of months all within a six or seven mile ra
will be hearing the vibrant sounds of WSUA

TENURE OF OFFICE DISCUSSED

President and Vice President of
Student Association was discussed, Presently the President and Vice
President serve one year Lerms, commencing two weeks alter they
elected, Council member Jack Schwartz proposed that these offic
not be allowed to succeed themselves, However, because of serious
constitutional questions, a vote was never taker

The controversy revolved around a decision by Couneil Chairman
Liew, He ruled that the pronosal must take the form of an amend
ment 10 the Student Association consitution, because it referred to
the tems of offiew. Ax such i two-thieds affirmative Couneil vate,
followed by a student referendum would be necessary, Sehwarte and
Ken Stokem believed the bill concerned eligibility and belonged in the
election laws, Therefore, a referendum would nat be neeessiry

A motion was made to overrule the chair's decision, Discussion
revolved not around the issue, but the parliamentary question, ‘The
bill was withdrawn and subsequently
wording.

Chairman Liese remained firm, He still believed the proposal was
constitutional in nature, After another discussion on the parliamen
tary ramifications, the bill was finally withdrawn or more considera
tion by the sponsors,

Schwartz liter explained the bill as an
; He! believes Student Association is unresponsive to student
desires, because the same group of people are continuously in power
Nothing has yet been settled, itis logical to assume that © kecond
attempt will be made,

‘The tenure of office for the

watered with minor changes of

tempt to end the rule of

COUNCIL REJECTS SMC CONFERENCE

Agnin Council rejected a plea for recognition by a politically active
#roup, Student Mobilization Committee asked Central Council mem
bers to support the anti-war conference to be held by that group in
New York City on February 25-2

Council members Kopilow and Widelitz Killed the bill
stated that SMC is an illegitimate group that “en
support of the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese C
Widelitz stated that the organization involved was in favor of the
destruction of Israel, The Council members were overwhelmed by the
impassioned speeches of their two comrades, By voice vote the bill
was defeated

Lou Abrams, spokesman for SMC, later expressed his disap

pointment with Council's decision. “{ think they were fooled by
Reople trom different political groups. They were agnins us because
we wouldn't adopt their tacties."* He pointed out that the Nationa
Youth for McGovern andthe stident yovernments if ves ene han
dred universities have endorsed the conference.

‘Thursday night's meeting was not without si
changes. Gregg Maynard, representing the commuti
mitted a written cenignation to View-Chi
was a major factor in his decision, .\ new member feom Alumni Qua
was sea, Patek Crean, the ony fash tn CounelL e M
Ht the special election held last Monday’ thresuth Wed nea

Kopilow

nt personnel
students, sub:
man Festus Joyee, Il health

ay

COVBRIDGE- STEMS: OCR cae”

TOWER EAST CINEMA

February 25 and 26

$.50 with state quad card
PLUS: Short Feature: FA

Lc7

Last Thursday WSUA was given an

jal appropriation of $5,424.50 to begin FM broadcasting, In 2

Room Rate Hike Imminent
As State Cuts Dorm Subsidy

by J.S. Flavin

To attend a state college next
fall, which of the following will

you be paying more for

A. Tuition
B. Dorm Rentals
C. College Fees
D, All of the Above

All of the Above!

Rockefeller's
‘Treasury

Boyer's
$63,000,000 of the s

calls for

crippled
Chancellor
office to raise
ite Appro:
priated $470,747,000 for fiscal

Robert Cone
Budget Office,

Governor's Budget does not affect
the State Subsidy for Dormitory

Debt Service
million in 71-7:

service costs to retire bonds and

accumulated in|

For
“Debt Service
16 per bed.
brought the to
$849. Resident
approximately

State

year paid $299

72-73. For SUNY to not raise all
‘of the $63,000,000 would mean

further cutbacks in programs, con
struction, education, and services.

Recent ASP articles
pending incr

cutive Budget for
includes an

tal Fees,

heralded
we in tuition. Now
it has been learned that the Exe
12-73
‘assumption” that re:
venues for SUNY shall be raised in
part by increased Dormitory Ren-

fise

Inflation and
and custodial

Passed onto the resident students,

Coupled with
for operating
crease of $100
dent student is

Harold Spi

S appearing imminent,

| The rate hike is neces

1971-72, Conery

words, State appropri

ry, New York State SUNY
claims that the

View Ch
and Business, cla
assumption
tory rentals by

budget cut of §
dormitory operation
resident student.

neetlor
nance

of ah

(estimated at $6.4
2, 1/3 of total debt

terest.) matched by increused rentals

Boyer

said,
amounted to
Operating expenses
tal per bed cost to
students only paid
$550." In other

ions last

per resident's bed

A $220 reside

may be
funds,

nual parking fee, student health
mission fee increases, and

more are

fees,

strong jrssibilities

Rocky's Executive
based, in part, on a $100,000
Federal subsidy (Revenue
Sharing). Should these funds no
come through, ull State
will be cut back fu
year

Budget

increased utility
costs are being agenc

less State f
expenses

per year per resi:
imminent, ‘There College tuition, rent, and for

Action on the proposed St

are approximately 55,000 resident creases is probably tw be taken
students in the SUNY system. at the

March Meeting of

SUNY Bourd of Trustees

ndler, Assistant

, more students might begin to seriously consider
sitated by a reduction in the State's dorm subsidy

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

Cooke and Stein Look

by Ed Potskowski
First in a Series
nt to know how the City of Albany spends
y and rans our government."” With these
es Couke and Robert Stein summarized
of their investigation into the 1971
Ly Budget
Attempting 1 move through the city bureaucracy
is like wading through a sea of tapioca pudding. But
Theresa Cooke and Bob Stein are doing just that in
order to obtain some explanations to some very
puzzling entries in the new city budget. And they
are discovering some very puzzling facts

Theresa Cooke—a SUNYA graduate working on
her Master's Degree in Business Administration—is
devoting full time to her efforts, She is also kept
busy raising three children.

Cooke began her investigation last March because
she was “disturbed by the political inachine control
of the school board." She contends that the school
board did not inform the public of the contents of
its budget. At that time there was a three man board
appointed by Mayor Corning. All were over 60 years
old.

“The two oldest (about 70 and 80) vacationed in
Florida for a couple of months," Cooke states, “and
let the other member run the board without a

running @ twenty million
dollar enterprise and, according to Cooke, he was
violating many state laws, including the purchase
laws. She claims that there was little communication
with the public, and board meetings were held only
at his conveniencesometimes with only ten
minutes notice

Who was this man? It was Judge Holt Harris, who,
Cooke points out, doesn't even live in Albany. He

ficticious residence’ Judge
since resigned as required by law, and th
ected schoo! board

The school system, she claims, accounts for 40%
Of the city payroll and thus 40% of the Mayor's

She will be yathering and indexing informa
mber of the school payroll

Mbany

quorum.” One man wa

power
Hion concerning every n
In fine with this, she will be seeking answers to
several questions that have been caised

Do school system employees hold other city jobs”
What is their family relationship peers in the
cily and ministration” Cooke hopes to

dispel or verify the rumor that the school system is

party

laden with patronage
discovered that
in the
what do we

During. her
Albany hay the highest
$14,000,000). Yet, she
to show for it? Only th
Mbany High School projeet for which
Holt Harris directly

inconsistencies and questi

investigation, Cd
school debt area
abivut asks,
have much criticize
$31,000,000
she holds Judge
Based an these
and her staff

plan to devote even more time to a

detailed investigation of the Albiny school budget

Too Many Questions

led her to wext examine the

city budget “Why,” she asked the Mayor
se of 81% are there no iner

1e said the Mayor refused to a

Cooke's curiosity
with a tax inere ase 11
city services?” § wer
her question
A this point it seemed the city was beginning to
lady who asks too many questions
time in recent memory, Mayor
Corning appeared at a budget hearing before the
Common Council (similar to a city legislature) 10
‘end his budget. He spoke for te
left—without taking any questions.
Council (which is all Democratic) refused &

hear of the
For the first

minutes and
Common

questions according to Cook

The budget was passed without
alteration; something, Cooke says,
is normal procedure. “It would be
highly inappropriate,” ‘Theresa
Cooke explains, "to question his
Honor’s wisdom and judgement
concerning the disbursement of
over 33 million dollars of publie

money
City Budget Probed

Ht was at this point that Bob
Stein, » local real estate agent,
joined forces with Cooke,
ogether they formed the nu
of a Taxpayers’ Association
wish Lo overcome the apathy and
intimidation of Albany's citizens {
and encourage them to participate
in their city government,” Stein
explains,

Attempting to some

clarity

and Stein invited
Mayor, or his representative, to a
public forum January 6 at Chan:
cellor’s Hall, The discussion would
be concerned with the budget and
public finances, The Mayor re
fused to participate, saying that it
would be “highly inappropriate
Cooke and Stein, aided by a small
staff of 20 researchers, were left
to find the answers that the city
wouldn't provide. And they found
some surprising answers,

First, they compared the st
cleaning, maintenance and repair
entry with the city of
Schenectady

Albi Schenectady

Population 124,000 87,000

Streets

208 miles 184 miles

Maintained

Schenectady budgeted about
$621,000 in 1972 for streets The
city’s estimates in the past have

to be

1 Pu
Schenectady, and has only
ads. Cooke multiphed the

Schenectady hudgeted for
VAX te

fairly aceurate
ws the size of
12%

arrive nt an
Albany
She dis

streets by
approximation of what
whine

y's request was

should be spe
covered that
$600,000 over her estimated fi
The key question Cooke wants
answered wy “Why ay Albany's fix,
ture so high’? And why the figue of
$16 milion an 1972 when in
1970 and "71 the
far his

Mayor's actual
expenst m wore $1
and $2.1 million
that these figu
to deceive the taxpayers

Cooke and Stein asked these and
questions. ‘The Mayor
‘could not provide
would allow an
examination of city records. A
Pandora's Box opened over Christ
mas vacation ax Cook

poured ov

discovered that there was
relation to what Mayor Corning
said in his budget and to what he
spent.” As a small example, she
noted that the city spent $2.40

many m
replied that he

nswers”” but

Sarah Lawrence College / University of Michigan
EUROPEAN SUMMER SESSIONS 1972
Florence;
London: London: June 23 - August 4; $800
Paris:
Lacoste; (Southern France) Studio Arts: July 1 - Aug 12; $1,000

Renaissance Florence: July 1 - August 11;$800

The Revolutionary Tradition in Paris: July 1 - Aug 11; $800

Progiam costs cover tuition, room and board (except Paris- where]
breakfast and lunch are provided), and planned excursions. Language
study (alan and French) oftered. Programs open to all undergra
duate men and women, Lavoste studio aif program open to all witht

uuterest or background in att
Foriegn Studies Offi

Sarah Lawrence College
Rranxyille, New York 10708

Far further information,
(brochure and application)

per gallon on antifreeze when it
could be purchased under state
contract for $.95 per gallon.

She discovered gross violations
of purchase laws. Municipal law
states that any contract for goods
cover $500 must be open to bid
Cooke discovered many instances
where a firm splits up the guods
and send the city separate bills so
that the total of each individual
bill will not be over $500, and the
bid requirement can be ignored
An example of this is an order for
police shirts from the South Pear!
‘Army and Navy Store (see Chart
1
Cooke
“these contracts do not have to be
bid since
This practice is at

his way, explains,

open fe each bill is
under $500

' calatian af thee save

Cooke also discovered that al
though the Park Department has
300 employees and a fleet of
trucks, a separate contract is awar
ded to transport sand boxes and
playground equipment from the
city garage to the parks. It cost
close to $500 to move just two
swing boxes to Washington Park, a
fee broken down in the following
manner: » loader at $22 per hour,
4 supervisor ut $9.45 per hour,
and 4 foreman at $9.45 per hour,

There are many lots and play
grounds in the eity, and the trans:
portation of these playground
items costs the taxpayers thou:
sunds of dollars, Why doesn't the

ty save this money and move

hese items with their own equip
nt and manpower? Ask L
who holds
ys Cooke William
d Democratic Leader

contra
rey, 9

Records Checked

The Mayor's attitude changed
once Cooke and Stein made their
findings public. Access to public

appears,
terminated, Cooke

4 request, in writing, 10

was al
sub

city records, it
most
matted
examine certain city files
sion was obtained two weeks after
the letter was sent but only one
view the records
with and no

person could
henee no se)
sof KeroXing were allowed.
To carefully
the massive amounts of
and entries, we were
20 minutes Lo see

Cooke
paper work
pout

ywven
cords,

Gity Municipal Golf Course con-
tained 27 full time employees
The golf course closed for the
season quite some time ago.

yoke claims that there were
many questionable names on the
payroll, such as the son of Judge
Tepidino (City Police Court Jus:
tice) and relatives of Democratic
Committeemen

‘An examination of the city’
garbage and dump contract also
yields some interesting material.
“The lowest paid laborer at the
dump,” Cooke points out, “gets
$15,000 per year plus overtime.”

‘The city rents equipment for the
landfill from North End Con:
tracting Company. (See Chart 2
for an account of just two pieces
of machinery.)

‘This is a lucrative “cost plu
contract. Such contracts are given
for street resurfacing, street
sweeping, and landfill. One state
audit reported that “claims. in
support of payments on the con-
tracts include items for payrolls,
rentals of equipment, mainten-
ance, parts and repairs, employee
benefits, i
legal q
materials and supplies, protection
. office and garage rentals,
and broom refills

In addition to all of this, the

jor adds on an administra:

und his fair

profit The audit con.
cluded that ¢ wax no indi
cation that the books and ac
counts of the contractors were
aduited or examined to determine
the accuracy und legitimacy. of
these charges.” AL the end of the
contract, the city owns nothing.

The man who owns the North
End Contracting Company and
the city’s landfill contract is
William Carey—9th Ward Demo:
cratic lead:

‘The city owns about 24 dump
trucks, 14 piek-up trucks, and 13
vehicles listed as “trucks”. Yet,
the city spends about $300,000
renting other equipment for
trash and sanitation. The Official
City Budget is an excercise in
simplicity, The lack of itemization
is notable : Trash Collec:
tion—$225,000, Labor for Street
Cleaning—$140,000, Labor for
Street. Maintainence~$410,000
No Breakdown exists on who gets
how much or how many laborers
are employed.

Chart 1

Date furnished
Quantity

12/29/71 18
12/29/71 16

12/30/71 20

Chart 2 New

Purchase
Item Price
1HD-8

$83,760

“947. 900°""'s5,812 "$202,032"

City Purchase|

Amount Order

$243 2107

$216 2108

$270 2109

Atend of 3
year contract city
Will Have Paid

Monthiy
Rental
to City

$5,290 $190,440

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

INEWS BRIEFS

Death Penalty Killed in California

keeper in 1966. The arguments
also covered the case of John
Britton Miller, who was con-

fornia.
SAN FRANSISCO AP - The ‘Three of Manson’s followers -
California Supreme Court de- gusan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten

International

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP)— The interior minister
warned today that civil war threatens this predom-
inantly Greek island because of an open rift with
the military government in Greece

It was the first public admission by 1 member of
Cabinet of the dangerous con:
between Nicosia and

President Makarios"

“Woe unto us if we fail to avert the horrors
terrible consequencies of a
Epaminondas Komodromos, minister of interior and

upled eight days ago when the Greek
junta in Athens presented an ultimatum to. M
They demanded he surrender a
tily of seeretly imported Cze
government of national w
tatives of his archrival, Gen, €
LONDON (AP)

h arms and form and
ty including repres

280,000 coal miners to call off a six-week-old strike

throughout Britain, Indieat
of miners would vote for a return by next wel
Heath intervened

Uement after the union leaders

E

proposed pay deal
proposed by an indep

turn to normal life as pickets
were ordered withdrawn from coalstarved power

tions throughout the country
wetricity cuts will cont for weeks Lo come

NEW DELII (AP)
today that it is prepared to have di
e talks with Pakista
and without any p

was contained in a lett
UN. Seeretary-€
to the press here, It is the strongest public sta
India hus made about a possible

en the two nations, which fought
war in December that ended with the creation of
independent Bungladesh in what was formerly Bast

National

ANCHORAGE, Alas!
officers return to th
payment of $250,000 in fines and
the Russian government to settle cha
supported illegal fishing activities within the U.S
12-mile fisheries zone.

Fines totaling $40,000
three after they changed th

ir ships today following the

levied against the
ir pleas from innocent
Court judge diree
that they be found guilty

came one month to the
the two Soviet ships were seized by the Coa
cutter Storis about n

miles from uninhabited St
200) miles off the

Maskan mainland:
hey were accused of transferri
the US fishers zane in vualation ofa LOGS law

WASILINGTON (AP)

i supplies within,

nation’s amost abused

economy af $U

Tits First speetal report to Conte
Department of Health

hot recommend new leystative
action but pledyes « comprehensive feders
Hehalihtation and. prevention pre:

HEW'S National fast

treatable untreated ilies,

Montisttan (Baik at Comet Canenaty Baday

at presfit Crone death and
desteielion averseas abso profit Tram explen

and these corporations. promote

which ts contra

Rockefeller funily

clared Friday that the death pen- and Patricia Krenwinkel - are in
alty is unconstitutional, and it the women’s section.

reduced the death sentences of “Most of the men are pretty
102 men and five women to life happy about it,” said San Quen- executions in California for al
imprisonment. nr Associate Warden James W. most five years, pending decisions
‘The court, ina 6-1 decision, said Park. “There are no demonstra: by the California and U,
execution was “incompatible with tions or anything like that, Most _ preme Courts.

the dignity of man and the judi- of them now are ina wait-and-see Since

cial process.” The court held that attitude, They want to see exactly
execution was ¢ruel and unusual what the court said." four women have been

punishment, In Sacramento, Gov. Ronald ‘The last to di
‘Among those removed from the press secretary, Paul

shadow of death sentences were Beck, said it had nat been decided
Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, convicted whether to appeal the court's cul

slayer of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, ing. that others will nit have

and Charles Manson, convieted in “We won't have any comment the way her son did

the murders of actress Sharon gn th Mitchell

‘Tate and six others, it and read it, and that may not be ler why he
Citing the steady nationwide de- joday,” he added n't

se in the number of execu

demned for the slaying of a depu.
ty sheriff in Modesto in 1967
‘There has been a moratorium on

Lin's gas chamber
was built in 1938, 190 men and

was Aaron Mitch
April 16

ell, executed
killing of
His mother said she ‘

decision until we have seen Mrs. Virgi

awe been given a chance 1

e ‘Anthony Amsterdam Stanford wait and see what was: go
tions from a high of 199 in 1935 University law professor repre- happen” in the courts on 1h
to two in 1967, the court said this senting the American Civil Liber constitutivnality of the .

“demonstrates that capital punish
ment is unacceptable lo society
today.” One-seventh of these
demned tu death in the U.S. a
Califor
Condemned men are held on
San Quentin Prison’s death row
The women are in a speci
the

ties Union in the case, argued that _alty
the death penalty is spottily ap- “The death penalty is aime
ON plied to “the miserable and social- because it’s wrong for anybest

in Jy unacceptable” and “has been kill and that my
repudiated by enlightened stan- the slate to kill
dards of decency.” Mitchell was executed Ap
J atlack against the 1967

Ly specifically involved He
we of Robert Page Anderson, the end

death pen
ion of the row built atthe
ulifornia Institute for Wor wh

alained his mnorenee fo

was sentenced to death for still belie
Frontera in Southern Cali- he filing of a San Diego shop: vieted

DEVLIN JAILED

BELFAST, Northern Ireland AP_ be done by a nonsectarian party

A Belfast court sentenced Berna- ‘They will be the first Alliance
dette Devlin on Friday to six party members to sit in the re
months in jail for marching in an gional Northern Ireland  Parlia
iMegal parade last Christmas in ment, now domi
Belfast. It released her on bail testant-based
after she announced she would Fein, the political arm of the
appeal extreme nationalist wing of the

Sentenced with her was Frank IRA accused themof of
MeManus, who with Miss Devlin is under the State Act.

‘4 member of the British Parliay Lynch has warned repeatedly he
ment from Northern {reland, Ele- will not telerate open defiance:
ven other marchers received the from the IRA, which also is out
same sentence and all joined Miss lawed in the south

Devlin and McManus in the appeal IRA bombs went off Friday in
and were freed on bail of $260 Belfast, Londonderry and Newry
each. as the guerrillas continued their

Miss Devlin, 24, and the other campaign of terror
civil rights marchers said they
intended to appeal to the highest
court, perhaps even the House of
Lords in London. This could take
months.

Miss Devlin, McManus and 24
other persons were brought into
court in Newry last Tuesday, on
charges of illegal marching Feb. 6
but won a month's postponement, WEST PALM
‘They considered this a vietory. (AP)

A conviction of violating North: on

Berrigan

HARRISBURG, Pa (AP) A
ted by the Pro defi lawyer says the pay

Unionist party. picked to try untiwar pris Phi

Berrigan and six athers on von
spiracy charges ix fair and without
bias.
Attorney
gave that
women and Friday
after three rejected jurors met
privately with the trial jud
gave sworn statements about com
ments they allegedly he,
federal courthouse
terrogation

U.S, District Court dudye Kt
Dixon Herm:

Thomas Menak

ant

during jury «

n refused to dv
the statements tu either govern
ment or def
dered th
Opent
scheduled Monday
There had been pub
counts that one or

Muskie in Fla.

statements are

by WALTER R. MEARS
AP Political Writer

BEACH, Fla
en. Edmund $. Muskie is
whistle-stop offensive

fon the selected jury panel, while

pledging to be 1

: n prejudicial “atatenwnts: ule
ern Ireland's law against illegal George C. Wallicw saying he ean. Peeudicral statements lew
marches calls for a mandatory not believe Florida Democrats Punt MNS ADA UNIS A
six: month jail term, would award victory in their presi UPA IM anti
An extreme left-wing Socialist, ential primary to a man “whee Mt sews
Six af the defender
Miss Devlin is behind the effart to. whole career hay tween ult an a at tbe defen
the British fram North playing on pesple's fears Taoiee seep. “ie
: Cathosie elergy 1
and unite the prover — Muskie said Walliew 1s oly peur Mreteen
with the Irish republic vehicle for protest, not areal sy. ae
She served four month, of a contender for nommatian or the aa} cane
sbemonth jail term an 1970 for White House and added that it cane ue Bt SS
iweiement to rok duane the the Alban goweenen ever dye UN om TE MN
hlvody street battles of Landen cami one, poms would Ae thal Meta
vuld tae gant that.” Metiakes tl
deery an 1960 away from him sar fast that tis revi

In At iy Haan the

other develupient three lead weld spun

Hee beheve: ths

Northern Trish legislators jomed ‘Phe Mame senator stressed that Wr teal there rg snr bes
forces with the only political par Meme and vanations ata half
ty uniting Cathohey and Protes dozen rear plattorn spevehe

a alesardd a sax car tranny dubbed the
The tee

Muskie Sunshine Special

McCartney:

mibers of the Nor

thern Parkament whe atineunedd Several lnandred

ey woul) eprsent the two each afoexdepets te Muh» Song Barred in Britain
Year ld Allunies with party were deliver speerhen tint weve: heegeee

forever Uist Barts Agieuitire oon phtasophy than vn
Master Phelan O'Neil, former In Deland, Muskie sont
Jodependent Umenst Bertie been toll that the euty was eta pees
MeConnetl and Independent Na candiditte ean hepe te win tte: eae Baal ie
Hronalint Tom Gormley mory un Blend Phy on bane alee

The Athanee party, a moderate pe fears me el .
group which clims oc membertup There's eanadedane anv tag pay, tattle Mes
of 10.000, cuts across Northern mary whose whale carers tas bh te
Treland’s traditional secret huolt I Dike Ee ony ee i
Hit om playing an people fea \

loyalties O'Neil and MeConnell and tis nan iy George Wallaee U2 '
re Protestants, Gormley isa Cath ¥ Anevopin un Ceeatbitect New th

He Make sont "Tet het lanl ad :

In 4 aint statement, the thee Mallar ts the leer awa UR cote tet
aad “We are convinced that if every puble opinen poll ean Se ‘

the people of Northern Ireland are ducted for ere

ti saver the ayn have Iweess banned

selves, this can only 11 way Flerida race

land

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

McCloskey Raps China Trip

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rep. Paul N. McCloskey,
R-Calif., criticized President
Nixon's China trip Thursday as a
“gimmich” while another presi
dential hopeful, Democratic Sen.
Vance Hartke, expressed concern
about the trip's pote

| impact
on U.S. imports and employme:

McCloskey said in a radio inter
view in Berl n, N.H., that the trip
was “a gimmick to divert people's
attention just before the election
away from the problems at
haek fire

he warned at may

T think the Chinese are smarter
han we are, amd they are gong te
Take advantage of this visit
They're going to drap Me) Nixon's

Nixon Tops Muskie
In California Poll

AP California Pr
earlier this momh, suid
President Nixon hy

Democratic rivals

A spokes
matehed ima trial ball
revived 10 per cent, Oth

McGovern's
Student Support

Is. reporting on a survey taken
Cahfonma voters. f
small am

said Nixon polled 1 per cent when
pairings: had Nixon

adding Sen. Hubert 1H, Humphrey 43 to 34 per cont
nel Nixon leading MeGawern

trousers neatly around his ankles
and he may never even know it,”
said McCloskey, challenger to
Nixon in the March 7 New Hamp-
shire primary.

Hartke voiced his concern in a
challenge to Sen. Edmund Muskie,
D-Maine, to take a public stand on
the possible repercussions of
Nixon's trip, as pertains to U.S.
employment

“T have not gotten a peep out of
Muskie on my plan to close th
tax and tariff loopholes: that

helping export American jobs to
Taiwan and other low
trws,” Hartke
released in Manchester, NI
Now that the Preside
the verge of opening the
whole new food of

id in a statement

axon

n over his top

inst’ Muskie, who

ne

(7 to 4 per cont

(CPS) Four hundred university and college stu:
dent body presidents and campus newspaper editors

across the nat
South Dakota

n have declared their support for
jenator George McGovern, who is
ing the democratic presidential nomination.

McGovern is “the man who ix most r
the needs and wishes of the people,

ponsive to
according to a

statement signed by the 400 supporters,

McGovern for Preside
tion on 0}

t groups are now in opera
+ 900 college and high school campuses,

However, the nationally-conducted Harris Survey

reports. th

yers-oF ay
tha

t McGovern’s support continues to be

ng young and old voters alik

ris Survey reports that among the under:
voling group

JK percent ide

McG
tical

mn pulls no
President

Nixon's support among the young

The survey states th

1 MeGavern wan th

choiew for the presidential slot hy only G pereent of

rank and file Democrats

MeGaver seared minor victory Leo weeks ago,

hawever, with Mos Caucus
group of antiwar hiberals

72, 4 Magsaehun

MeGinwern placed first ay the balloting with 1101

5, fullowed by New

MeCarthy with 286 wotes,

rk Representative Shirley
Chishohn with 110 votes, and former Sen

jor Bu

MeCarthy, whe leads MeGovern an the Uarris
Surves for navk and file Democeats with ¥ percent

her wnusual

tionally, dismissed the defeat saying, This ¥

which your strength

depended upon how many people you brought. And

Senate
chusetts

MeGiowern bas been werking hard in Massa

e e don’t think the trouble with

God is God. The trouble with

God is people. ® by)

It you've got something to say about God, we'll give you

time to aay it... asa

We're looking for hard-core human beings.
we Till Ryan

Contact

st in the Albany Diocese.

H Ne. Mais A
N.Y, 12208

ACHIEVED A SIGNIFICANT
\CTORY BY APPEALING TD

Dacron 88
Down Bags trom $35
Omne Tomp Foam Bag rated 20°

duced by Communist slave labor,
U think Muskie has an obligation
to the voters to take a stand on
something meaningful to Amer-
ican wage earners," he said,

‘The senator did not address him-
self directly to Nixon, nor did he
orate on what he thought the
trip's impact might be

In New Hampshire, Sen, George
McGovern, D-S.D., discounted
polls that show him trailing Mus:
kie inthe ey
don't measure the degree of com
mitment... to 4 ¢a

state, saying

didate
Tm willing to make a very

intial wager with
we will do better than the
polls are indicating,” he sind ana
radia interview at Lebanon

nyone

by Michael Putzel (AP)

‘The latest entry in the Demo
cratic. presidential sweepstakes,
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas,
says he will accept the nomination
if he gets it, but he doesn't have
time to campaign before the con
vention in July

Mills, a congressional expert on
finance, told a news conference in
Concord, N.H., Tuesday, he has
ho idea how much money is being
spent by people who want
hominate him, But he hopes its

ugh toe win some votes and
have a little cush left aver to cower
campaign debts,

The chairman of the powerful
Hause Ways and Means Conmmit
This is mot a Milly
ir” this as a draft Malls
campaign. ‘The work of our
and Means Committee as such that
T just cannot take away from the
committee far sufGicwnt Cae to
ko into the states that conduct
nd

presidential prim,
that kind of eammpaig
But the congressman said nor
oof the other Demoerats in he ri
appear to be attracting enthusias
te support, and he might get the
nation on the second ballot
convention.

CAMPING EQUIPMENT
book & hiking packs

air mattresses

leeping bags

$22.50

and other r camping goods

call: Bill OKrent

74765

1902 Eastman Tower

Students Get Second Chance
To Vote in June Primary

AP—Chief U.S. District Court Judge Jacob Mishler
New York State
requirement that prospective voters in a primary
election must have been registered in the preceding

struck down a

Holding that the right to vote was
tied Lo the right of free expression,”
‘Thursday declared
73-year-old election law ui

the state's June 20 presidential

including some of the estimated
persons between 18 and 21 who Tailed to register

before last November's ¢

EREAPED AN

rE MAKE IT CLEAR
HARVEST Or vores By os HAT ha

© ayant won BY Von
“THE BecaGes AND TH

| 4064 it
Wilbur Mill Announces;

Rocky Backs Nixon

ree

Rocky Backs Nixon Humphrey was slapped down.
AFL-CIO President
Meany, commenting on Humph-
rey’s hopes for the labor feder-
atic 1's endorsement

i) convention, said:

AP— Gov. Rockefeller said that
President Nixon has a‘
* of carrying New
York State in his re-election bid if
the Republican Party rallies to the

Nixon's campaign
spearhead for the state 0
inited effort in an address to the
Federation of Women's Repuly
liewn Chabs of New York

that he was pre

meeting with Meany was pleasant,
’ rstood Meany would

pared olipaiee (akan

Kosher Food

in
Dutch Quad

suid his fortheaming trip to China

hon people can't be ignared.

« that plans for a Kosher Kit
chew on Dutch Quad had been
approved and ar

Labor Slaps Humphroy

. Vane Hartke of by
diana and) Muskie
AFL-CIO exeeut

‘nan area off the Dutch Quad
kitehen in time for the Pull

cooperative, with a small group of
students taking responsibility. fo

and for the general operation of

and cleanup duty will be rotated

price for such x meal option
Hl not exceed the current cost
for a regular board plan. Shudents
will be able to select the kosher

at the sume time that they
make their housing phinsabout

man of the Kosher Food Commu

work, Now is the time to get

Sat. 11 am - 2 pm
PAGE 6

cation
We now

Playing on
enterprise

We urge

Editorial

term paper
advertising

Reprinted with pormission from the New York Times, February 16, 1972.

Commercial trading in term papers, though by no means a
new phenomenon, has become more brazen and apparently
more profitable, Shady merchants of such papers advertise in
student newspapers and, in their public statements, try to give
the impression that they are engaged in a legitimate business.

Their sole purpose is to profit from providing means for
successful deception. Theirs is a racket through which stu:
dents, who are foolish enough to be the customers, are as
cruelly deceived as the society which takes it for granted that a
certificate or degree attesting to certain attainments stands for
real achievement.

Recent attacks on the term paper peddlers by State Attorney
General Louis Lefkowitz have helped to call attention to this
problem, But effective legal action rather than mere expres:
sions of disapproval is needed to stop the abuse. Colleges can
help by spelling out the penalties to be invoked against
students caught engaging in such fraud. Student newspapers
‘moreover should have a high enough regard for academic
integrity to reject thesis-for-sale advertisements,

“Term paper for sale” advertising has appeared on our pages
in ever-increasing amounts this semester. At first we thought it
a novel idea
service that has existed since the beginning of higher edu-

companies and fully agr

A term paper involves work, research, time, What is gained
by sending away for a term paper? A“B'? An “A? Where do
you get the educational experience we are all (supposedly)
here for? How can you get any practice i anaylsis or creative
writing if all you must do is send away $..00"

Attorney General Louis Lethowis's office to | whole University store.
spoke to this reporter ab

undertake a formal investigation of term paper companies and
ig vet i hookrush, and plans for bettering

We urge all students not to buy any term paper that is for sale

No more

4 company making money by providing a

store manager
realize the true purpose of the term paper
with the New York Times editorial
many students laziness is not our idea of free
the University

outlined tentativ

Jagn-Luo Godar

Thursday, Feb. 24 in LC-18 at 7:30
FREE with current tax card & ID, $.50 without

Allso...Flash Gordon Sarisis

by Linda Mule
‘The SUNYA University Book-

store may soon be taking on anew
look, or so at least hopes book-

Colon, who previously worked as
bookstore manager
munity college set-up in Pitts:
burgh, took over as manager of

January Ist of this
addition to certain rearrangements
of merchandise that have
seen in the store lately, Colon has

larging and restru

's ALPHAUILLE

the service and utility of the
bookstore

‘The plans for actually enlarging
the square footage selling space of
the bookstore are still up in the
air, but Colon is hopeful that his
project will be approved. The pur:
pose of changing the store, which
involved ing the offices
located in back of the present
book-selling area, tearing down
the walls which separate the
offices from the rest of the store.
and then finally remodeling that
new area, would be to double the
actual square footage of the store
from 4,000 sq. feet to 8,000 5q
feet, ‘This should, according to

ton, faci thing up all the
departments of the bookstore on
a totally self-serviee basis.
Another part of Colon's idea is to
set up a used-book department an
the bookstore, as “the only
effective way of reducing the
costs of textbooks.” ‘The manage
ment of the bookstore, which ts
part of FSA, now supervises the
Used Book Sale, but Colon would
like a permanent used!
hook department in the store
itself

see a pro

PROFESSIONAL
SKI INSTRUCTOR
OF AMERICA

UV
for

fundamentals

PROFESSIONAL SKI
INSTRUCTORS OF AMERICA

Aavertising contributed tor
the Public Good by the
Albany Student Press,

It will be contained as an insert with the regular ASP.

Anyone wishing to contribute in any way,
contact Jeff Redgers, CC 334 or 457-2190.

On March 17, the ASP publishes Its

Annual Spring Issue.

featuring poems, photos and essays
all on the theme of Springtime

New look planned for the bookstore

Colon would also eventually lik
to set up the textbook area in t
tunnels on a totally self-servi
basis. He feels there is somethin}
lacking with the present ler
service," and that it would be "
benefit to our customers for ther
to be able to see and pick ou|
their own books." However, sine
this plan will take a large amoun|
of time and money before it ea
be implemented, Colon wil
continue to use the option syster

the beginning of thi
This system of buyin
books, which affords students thq
option of either staying on hne 1
the tunnels and waiting for ai
order to be filled (he same day, 0
leaving an overnight onder and
picking up the order right awa
the following day, proved ver
successful, according to Colon Ud
said he has recenved many: favor
shle comments from stuuteni
about the option systen
wlded that

shine that exceeded 20 mint

A few minor problem
the beokrush. such as the d
culty of filha overneht o
for only Zoe 4 hawks, but th
particular peobiem wall peshably
he comma, sand Colon by basing
that can be filled an an eee
basis

Some of Colun’s

for the buckstore melude

ancl a jsut benok anne ceenirel

row raffles tee win a 1
Invyele cian be pick
the bookstore ane
for the tinker wall
2Ath Ale planned fo the inenth

of Maret asa rerond atuch

1 Mare

Promises, some great tanga
all kines et music, teens hare
te hurd cock .

which will anetude abv
everything in the stere at tener
ous sawinnys

Announcements af both
will be inthe Athany Studeat

Press during the next week

ee

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

HOME
HOME

SWEET

9

by Bob Mayer

1 went home to New York City this week-end, if one can actually

call New York a home and from the

nute Lset foot on her ground

realized the doom that my city was destined for, It had been over a
month since I left the womb-like security of this campus and I forgot

the horrible reality 1 left behind, Man could ha

ome no closer Lo

no that Dante wrote about if his life

have people chosen to

fund 1 had to ask myself why

wpt the madness, All the answers are not

adequate yet all the reasons ure very real to these people, They never

chose to live like the

that they wi some sociologists nightn

do, they just woke up one da

nd discovered
You look at

their faces and you see that not one is happy, not one is glad to be

alive in this haven of despair,
fulfillment or achievement, ‘The

and not one shows
Park Avenue execut

S-hour work a day suit and the garment worker with his 10 hour week

trousers share the same expression of be
mechanic humanoids force their way

nent and fatigue, The
nd out of the archaic

tunnels that will lead them to a final resting place, even if it is only for
12 hours, There is no consciousness occurring in their minds. ‘The

hours in the office, factory. or shop, filled with small talk, gossip, and

orders, have left them with a fer

of emptiness and with little hope

of their lives ever being changed inte something decent ayain, ‘They

sew the thousand others th

unity they can only feel the lass
biggest fear ts that one of those an the

look just hike them and instead of feeling

f self and individuality. ‘Their
ob will venture to come up to

them and molest them with a question or some ridiculously, absurd

Jatement about how bad things have become
yelids droop down as if the weight of

hold up a newspaper and th
the world was on them

Most are too tired ty

T thought of the often used term, the “affluent society” and had to

Taugh Is this what affluence has given them Does it really: matter
whether they return te Borest Hills ae (a Bedford Stuy? Not if this is

He means ty that end, Not one lousy being on all the miley af steel

tracks is living for anything

her than SURVIVAL. One must suffer

this disgrace, Uhis waste and detention enty because he ar she hi te

Provide so the children ean attend un-edueating schools, 0

they can live ina city, af decay, inexcusable destru and

deteriation af goods and services

Pouple can find little joy a this Wastehind ‘They're too dima busy

stra

this on them, it isn’t Richard Nexon,
heir eyes closed By refusing to think of the

all themselves hy kee

6 SURVIVE in that eity. [isn’t John Lindsay: who hay pat

the Rockefellers ‘They did it

msequences that the false god progress had in store for them. ‘They

ilectively buried Uh

their greed refused to mike sacrifice .
F victims of the empires inevitable

reasoning, they may be the i
fall And now there is no chore

sof human flesh and through
And by the same speculative

eis anly the need Lo survive

Ex-Cons Now In College

New York, N.Y. (CPS) - Ray
mond Machado was in u juvenile
detention center at the age of 11
He came to New York City from
Puerto Rico with his famil
still in his infancy, Ev ly, h
was to serve 10 years in presor
including eight years on a mun
slaughter charge

Cris Montiero is a 40 year old

ex-addiet
exconviel with over 13 ye
prison, mastly on drug rela
charges. He was born und raised i
New York

Scott Cross is. white
member of the
Jersey police farce
aye, he was arrested as part af a
police ring stealing from neigh
borhood stores and he served a
year in New Jersey prison after his

Two years

conviction
Ray Machado, Cris Montiero
and Scott Cross have two things in
common, All three are ex-conviets
and all three will be students at
Montclair State College, Mont
clair, N-J., this semester
‘They will be college students as
a result of a federally-funded pro:
xrum in which Montelair State
College a
zation

will be working
Fortune office us counsellors
traning
This college program ts designed
to permit former off
teach and counsel men in prison
It ts operating under the premise

that the rehabilitated ex-offender
can create « rapport with the
inmate, unmatched by the
“square” instructor, ‘This is ay
sumed for two reasons © one is
that he can understand the
us und attitudes of the stu
dentinmate and also because he
represents hope in a bleak exts
tence. As an exconviet turned
weher, he ix evidence that a mun
an make if on the outside
The reality of thiy new ex
perience is difficult for Raymond
Machady to totally comprehend
At the age of 19, he rece
20-40 year sentence from a judge

wh the courts, he
ee reduced to 10-20
ide parole in 1969
ayo, Ray Machado
thought that he could be in prison
until 1999. Now he is a scho
preparing to tei
with whom he was once
encaged
Cris Montiero used drugs for
over 20 years and had been uban
doned by most of his family
Society had written him off as an
addict and a convict. His role in
life had been cemented
Scott Cross was a cop who had
busted. He was called a
disgrace to his police unife
while boing lubeled an ex-con. |
felt he belonged nowhere
But people can change — and
ch people provoke
growth and progress

(WHAT D0 YOU CHICKS
WANT, ANYWAY?

ELL, THERES THAT
TERM “CHICK* FOR
STARTERS! -—~

We DEMAND TO BE

ALLOWED INTO THE
FELINE FOLD!
a ji

We'Ve HAD OUR FILL OF BEING
IDENTIFIED WITH SOFT, FLUFFY,
ae HELPLESS: ;

—__————
G3 WEVER THOUGHT

OF IT THAT Way, | DID I!

with HUEASURE! SLAP He)

\C THREE, Pussy,

PAGE 8

On January 25, President Nixon went before the American people to
bring the news of an “8-point peace plan.” The Nixon administration made
clear that if its latest ultimatum is not accepted by the Vietnamese people
there would be the ominous danger of a major escalation of the Indochina
war by the U.S. government. Nixon himself spelled it out in his speech
when he said:

1f the enemy's answer to our peace offer is to step up military attacks,

! shall fully meet my responsibilities as Commander-in-Chief of our

armed forces . . . (emphasis added)

James Reston writing in the Jan. 26 New York Times expressed more
fully the intent and message of Nixon's speech;

He did not deal with the problem of peace itself. In fact he made it

worse and committed himself to more fighting and more bombing if

an offensive occurs . . . in mid-February.

From the man who fully met his responsibilities as Commander-in--
Chief in 1970 and 1971 by invading Cambodia and Laos, Nixon's speech
represents a matter of serious concern to the antiwar movement. In light of
Nixon's speech and the increased bombing of Indochina that has occurred
in recent months, we must analyze the state of the war and place the role
of the student antiwar movement in 1972, a Presidential election year, into
perspective,

The form of U.S. involvement in Indochina has changed in an effort to
deal with the deepening of antiwar sentiment at home. Majority antiwar
sentiment is the reason for the government's propaganda campaign to con-
vince the American people that ‘‘the war is winding down." To provoke the
power and anger of millions of antiwar Americans is something to be avoid:
ed at all costs. The war has become an automated one, relying on increased
use of air power, chemical defoliants, pesticides, and electronic gimmickry.
However, the military goal of the war-makers has not changed, it remains
the military crushing of the Vietnamese liberation forces. The war contin-
ues, as it has for over 10 years of U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, only
the form has changed.

The “Nixonization” of the war involves the increased saturation
bombing of Laos, Cambodia, and North and South Vietnam to the point
where, in 1971, almost one million tons of bombs were dropped on Indo-
china. One-fifth of Vietnam has been defoliated, the U.S. government using
enough chemical defoliants to amount to 61 Ibs. apiece for every man,
woman, and child in the country. Delicate electronic sensors proliferate
throughout Indochina to direct the releasing of thousands of tons of anti.
personnel bombs designed to rip to shreds every living person within their
range.

Herbert Mitgang, writing in the Dec. 20, 1971 New York Times, ex
pressed the rationale behind the “winding down of the war.”

Pentagon planners (are) under orders to lower the casualty rates

though not the American involvement supporting Vietnamization dur

ing the Presidential season. (emphasis added)

The simple fact is that the war is not winding down, as the five-day
bombing raids against North Vietnam proved. The "Nixonization” of the
war has become a policy of saturation bombing, destruction and devasta
tion of the countryside by use of chemical defoliants and insecticides, and
the political and financial support to the dictatorial regimes of Thieu in S.
Vietnam and Lon Nol in Cambodia.

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

‘TROOP REPLACEMENTS

"Under an creumelancns wil | be aifected
mumphrumfrumphf’

The government's policy of continued aggression in Southeast Asia has
been combined with a serious, concerted attempt to convince the American
people that the war is on its way to being over and that the antiwar
movement is dead. We have been told to sit back and wait, that Nixon will
go to China and end the war, that his globe-trotting adventures will create a
"generation of peace.”

That illusion, created by the mass media, was shattered and broken in
December, 1971 when the U.S., as the Anderson papers revealed, was giving
direct support and encouragement to Pakistan in the Indo-Pakistan war
Illusions were further dispelled with the five day round-the-clock bombing
of North Vietnam at the end of the year.

On Jan, 25, the same day as Nixon's latest “peace plan’ was announ
ced, The New York Times reported that U.S. jets carried out another
“protective reaction “bombing raid over North Vietnam. We can expect no
“generation of peace” from the government which has invaded Laos and
Cambodia and dropped more tons of bombs on Vietnam, a country the size
of Texas, than were dropped in all of World War I!. The only way this war
will end and people of Indochina will be able to determine their own future
will be by the total, immediate, unconditional withdrawal of all U.S. troops
and bombers from Southeast Asia.

Antiwar sentiment has grown to massive proportions in the United
States. A recent Harris Poll showed that 65% of the American people
believe “that it is morally wrong for the United States to be fighting in
Vietnam,”

Neil Sheehan, in the Jan. 16 New York Times wrote:

The outcry over the five days of bombing raids against North Vietnam

at the end of [December] has demonstrated the war is a latent issue

with the electorate that could be quickly rekindled by events in Ind
china. And the military reverses suffered by Washington's allies could
conceivably rekindle it. The U.S. government is being boxed-in in

Southeast Asia between the deepening antiwar sentiment at home and

the increasingly difficult military situation in Indochina.

We, in the student movement, have learned a lot in the seven years
that we have marched, spoken-out, and organized against the war. We learn
ed on Nov. 15, 1969 and April 24, 1971 that it is mass demonstrations
which have given the antiwar majority the courage to express their opposi
tion to the war. We learned in May, 1970 that our campuses and high
schools should be antiwar organizing centers where our power, our organi
zation, and our numbers can reach-out and involve the decisive majority int
the movement to end the war. We have learned that it is only the immedi
ate, unconditional withdrawal of all ships, bombers, and GI's which guaran
tee the people of Southeast Asia that they will be free to determine their
own future.

It will be key in 1972, when many in the antiwar movement have
different ideas on electoral strategy, that we realize the maximum potential
of our movement by uniting all who oppose the war in common antiwar
activity, regardless of their position on other issues. Most important of all,
for 1972, we have learned that our maximum power and effectiveness lies
in the independence of our movement. We have learned that the best way
to unite the antiwar majority is through independent mass demonstrations
in the streets for immediate withdrawal, welcoming all who wish join the
‘movement to end the war. And it will only be by continuing to build an

centerfold by Bob Mayer

TUESDAY, FERRUARY 22, 1972

independent movement for the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. force¢
from Indochina that we will end the war.

In the last year there have been significant additions to the forces of
the organized independent antiwar movement. Labor, understanding that
Nixon has attempted to make the working people pay for the war, has
endorsed and participated in mass antiwar actions on a greater level than
ever before. Women, Chicanos, Blacks, Vietnam veterans, active-duty GI's,
and Gays have all become powerful, dynamic components of the antiwar
movement by linking their demands for justice and liberation to the neces-
sity for immediate withdrawal. Within, the student movement, high school
students have become the most consistent and active builders and organiz-
ars of the antiwar movement. High school students, in some cities, made up
the majority of those who demonstrated on November 6. The antiwar
movement now clearly represents the majority of the American people. We
are beginning to include in our ranks the forces necessary to end the war.
Our job now is to turn the majority antiwar sentiment into majority anti-
war action, when we do that this war will end.

An integral part of the administration's propaganda campaign has been
the theme that the student movement is dead. For the last six months
feature articles, radio talk shows, and TV specials have presided over the
funeral of the student movement. Typical of these was an article in the Jan.
10 New York Times, by Douglas Kneeland, entitled ‘‘Where have all the
sit-ins gone?” Kneeland joins in giving the last rites to the student move-
ment:

If the radicals had faded then (fall 1970), their energies dissipated,

they are virtually invisible now. A mention of the Vietnam war is

more likely to elicit a shrug than an expletive...

These pronouncements represent wishful thinking more than reality.
Antiwar sentiment is higher than eve: before on college campuses. On April
24, 1971 more students demonstrated for immediate withdrawal than ever
before on a single day. A Carnegie Commission on Higher Education study
released on Nov. 14, 1971 reported that “the tinder of discontent on the
campus remains dry (as ever)."” High schoo! students have now organized in
greater numbers than ever before. In reality, the pronouncement of the
death of the student movement is a striking testimonial to our potential

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

:

(ONCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS A WAR!

BIGSICECiSicinicioioioicicioioioiginicieiaianiaicicisieniciskiaisieiiaioiaioiaiciok ick setotoiicioiaieict ak at tk Ak FI AIR III A Ak ed tie te IHR AAAI BAHN TT

In conjunction with the pronouncements that the student antiwar
movement is dead, the government has continued a campaign of victimi-
zation of antiwar activists, both at home and in Vietnam itself. The repres-
sion of leaders of the Vietnamese student antiwar movement should be a
question of urgent concern for all American students. A background to the
development of the repressive actions against the Vietnam National Student
Union is included in this issue of the Student Mobilizer. The facts about
their victimization should be part of teach-ins, rallies, and educational
material on the continuation of the war. At home, this spring the govern-
ment begins the trials of Daniel Ellsburg and the Harrisburg defendents, The
right to organize and speak out against the war is under attack in both of
these trials, The defense of victimized antiwar activists remains essential to
building a powerful mass movement to end the war.

The most urgent task before the student movement this spring is to
expose and combat the widespread illusion that the need for mass antiwar
activity is over. Campaigns such as those being carried by the Berkeley SMC.
(see article p. offer an example of the type of education and action we
need to carry out this spring. The ominous situation in Indochina, with the
possible danger of a new escalation of the war, makes it imperative that we
bring the truth about the war to the American people.

It is in this context that the Student Mobilization Committee, the
largest national student antiwar organization, has initiated a call for a
National Student Antiwar Conference, to be held February 25-27 at Wash:
ington Irving High Schoo! in New York City. The purpose of the confer:
ence is compelling—to bring together the student movement to map a pro-
gram of broad-based antiwar activity. The central themes of the conference
will be, “Is the War winding down?”, and ‘the student movement in 1972,
what next for the antiwar movement?” The conference itself will be a
decisive answer to those who would like to pronounce the student move-
ment dead. The decisions of the conference can have a tremendous import:
ance for the student movement in 1972. Add your voice to the growing,
decisive antiwar majority. BE THERE!

STOP THE LIES!

STOP THE BOMBING, BRING ALL BOMBERS, SHIPS, AND GI'S
HOME NOW!

ON TO THE NATIONAL STUDENT ANTIWAR CONFERENCE,
FEB, 25-27, NEW YORK CITY

s.THAT I PLEDGE TO

By DEBBY BUSTIN
SMC National Coordinator

FRED LOVGREN
SMC National Staff

Reprinted with permasion frony the

Student Mobilization Committee

IFEBRUARY 25-27
INEW/ YORK

40 Irving Place

HNATIONAL STUDENT
I ANIVAR GNFERENCE

SPONSORED BY THE

BSTUDEN MOBILIZATION GMMITTEE
I Bring ALL US. Forces Home NOW! s seisiisientstese an

WASHINGTON IRVING HIGH SCHOOL

(one block east of Union Square) action, The Student Mobilization Committee, along

BRING ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOV

Nixon has one big problem, us. Every time he
starts up a campaign of lies, we tell the truth, Every
time he escalates the war, we answer, ‘OUT NOW!"

In 1972 the power of the student movement will
be more crucial than ever before. In order to plan
our most effective strategy, we need to meet together
10 compare our experiences and decide on a course of

with many other organizations, 1s sponsoring a Na
ronal Student Antiwar Conference to be held in New
York, Fet vary 25:27. The conference 1s open to all
young people who want to end the war. Every per
son has voice and vote. Add your voice, Be there!
BEBE SSE SESE SES
©! will attond the National Student Antiwor
Conterance, Enclosed is $3 advanced registration.
‘O'Send me more information on the SMC and the
Conteroncs.

a
a
HE Ol want to join tho SMC ( $1 membership foe).
Oenelosed ina'$- donation,
r
c

Name.

PAGE 10

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

_PERSONALS

SERVICES

ODDS&ENDS

A belated happy birthday to Mr.
Harry Arse.

Love,

Mrs. Arse

Gary: Now that it’s your birthday
| don't know what to do, can’t
afford a Thunderbird or a pent:
house with a view, can’t even buy 2

TRAVEL HELP WANTED

little present I'm much too broke, |
find: But there is one way | may

Spring in Acapulco: 3/31-4/7 via
Saturn Airways Jet. 40 seats open
to University students/staff. Also
Europe this summer, For Informa:
tion call Albany Student Flights
(3-8) 482-3474,

RIDES WANTED

Ride wanted to Bronx THIS
FRIDAY (Feb 25). Call Arty
472-5618. Will share expenses.

Ride Wanted: Feb 25 10 East
Meadow (or general vicinity). Re
turn Feb 27, Call Bob 472.7818,

Ride Wanted: Ride needed to
Harpur College in Binghamton any:
time Friday, Fob, 25. Call Linda,
2.7773,

Need ride to the Bronx for Fri
day, Feb 25, Call John 7:7983,

Neod ride for 3 on 2/23 10 Man
hattan for concert, Call Judy
7.8243, or Joyce 74043,

Ride wanted: To Hartord,
Cann. orea, March 10, Call Phyls
457-4006.

Ride
(Harpur)
7.8993.

wanted 10 Binghamton
Friday. Call Karen

Wanted: Round:
Stonybrook Fri, Feb, 25 to Sun.
Fab, 27, Call Allen 7-789,

Neod ride to Cornell University
Fab, 25 call Arty 472-4450,

Ride wanted to B’klyn Feb. 25
to return Feb, 27, Call Lenny
487.4664,

Aide needed to Lit. or N.Y.C.
Wed. Fab, 23 anytime or Fob. 24
Call Diane 7:3068,

Ride wanted for 2 to Ithaca
Feb. 25, return Fob. 27, Call
Andrea or Judy 7.7764

RIDERS WANTED

Riders neaded to Miami, Leaving
March 31, 1972. Round trip $60,
Call Paul (457.7950), Stove
(457-7989)

LOST

LOST: a maroon and white scart
& ski cap, in L.C. 23 and Campus
Center sctively, Call Dave
Ogden 457-5084,

Lost: Used
valued family photos,
371-3240,

role of film with
Reward

OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STU-
DENTS Australia, Europe, S.
America, Africa. ete, All profes:
sions and occupations, $700 to
$3,000 monthly. Expenses paid,

Sightseving, Free informa-
tion, Write, Jobs Overseas, Dept. E6
Box 15071, San Diego, CA, 92115,

time, Hours
arranged. speed
writing proferred but not absolute
requirement, Dr. Howard Flior!,
98-328, 457-8680 or 439.3354
{ovenings!

Research
nooded
Help

74690.

information
wostitos
Martin

project
concerning,
appreciated, Call

NEED SMALL AMOUNT RE
SEARCH done soon: Astro
omy /physies (graduate lovel?), pay
negotiable. 399-4273,

HOUSIN

Female roommate wanted, Own
room, Furnished, Threo blocks
from old campus. Opon March 1
Cali 438-1594,

Wanted: wo bedroom apt. on
busline for the summer & noxt
year. Contact Sylvia, 457-4742.

Five bedroom apartment wanted
for Fall ‘72, Call 457-4508,

Boautiful house near uptown cam
pus needs tourth roommate. Call
482-6883,

Studio apartment and spacious
apartment for two available - 46
Willett Strvot « dicectly across trom
Washington Park. Call 459-7352
anytime,

Fomale
$57/mo., now bus,
Lory, 489-4363.

roommate wanted
privacy. Call

Roommate wanted: own room in
large apartmont near Medical Cen:
ter, $60/mo., phone 465-4684

Woman needed to share house
with one other. Call 489-7271, be.

WCA, Chapman College, Box CC11, Orange, Cal. 92666

SEND TODAY FOR
FREE CATALOG ON

m YOUR SEMESTER
AT SEA

Academic Credit.
Financial aid available.

save the day, and | sure hope you
don't mind,
Frank

Chel & Gory
Chell & Gory remember
“U' continue to continue...”
IMLJ M, XIRDENH.

Steponme: Congratulations, to:
morrow you aren't a teenager any
‘more. Happy birthday

Kathy, Ellyn, Sue, Louise

M.M.: You're such a cunning tin-
quist

Ed Cohn. what's now in town?

To Bitch and Pal
Are you sure you're just
mates"?!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

DEBBIE KATIN 2 22.72

FOR SALE

"68 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE: $300
‘needs work. Call 472.9504.

FOR SALE 1963 VW  Suntoot
needs somo work. Bost offer
436-1704, after 5.

FOR SALE: Roberts 773X Pro:
fessional tape recorder $250 (will
negotiate). Call Whale 457-8812.

FOR SALE: Judo Gt Compl
$15, Call Jaik. 7-523,

FOR SALE: 50 watt, 3 month
old steroo amplifier. 20 month fae:
tory guarantee. Reasonable price,
Call Gene 457-7973,

IBM oloctric typewriter 15" car
riage. Call after 6 P.M. 438-5039,

1963 Chovy Impala; 283; new
carb, rebuilt trans; good brakes;

1963 Chevy Impala; 283;
new carb., rebuilt trans; good
brakes; 64,000 miles, snow and now
radial tires; wagon: good mech,
cond.; $225 - must soll, Phil
465.4227, after 6.

For Sale: 63 VW
offer, call 436 - 17

sunroof. Best

1970 Duster
body damage
370-1916.

340 4b. Some
$1250. Phone

FOR SALE: '65 VW Good con.
dition, roasonable, low mutea
Nick 436-7038.

For Sale:
Condition - Best
365-3604 after 6.

"65 VW Bus, Excellent
offer. Call

i.

oxperi-

Income taxes prepared:
enced 489-3239 days or
436-1068,

Income taxes propared, student
foes 438-1315.

Typing done in my home.
Reasonable rates. 869-5932,

—WANTED _

WANTED: Hockey goaltender

equipment (used) or shin guards.

Call Andy. 472-4467,

CONTRABAND

‘A funky musical group is looking
tice and store

for a place to pr
equipment, Willing to rent. Respon:
sible parties only. Call 457-8073,

KEG with Bota Phi Si
Independent girls, Tuesday,

22, at 9:00. 12th floor, Stuyvesant,
All rushoos invited,

he BLACK WEEK

Honest fellow who found my
wallet: Your sister did not return it.
Rich 465-1014.

ANNUAL ART SHOW All col
lege students residing in Albany
County are invited to display and
sell their paintings, sculpture, jewel:
Fy eteations, candles, woodcraft,
and macrame.

This is an excellent opportunity
to have your creations viewed by
the public and to convert artistic
talent into earning power:

Students should bring their work
to National Commercial Bank and
Trust. Company (Guilderland
Branch), Community Room, Route
20 and 155 from 12:00 to 2:30
p.m. on Sunday, March 5, 1972.

Work will be viewed and pur
chased by the public and Sunday,
March 5 from 3:00 to 7:00 p.m.
and Monday, March 6 from 5:00 to
3:00 p.m. An entrance fee of $3.90
will be required of all exhibitors.
Students determine price that artic:
5 will be sold and are encouraged
10 moet with the public.

admission to public; spon:
ored by the Albany County Youth
Activities Committee,

For additional information: Mr
ra Smolowitz, Art Show Chaseman,
159.5570

AND SISTERS

END COMMITTEE invites all Black

Students to display any Art works they may have at the

Third Black Cultu

pictures, posters, lithoics,
relate to Black people arc
J be shown, speculate if yo

4 al Week-end at Albany State during
April 14th through the 16th, 1972. We

¢ interested in
. ceramics, and pottery which
nund the world. All picces will
ou wish to have them sold. All

pieces should have a return address. If interested, please

contact:
Roger Mattison or 1
107 Tappan Hall
State Quadrangle Bi

d Bell

ox 556

Telephone: 457-3009 or 457-5370.

Besse fey b before March 20, 1972

1400 Washington Av
CLASSI

e, Albany, N.Y. 1220

SSIFIED FORM

{Date(s),ad is to run

Ad is to read as f

‘ollows:

TOTAL ENCLOSED
So,

Name.

Total no.
of words H

Amount to pay—X_5¢ 4

For each date $

Address

Phone.

DEADLINES: For Tuesday Paper, Sunday 11:00 p.m.

For Friday

Paper, Wednesday 11:00 p.m.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 11

Applications are still being accepted
for the Aegean Institute, a summer
Program to be held in Poros, Greece
fram June 25 10 August 8, For details
swe Prof, Pohisander in HU 349,
Zotetiks
lub—has

the undergrad Philosophy
wwekiy cotter
11.00-12.30 Tuesday 1m
HU 354 (Humanities Lounge.) Open
to all, At Feb, 22 and 29 meetings

ons for speakers will be taken,

hours at

PEACE & POLITICS mings in

MAJORS & MINORS

Come to the National Student Anti For alt ynte
war Conference Feb, 25-27. {twill be students. Tw
held at Washington Irving High Tues Feb 22 ut
School. 40 Irving Place, New York — establish ESAC

City, Everyone attending has vote and

sit SUNYA English
rll te su

Zototiks,- We undergrad Philosophy
club-)s Pleased 10 present Prot,
Kenneth Stern of the Philosophy
whether ‘Beyond
Freedom and Dignity’ is only Skinner
deep? on Tuesday, March 7 at 7.30
pean HU 354, Everyone is welcome,
Garvin watt seen

speak ov ‘Religion and Enquiry into
Religion: Universities and/or Gurus?”
West, Feb, 23m HU 290 a7

pas Students Ad:
visory Committee ‘i 11 purpose ot

15 Oobtasng a woe ear culm change
aa " : dept, discussing
sanes waitin the Eris De

SUNYA Draft Counseling Hours
Tues, 10-1, 7-9, Wed, 12-3. Thurs,
1-5, 7-9.

Philosophy and the Humanities Col-
Joquim Prot. Robert

. Biology club sweting’ ynformal
discussion on Tues,, Feb, 22 at 7 30
pm i BIO 248 featuring Dr, Baum,
Dr. Ghiradella, and Or. Fetdinan,

The English Dept. will presont Gal. trees

way Kinnell reading {rom his poetry
Thurs, Feb, 24 at 8 pm in the
Humanities Loun

The organizational imeeting of
Maoists for Muskie has been
rescheduled for Feb, 24 at 8:00 pm in
theo Fireside Lounge: Premedical and pre-dental students
applying in 1972 to begin studies in
1973. If you have not registered with
the Advisory Committee, please do so,
Forms available in University College
(ULB 36),

Marxist-Leninist Study Group meets

Tues., Feb, 22 at 7:30 pm in CC first
floor lounge. Topic: ‘The Economic
and Historical Basis for Calling
‘America Fascist.’ Advance readings
(from G. Dimitroff, 1935, and J,
Kusinski, 1944) available trom M,
Howard in HU 309 or Tues, noon in
CC lobby.

Application forms for those who
wish to apply for membership in Pi
‘Mu Epsilon, the National Mathematics
Honorary. For details on requirements
and where to pick up forms, see
posters in the Earth Sci, Big, Com.
pleted applications must be returned
by Feb, 29,

Cathexis is sponsoring two ims
“Unconscious Motivations,” and
‘Hypnotic Behavior’ \orught at 8 00
pm in LC 18, Admission 1s tree,
Funded by Student Tax

New!
Puts your lashes
<Jn th the thick of things

\

‘y ve Wy

@
GREAFLASH

The Protein Mascara

Builds body onto your lashes the way that
protein formulas build body onto your hair
Makes even skimpy lashes look thick, thicker,
thickest! Unretouched microscopic photo proves
Great-Lash Protein Mascara greatly increases
the diameter of every lash. And the Great-Lash
method is so casy! Builder-Brush applicator delivers thicker cov-
erage, more first-stroke color. No smearing, sticking, or lumping,
No waiting to dry. Just keep brushing on formula until lashes are

as thick as you like

“INTERESTED FOLK _

Colonial Quad residents may still
purchase tax cards by calling Alice at
7.8961. Good for discounts on
Toboggan party, Boston trip, and St
Patrick's party.

There will be @ meeting on a now
guitar seminar on Tues., Wed,, and
Thurs, evenings at 8:00 pm in the
basement of Onodaga Hall, Indian
quad, For further info, call Joan at
457-5239,

Attention all interested £.0.P.
Students! Thore will be a Rig Brother
& By orientation
which wall be held in LC 22 on Fab,
21, 22, & 23 trom 7-9 pm each nie,
You must attend these meetings to be

Sister mweting

mterviewed for your little brother or
sister. I! you absolutely cannot attend
ties meetings contact Randy Gam.

ble at 457-7881,

Wo are organizing a Kosher Sundey
‘Night Dinner. For into and reserva:
tions call 457-4056 belore 11. pin on
Thurs., Feb, 24,

Tonight's Viewpoint meeting can
celled Next meeting Thurs , March 2.
8pm, CC 346.

Parsee thw science fiction magazine
is now accepting stories, poumns and
other creative eltorts, Hl you think
that you have s
ito Curtes€, Sath wn HU 274

netiing yood, subst

Albany Outing Club will show
a move on hypothertna, ‘By Nature's
Rule’ on Weal, at 700 pm in CC 315,

Honwenate: coudios andl cakes sotutn
Ne SUNYA at a bake sale
foam TEA EO an tw

ni ted 2
ry thar acs ive

TELETHON °72 1

Gumuna Delta Che

Anerganel iis

Grovk American Student Assn,

, fo Monat tea te
Puwrty Reo hin Laser yard
hu TELETHON 72

TELETHON ‘7218 commny!
oat wate Bacly ol Caan Wa

Poop wnterestent at taking an a

fale in the iiewly approved kosher
kutchen

447 4983,

should comtact Samat

There wall be a kosher kitehon on
Dutch Quad, next yaur, You can sign
up when the housing packets are
distributed, Watch for mare

Many of the studunts and taculty
SUNYA today, won't be
har owst September, On Wednesday
wht at 7-30 pm we would ike those
of You who ate uitaested in boing
back ext yoar to come and plan our
counterattack (0 Hocky’s
kes, And fom hikes, And bust
Inikws, Be wn the CC Assembly Hall
Wextnesday oF you muy not be fens

Sopwnibe,

{Italien club will present Bellocchio's
award-winning film, ‘China is Near’
Thurs,, March 2 in LC 7 at 7:30 and
9:30 pm, Admission Is $.25 witax
card, $.75 w/o, Everyone is welcome!

Tho Fight for Sight committee is
sponsoring a basketball game with the
Harlem Laugh-Ins on March 24, Facul
tysstaff interested in playing against
this comedy team should contact
Steve Needleman, 7-8739,

The Albany Chapter of Zero Popula-
tion Growth will -hold its monthly
program on Thurs., Feb, 24 at 7:30
‘pn in Room 114, Humanities, Union
College, Or. Edward Renshaw, prof,
‘of economies at SUNY A, will be guest
Speaker.

Student NYSTA is having a meeting
on Feb, 22 at 7.30 pm in ED 123, It
will be a multimedia program by Dr,
Margoles of the education dept, Fund:
ed by student tax.

The Italian-American Student Alli-
ance (L'Alleanza degii Studenti !talo~
Americani) will sponsor a lecture by
Dr. Dwight Smith on the Mafia Mys-
tique’ on Thurs., Feb, 24 at 8 pm in
HU 290,

Free counselling and referral ser

es available to pregnant women.
Swrictly confidential, Contact Catholic
Family Services, \50 Hamilton St
Albany, at 436-9745 trom 9 am~5
pm, Weckdays only,

Puerto Rican Weekend 1s coming on
April 28, 29 and 30-Wateh tor Hit

Experimental Thewwe
change 1) ender t0
you iwist obtain a te

half-hour bwtre V

policy
er the theatre,

Statho bow attice

La Vor del Purblo 4 Newsletter

WHAT TO DO?
yhe-Out" ts
e's Beaute!
“ahudeure:Propte's
ransusnttag

eaboranion 1106

1 Intercourse

WSUA 1

All University open house: Cor
nt ne fetter at APA
Haars, canbit at Bq ab Chto

Were tke te

Mohawk Toboggan Party 0 March
3, Wine, tue, fan, Colonial quad
residents $50, $1.00,
Transpos tatnnis $.25,

others

Free Music
contemporary flutist
Feb, 28 i the arena theatre of the
PAC at 8.20 pm, Works by John Cage,
Lumont Young, and Potr Kotik will ba

performed, Its tree!

Store presents
Pow Kotik on

OFFICIAL NOTICE

The Gracvate Student Assoc. has
been Hotitied of mailing delays con
corning the GSA Student Membership
Fee vwlandun As a rusull thu volar
undun ballot return diate will be
extondad tw February 28.1072

PAGE 12

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

Aquamen Split Pair; Relay Sets Record

By Ira Mozille

During the great snowfall of
last Saturday, the Albany State
swimming team travelled to Long
Island to meet Stony Brook and
Columbia University in a triangu-
lar match, Depressed by their re-
cent loss to Oneonta State, the
mermen were eager and ready.
‘Through this regained confidence,
the Danes beat .Stony Brook, but
lost to a strong Columbia team,

In the 400 yard medley relay,
Bill Hart, Les Puretz, Mare Exon,
und Peto Gerstenhaber placed first
in 4:08.2. Albany also captured
first in the 1000 yard freestyle

with Lennie Van Ryn beating
Stony Brook in a commendable
11:21.1,

Other Albany individual wins
were Gerstenhaber in the 200 yd,
individual medley with a quick
time of 2:18,2; Jaik Schubert fin-
ished in 2:33.9 in the 200 yd.
butterfly. Hart won the 200 yd
backstroke in 2:19.2, and Van
Ryn again placed first in an
individual event by swimming
5:28 in Lhe 500 yd. freestyle.

The meet came down to the
100 yard freestyle relay
Columbia was already out in front
with a big enough lead, The Danes
were faced with a battle for sec
ond place with Stony Brook

Sports Si

idelines

By Mike Igoe

‘The ‘Times Union honored Bob
Rossi as Collegiate Player of the
Week lust Friday, In Albany State's

Dasketball games, Ross
areor-high point
performance each time, He
canned 17 points ina contest with
Hamilton, collected 21 markers
against Siena, and chipped in 22
during last weeks loss to Utica
Rossi was also a key man in
qincering the Great Danes’ come
from behind victory in the Capital
District Basketball ‘Tournament,
‘The former Bishop Gibbons ace
joins teammates Byron Miller und
John Quattrocchi on the ‘Times
Union squad.

Doc Sauers successfully defen-
ded his Albany Y.M.C.A, handball
title in championship games held

recently,

Union's dim Tediseo broke the
Capital Distriet record for career
field previously held hy
tise.

oaks
Albany's Rich

Tedisees

“The score before the event,”
Coach Kelly said afterwards, “was
54-62 in favor of Stony Brook. In
a relay, the winner takes seven
points and the loser nothing.
Albany had to take that relay to
beat out Stony Brook. Knowing
what they had to do, Ed Daniel,
Eson, Gerstenhaber, and Van
Ryn finished in a fast 3:40.2,
setting a new varsity record, and
pulled second place out for
Albany. This relay team beat
Oneonta last week,

"The final score was Columbia
65, Albany 48, and Albany 59,
Stony Brook 54

When asked about next week's
meet against Binghamton, Coach
Kelly had this reply, “They won't
be tough, but it'll be very close.”
Last ye Binghamton beat
Albany 57-56, and this year they
heat Stony Brook by three points,
With Van Ry Hart,
Gerstenhaber and the rest of the
team in cood shape, the cards are

pollack

win now t's Wrestlers Prep For SUNYAC Tourney

finished his basket hal
As

ball conch Bob Burlingame

will serve as a

the Albany ‘Tw

Margison

‘ommissioner for

yes this

Doe Sauers, along with the
New York Jets’ center
Schmitt, was a speaker at a sports
night held at King
Chureh in Westmere last night

State is still ranked second be:
hind Union in the ‘Times Union
Ratings even though the Great
Danex beat the Dutchmen earlier
in the season.

John

By Kenneth Arduino

We ot caught with our pants

iy wrestling coach doe

's explanation for the disap:
pointing loss to Oneonta last Wed
‘The defeat evened

record tof wins 5

losses and a tie
The matmen have their last
match of the season before the
SUNYAC championships this
Wednesday night uway, against
New Pultz, Albany must win if it
is going to have an overall winning

Thinking of a stereo compact?

THINK LAFAYETTE

nat SUNYAC foes as the Danes
aire presently one and one against
sueh rivals

Albany will use the sume
up they used aguinst Oneonta in
cluding Rex Cary who came out
of his last mateh bruised and bat
tered.

Cury’s injuries are just another
in an injury ridden season.

First Jeff Albrecht broke his
leg before the season, Then, Rudy
Vido broke his leg and has been

out for most of the year Phil Mims
has had knee problems and some
top wrestlers who were supposed
to be key factors on the team are
no longer on it

With Phil Mims and Jeff At
breeht now almost completely re
covered and Walter Glod, Rudy's
replacement, now in shape the
team should be nearing its peak
Yet it will be up to the other guys
to continue doing their best if
Albany is going to win the big

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opposite
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ATE, 6
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TIL 10
Tel, 459-7550

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141 Ewe Sivd,

9:30 10 6 PM
Daily
Tuesday Thursday
9AM. 9 PM.

Tol, 346-6111

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79 Central Ave

9. AM. 6:30 PM
DAILY
Monday-Thursday
Friday
= AM. 9 PM
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707 Upper Glen St.

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Tel, 792-9992

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42 Summer St.

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___ Tol, 499.1420

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 13

ASP SPORTS

Snowstorm Stalls Great Danes

quette had sy

th
th
by

im

i.
y

happen
will merge thi

du

Dane Hoopsters

Close Home Season
Wednesday Night

Against New Paltz

Pros Ars Threat to
College B-Ball

By Bruce Ma the Washington Senators left

Opinion foawne Aer
k thaw fang tested atthe cue
Haye the: leagues is

NBA
when the

Last week, College Basketball Phe wat

yuan The

as stunned when
minced that dim Chose
ala multiyear cot att
New York Nets ot MeDamels wha jumpet from the
ff Carahna Cougars of Oe ABA The

AIGA carne right hatch stad sa

et Mar ntatte the
SuperSantes

act with the
he AKA,
fe outstanding, center an
ashet ball
Maryuetty
vaning NCAA

Chenes wats eonsuter

salle
Thee saying all tut Heguate: Chats toa contract
hupes Where with tall stop
Nat pring, the NIA and ABA
mn wt dialing all calle
What os thay valle Hie NIA hs

shet ball avabshngs abit

HA tan

Liv thee pu
aul NIN

avers wonal ty Haskettoal

Eventually

Father the twee teang

ending callege
Hasketball they tea

MPAs OF College

ead uate cagues will be

All suffer tren
ged thus missing out of the

ndlevasly
Hh seems that a me
In order for NBA ABA

ta take
this
anal sports are ti

hugh salaries new beng paul out

place,
hethall ts tor the NIA and ABA

Congress
tar menge Camgress must act EAC ty

1 good stu
Alege bashetlall

th Congress espeeully after be sive

By Bill Heller

As the Great Dane basketball

n prepared for a crucial league
game at Cortland Saturday night,
Doe Sauers and the boys ran into

unexpected foe: Mother Na
ture. ‘The beginnings of a hug
snowstorm forced Cortland to
cancel the SUNYAC game, thus
ending a rough week for the
Danes. ddition to losing to
Uticn and having the Cortland
game postponed, Albany also
learned that the Bounds decision
(concerning Brockport's having to
forfeit their games) was delayed at
least « week

‘The Danes,1-5, now look
hopefully to their most important
week of the season, on the court
as well ax off. The Danes host

their final home game,
the game league

Albany must win, Desp

mal record, the Hawks
Oswego on’ the batt

court, by 17 points, while Albany
topped Oswego by just , New
Pallz relies on a zane press, and is
6" center Don Voldez,

led by 6'6
On Saturday, the Danes fly to the

University of Buffalo, for a very
Lough non-league game,

Meanwhile, the Dane's hopes
for un NCAA bid could be de-
cided this week, On Tuesday af-
ternoon, a SUNY conference
meeting will probably rule on
Bounds eligibility, A forfeit of all
of Brockport games could result,
thus putting Albany into a tie for
first place with Buffalo State, (The
Danes would get the SUNYAC
title over Buffalo, and get an auto:
matic bid to the Eastern Regionals
of the NCAA-providing they beat
New Paltz and Cortland.)

In another meeting this wee
the five mun NCAA committe
wil probably reduce the twelve
(eam field heing considered for
the Eastern Regionals, However,
‘one oF (wo bids might be handed
out, A site for the games. also
must be chosen, Albany bas an:
outside shot of being picked, Pour
teams will play in the Regionals,
but two extra eams could be
chosen (o playoff for one or even
two of the spots in the tourney,
‘The Regionals will probably. be
held on March 10 and Ut, with
the winner going to Evansville,
Indiana for the NCAA finals,

Abbey Road =-serencermecnrsreccermnnm

Haves and Have-Nots
Fight Over Bread

PLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLSLLLLLLLL LD

The ha’
who have

sand the have-nots,

beginni
again, only

As always, the issue is money.

‘The large universities in the

NCAA, the ones with the big

football prageams, want Lo contin:
of giving athletic

They wish to

uated bee

ue the pract
scholarships
system perpe
would lose great f

pionship football teams, if they
could no longer reeruit.

‘The smaller institutions, such as
Albany State, want the rules
changed so that the only athletic
xrants-in-aid would be given on
the basis of need, Possibly the
smaller schools want this because
they cannot afford to keep up
with the bigger schools recruiting
practices

Albany is a member of the
Eastern College Athletic Con
ference, ax well as the NCAA, and
the ECAC hax come up with w
plan for reorganization (us have

reenecrnenennne Alan D, Abbey

many others), ‘The ECAC plan is
not without its merits though, and
possibly would eliminate some of
the problems the other plans can:
not seem to solve, Basically, the
plan, which was originally drawn
up to help the ECAC to reor-
qunize itself, sels up three divisions
Division A would include the
larger universities who pluce great
emphasis on their athletic pro:
rams, Class B would be for smal
ler schools, but ones whose teams
have a high quality, Division C
(the one in which Atbany com
petes) is for the smallest schools
with the least emphasis on sports
‘These general guidelines would

hopefully be enough
Dr. Alfred Werner, Dir
Athletics here, supports the KOAC
plan Kven thowsh a petition of
his to nase Albany out of Division
or be

plan could work, Dr
er declined to comment on
Hofstra plan (reported a week
ago here) saying, "Ehave made no
commitment yet, because 1
haven't had enough time to study
iw tt different ap
prowel
difficulties
saying, “HE at school has one
division, and

presents
and beings out ats own
He offered an exam

un the Ope
Chopead division (a
Moist

wsther an the
Poosstbility ander the
1 stident who com

but is getting a

plan), and

petes on both,

scholarship ty any one, problems
could arise

The ideal situation, E believe,

would be to end all scholarstups,

which are given for whatever pur

pose, and elimi

schools. ‘This however

and practically, cannot be

So, [still support the

mises of the Hofstra plan,

te seo that plan

PAGE 14

WESTPHALIA!

by Robert Verini

THINGS WENT BADLY IN
WESTPHALIA, by Martin Sher-
man, is a rather poor product of
the Dalton Trumbo “hit ‘em over
the head” school of play-
wrighting; from it, however, di:
rector W.C, Doscher and a com:
pany of ight capable and
thusiastic performers have created
an enjoyable and all-too-short
evening of theatre

Frankly, the less said about th
play the better; i's 1 simple
minded affair chronicling the ad-
ventures of “Joshua”, a rock
singer/eulture hero, as he travels
around the United States of
not-too-distant future, in which
chaos reigns as all forms of hatred,
bigotry and prejudice surface in
random violence and death. He
experiences more perils than
Pauline in his encounters with
grown-up thalidomide babies, mil-
itant gays, motorcycle hoods,
Southern rednecks, etc. in his
efforts to get to the fabled
“Flower City"—which, upon his
arrival, is the scene of more tra-
gedy. Sherman's message seems to
be that to avoid all this misery we
must love each other, hardly an

earth-shaking thesis. The philoso-
phies espoused are infantile, the
dialogue generally Mat.

I much prefer to dwell upon the
production itself, surely one of
the most creative uses of the Lab
IT space since the P.A.C, was built.
Doscher seats his audience in the
center, blocking the action around
them, ‘The production scheme is
based upon the rehearsal Lech-
nique called “changing gears,
which consists of instant tran-
sitions of characterization and lo-
ale at a given cue—in this case, a
guitar chord. Thus, us Joshua tra-
vels from place to place (i.c, vig-
nette to vignette) the other actors
must automatically take up new
roles immediately. It is irrelevant
to dwell on the fact that some of
the characterizations succeed
more than others; what is most
important is that the performers
approach each new scene with an
admirable(indeed, essential) verve
and spirit that continually holds
audience interest. I particularly
enjoyed Robert Hebert's chain:
fang philosopher/prisoner; Jody
Hiatt's wordless rendition of a TV
news commentator (that sounds
like a contradiction, but it’s a

The Great American
Light War!

rosenbarg

(March 1.5,
PAC Main Stage)

Tickets Now On Sale!

TONIGHT at 8 pm

Phil Chansky presents a look at our
past and a peek into the future of

8 cenceoron ascent Aah wasonoccio

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

— ze
dazzling bit); Kathleen Collins’ Kind of semt-improvisational

beer-guzzling, knife-weilding Hell-
rider chief; and, in perhaps the
show's best performance, Robin
Sagon as a garrulous groupie who,
after being flogged half to death
by a Southern governor's hench-
men, still finds time to rap about
the “plasticity” in Joshua's early
records, I must emphasize, how-
ever, that this company is an
ensemble, in which everyone pulls
his weight, always aware of each
other and their character's de-
mands. It is they (coupled with
Doscher's obvious talent for this

Albany Symphony

by Andy Palley

1 have been to great concerts
before. ‘They by great or
chestras: Cleveland, Chicago, New
York Vienna, Boston, Philadel
phin I fully expected to get a
good show out of every one. But
the Albany Symphony” Yes, the
Albany Symphony is coming of
age, and surprived me Saturday
night with w truly beautiful eon
cert. 1 say “surprised! use
the last concert T saw them play
was the Brahms Second Sym:
phony. and the o emed
to miss the whole point about
Brohms. At any mite, it was not
good
But ay night! ‘The fest
piece on the program was an early
work by Webern, Called the Passa
cal (Opus no. 1), it has many
extraordinarily beautiful
moments. | didn't know the work
(I suspect most people don't), but
1 was impressed with its varied tone
colors~especially in its quieter
ments. ‘The muted trumpet
ites blended well with the

twentieth-century composers. The
louder sections were dynamic
enough, though I felt that the
brasses were holding back just a
bit; an excusable thing with such a
difficult program following. Wh

delights me is that I don't have to
harp on wrong notes or sloppy
playing—the execution of the
Wel as fur as | could tell
from my baleony seat, Nawless

©/ GRAND O

+E Jade House Restaurant:

4B Chinese Ame

theatre) that makes this show
click,

Unfortunately 1 must report
that ultimately the show fails to
move, to really hit our emotions
and provoke serious thought. We
rarely care or feel much for the
major character and his many
torments. This is hardly the fault
of John Kearns, who plays Joshua
with honesty and an often beauti-
ful simplicity, but rather that of
author Sherman, whose concep-
tion of the character is fuzzy at
best. Often it becomes a case of

‘The Mozart symphony which
followed, No. 28, provided not
only an acceptable relief from the
often harsh dissonances of the
surrounding works on the pro
gram, but also a fine hearing of
great, but rarely done, symphony
Alfred Einstein claims that this
symphony has the same elements
of perfection as does Mozart's last
three monumental works.
terms of style and form, perhaps
certainly think it is

they do.
culesT'm not sure if it is as
monumental ay I'm supposed to
think itis
One thing about the orchest
stood out here, and that was
Julius Heyyi's conducting Not
only did he conduct the entire
concert from memory, he led the
orchestra in ax clear and lucid
style ax E have ever seen—all the
great conductors included. His
beat is very easy to follow, and he
ms to flow with the music
nvakinyg just the right gestures here
and there We must ren
that it takes a great condi
build a great orchestra,
eredit where eredit is duc
Again, th ct of the
Mozart wa
of sloppy playing in the strings
and oboes. ‘This was soon forgot

nt, save a drop

little more

ting. Enutled “Ventanas
(Windows), it was written by the

n composer Silvestre
Revueltas in 1931, nine yeurs be
fore that composer's untimely
death. The piece ts generally free:
form (it might have had a pro:
gram, but Revueltas comments

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STATION Achoss sInEEr

confines. I yearned to see this
group create their own show from
scratch, much as Peter Brook did
with the Royal Shakespeare Com
pany with TELL ME LIES. Never
theless the show as it stands
should be seen (it's to be re
peated—outdoors—in May), pri
marily as # fine example of a
group of serious and dedicated
young professionals getting to-

gether, deciding to cut the crap,

and do theatre. And that, ladies
and gentlemen, is what this art
form is all about

Brilliant

that he forgot it anyway), with

many exciting moments, and

many moments that I like to call
udo-exciting.” The

maxes that occur without any
redundancies, if you will
wis a de

differenc
emotionally
There was no holding back by
the Symphony here All the party
were evident in full foree, though
the brasses seemed tv averblow at
times, drifting w tny bit out of
tune. On the whole, though, the
exceution wis very” aceeptable
and the muted violin parts a
end came through well In
addition, 1 © audience
ething 0
intermission
T confess hereand-now that the
piece [really wanted to hear way
the Rhenish symphony by Robe
Schumann, [usa work ay familiar
to me as the back of my hand,
and one which | was sure that the
Albany Symphony would. judging
by ther performance of the
Brahms, bomb miserably Bu
they didn't bomb it. They played
tC very well, especially considering
that it was the last work ona
well-stocked program, Not only
colors difficult to
up, there are also some
backbreaking, tiring things for the
French horas to play—the last
movement is as tiring as the first
‘The tempi were bright and cheer
ful when they were supposed to
be, und pondering in the third and
fourth movements. The orchestra
was as ight as can be during the
first three movements, almost us
taght as be during the first
three movements, almost as light
in the fourth, and just-a wee bit
tired in the finale But it was
much better than [had ever ex
pected, and compared ly
to Boston's rendition of it which |
heard over the holidays
The Albany Symphony is much
roved in the past few years.
continue to improve
the financial suppo
By the ume the new

ns Up in afew yours, we mugh

4 truly top nuteh symphony

tire upstate

rea 10 as certainly heading in the
right directions

Keke

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

Don McLean Galler

Photos by Arthur Goodman

Joe Hill: Story of An Early American Radical

Shelter/LIBERATION News Service

At the turn of the century, a socialist revolution appeared as a very
real possibility in the United States. ‘Two decades of radical union and
anarchist organizing bad inspired « rebellious altitude among workeres
which makes the complaints over Phase Two look like a lovers’
quarrel

pression and official violence far
the crowded, dingy, and rapidly growing cities of industrial America,
In 1886, eight anarchi « executed for alleged participation ina
riot at Chicago's Haym In 1892, Federal troops crushed
the Homestead Steel strike

the flames of discontent in

in 1404, the Pullman strike Businessmen
tempts to organize workers

and government fought bitterly ajgunst
And radical Wdeas spread in

and lived in righteous fear of reve
every direction

Ia L904, the ore the Industrial Workers of the World
(LW.W.) was Eugene Vo Debs, Soethst candidate for
President, polled more than 100,000 votes, and by 1012, nearly one
million. In the second decade of this erntury
sie the: propualar cauiesh

to stage at decrsive: at Law
The murder of Joe Hill songwriter and ongenizer for the LWW
11 angnalled the hegmmmng of the

(alse: kevwown as the Wotsbliest, an
that eneled

{4 movement « eampayen
snd Vaneett

roughly st decade later wath
ne TW, male by Bo Walerberg, a

There is now a film called
Swedish director Much mor
there mythiel legaey
{fut he had already written matty

» knwwe abort other Wobblies, but Joe
He had been a Wobbly

is now at the center
only four years when he was arrest
spirited songs of the workers’ strange
‘As he awaited execution, his correspondence with Elvabeth Gurley
Flynn and) Big Bill Haywood, reflected a man concerned with
revolution, not with death His last note to Haywood 1 surely the

most poignant in American labor test
Bill. 1 die a true blue rebel Don’t waste ime mourning

As for the movie, well, (Us nut quite Joe Halland it's not quit

Wobblies, ax John from Shelter, Kansas City’s undergre
this review

With a title song by Jown Baez, an ad with a sturdy handsome man
cradling a guitar, and his hfe summed up in neat phrase “Joe did

more than complain about the world he changed 4," the film
With current interest in “revolt

industey thought at had a winner
is 4 Joe Hill would

tionary” films a «high, the industry ki
Pay good returns, ‘They were right

“Jow Hil" fits beautifully into what is by now ac
portrait of a rebel (who is invariably a» loser) ‘The Industrial Workers
of the World, much persecuted during ts existence, much roman
to its most colorful martyr. to tact, the

matic eliche- the

ticized since, takes 4 back s
film aims more than one below the belt blow at the LWW

‘Two party “regulars’awaiting the outcome of Joe's trial on charges
of murdering a grocer, cynically wonder if the cause will be better
served if Joe’is found guilty and martyred than if he wins the case. Joe
is found quilly and the film moves into an overplayed execution
scene

After his body is cremated, the party grinds up his ashes and mails
them to chapters around the world in a contrived envelope-licking
scene. ‘The ash-mailers are not even dedicated enought to resist
interrupting their task to enjoy a callicking dance upstairs, and
casually joke, wouldn't mind.” The effect is to elevate the
romantic individual while putting down the collective efforts of a
revolutionary workers union.

‘The movie cleans up Joe's character so he will be « more appealing
rebel, ‘There ix a heart-rending scene in which Joe pleads with his jaiter
to lock the doors of his cell so he won't escape throught the fault of
his friend, ‘This strays far from the historical Jow Hill who barricaded
himself in his cell when the guards came to take him to the firing
squad. In the end, he fought them off with a broken broom stick
rather than submit

Two haekneved film roles are grafted onto the story, both of them
women's rules. ‘There is a short sequence with a wronged lover, who
June loaves carelessly behind when he decides to move on And then
there is an tunattianable beauty whisked away from Joe by an opera

Lar She appears later inthe film while doe is singing an organizing
Seng tos crowd, dow rims to her gleaming carriage and grips her arm
and they yaze hopelessly into each others liquid eyes,

The film does have strengths. But I kept feeling that it could have
been i greal movie if the money-hungey film barons had kept hands
off and left production of the film to someone who had a political
understanding of the film subject. ‘The Wobblies, hobo radicals with a

came across with clarity
npse Of the free speech campaigns of the
4 town bans radical street speeches, Hundreds of
workers would stream into town during these campaigns, each man
waiting his turn to climb onto the soup box and be arrested until the
would finally give in beewuse the price of (rying everyone was

of repression in the film comes through strongly when a

vigilante bund rounds up a group of workers und forces them to kiss

nd sing the national anthem or have the ‘shit beat out of

There is a short and historically accurate scene in which a train

rado dumps a load of striking miners in the middle of

Kansus so they can't interfere back in the mountains when scabs are
brought into the mines to Lake their places.

And of course the romantic freight hopping scenes would warm
anyone, especially if you've done your share of hitching rides.

Leaving the theater, having spilled several dollars into someone else's
pocket to see another film industry radical, 1 dreamed a bit-if only
we could get our hands on some good film making equipment and
learn how to use it

PAGE 15
PAGE 16

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

MAILER

by Brian Carr

“Why did you come to Albany, anyway?”

“Earn some money.”

That was Norman Mailer's reply, as the writer, film
producer, and one-time New York City mayoral candidate
agreed to a rather informal interview, It was just that blend
of frankness and honesty which pervaded both the airport
interview and his speech before a full, predominantly
student, audience in the Campus Center Ballroom late last
evening,

At both places, Mailer focused on a variety of his political
and social views and offered some insight into what many
feel is his illusive character.

A major theme which occurred again and again in his talks
concerned the aspect of amateurism versus professionalism
Mailer feels that the era of the professional is dying and is
being replaced by a new period of amatcurism

He offered his own life as an example af this new
direction. Though a professional writer, Mailer's non
professional film productions and work in the political
sphere illustrate this “rise of the amateur.” “Both ended in
failure,” Mailer said, bue explained that the success was
actually found. in his abilities of improvisation. It iy a
parallel course that many others are following

Political Views

Mailer dismissed polities as a “marvelous joke.” “The
Democrats are the ones who always want to bring in the
‘Great Society’ and the ‘Brave New World’: the Republicans
are always the ones who wane to stop communism, But the
fact of the matter is, the Republicans make all the pacts and
all the treaties with the communists, and the Democrats
‘Thus, Mailer is rather

fight the Republicans’ wars for them
indifferent to this year's presidential race, hough he does
express some support for Eugene McCarthy and Ted
Kennedy, “If Ted Kennedy were to run," Mailer said, “that
would be exciting. Gene McCarthy is not as exciting, but
has a finer mind and tougher mentality.”

As for himself, he dismisses a quick
political scene. “I don’t think any group of people will ask
me to run for mayor again in a hurry. 1 had my fling, if you
will.”

nery into the

Little Societies

His alternative to the present political and. societal
structures is a novel one, It isa prediction of a formation of
“fitele societies" within our present society where minorities
of people will find a more satisfying life style. “I'm a grest
believer in turf and the right of people to do on that turf
what they want to do there are a lot of women, for
example, who would like to establish women's libertarian
societies, Well why not?" The problem as he views it, is a
structural one, “The trouble with American society is that
there are not enough avenues of commitment open. People
can be powerfully connected to certain ideas but there's
nothing they can do about those ideas.”

It is this concept of minority based “tiny republics” that
will offer numbers of alienated people an alternative to the
centralized bureaucracy and an opportunity to live life on

their own terms.

Maidstone

Mailer's most recent effort in cinema was a further topic
of discussion. Maidstone. which will be shown on campus,
was dubbed “the Gone With the Wind of the underground”
by Mailer.

“Ie was officially difficult, officially irritating, officially a
pain in the ass," he told his audiency, “but I've got to

brainwash all of you."

He urged all to see it claiming “It’s delicate, it’s terribly
delicate. At its best it’s like a beautiful lady, who needs the

most careful lighting and the best makeup, She doesn't

make it ina harsh light

Only Questions

For Norman Mailer, who came to Albany on the last leg of
« speaking tour and captivated his audience for some two
hours, there is much to come, He ty working on a new book
though details are scanty. He may cover the national
conventional scene once again if it holds the promise of
excitement. And he may, once financial security is gained
return to his movie making efforts. But the specifies of his
fueure and the success of the philosophy he expounds
remain dubious. For ax he told his audience at one point

“There are no answers left, only questions

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

Vol. LIX No. 11

State University of New York at

ALBANY.
STUDENT
PRESS

Albany February 25, 1972

Y

Tuition Up

Trust

—fwnon up
Room Rates Hiked sips—esatiisnea vy SUNY to aid

yw income students, they pay the

Phone Subsidy Out sittewnce’ between’ scholar ie

by Vicki Zeldin
Capital Correspondent

SUNY tuition for state residents
will rise to $650 for freshmen and
sophomores, $800 for juniors and
seniors, $1,200 for graduate stud.
ents and $1,600 for students in
professional programs according
to Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer.
The hike is effective this summer.

Terming the tuition hikes a
“do-it-yourself” method for help:
ing to finance SUNY, the Chan:
cellor added that the increases
were designed so that students
with the ability to pay would, ina
sense, be helping others who
could not. He also stressed that
although the rates were increased,
the Trustees realized that low and
middle income students had to be

protected.

Tuition Differential
Boyer justified the tuition dif-
ferential between lower and upper
classmen by claiming that “two
years of post high school educ
ation is basic...” He also con
tended that it “costs more as a
student moves along..." Boy:
claimed that it costs about $1100
to educate each lower classman
and about $1700 for an upper
classman, Another defense given
for the fees was that
past their
first two years stand to gain more
economically. According to Boyer
they are “put in a privileged sit
tion..." ‘The Chancellor stated
the tuition differential “is
new to my knowledge and has no,
precedent..."

Financial Aid
In order to offs

the higher tuition, the ‘Trustees
established an aid formula which
will mean that students whose
Parents’ net taxable incomes are
Tess tha 00 will pay no
tuition, ents whose families’
nes are between,
00 will pay no
more than $1000 above present
charges at the undergradaate level
and not owr $150 the
Upper division fevwl Students

from
micomee ay above $20,000 will pay

ding rates represent
combination of scholar incentive
awards, State University Scholar

centive awards and the
tuition—and tuition waivers (see
charts). According to Boyer,
scholar incentive must cover aid
formulas, and by law will follow
the tuition hikes. Boxer claimed
that 78% of SUNY students come
from families with net taxable
income of less than $12,000. He
also claimed that only 15% of
SUNY students pay full tuition.
Along with their decision to
hike tuition, the SUNY Trustees
also adopted a resolution in sup:
port of a $1,000 increase in the
maximum yearly loan students
may receive through the New
York Education Assistance Corp-
oration. This would raise the loan
ceiling from the current yearly
amount of $1,500 to $2,500

$20 Million in Revenue Generated

As a result of the tuition hike
SUNY is estimated to generate
some $20-$30 million in revenue.
Boyer stated that after provisions
for scholar aid—waivers and
SUNY Scholarships—were madi
SUNY could expect to have a
remaining profit of some $18-$20
million,

Funding Priorities

With these additional funds
Boyer hopes to increase enroll
ment by 1,000

bringing the number

SUNY students to 5,600 for next
yeur. He also listed supp.

the EOP-in order to keep it up to
the level of funding of last
yeur—and aid to the disadvan:
i up to
this year’s level of —as
Priorities for the newly wequired
funds. Increased aid for the
upstate and downstate medical
centers and funds to help

health sciences center at

Brook take in a fr

tuition revenue, Boyer r
ed that the new funds would help
to bolster brary support which
ad been eut in half nlenance
nd repair and summer schout
operations.

Beofre any of the above pla
can be fulfilled, the legislature
must give SUNY the authority to
spend the revenue acerued by the
tuition hike. Boyer claimed that
legislative leaders had shown
sympathy for what we are trying
to do," but the SUNY had
received no firm or affieil com

Monday - 12 noon
8 Thurlow Terrace

MASS RALLY

No Tuition Increases

M

mittment to let them spend the
money, He indicated however,
that the governor's “hold the
line” budget of $481 million was
actually giving SUNY less than it
received last year because of an
additional $30 million in costs to
the system this year. He indicated
that there were "no new tax
dollars," for SUNY and termed
the tuition hike as an attempt "to
do our part to help a very serious
budget picture.”

Out-of-state students will also
find a hefty tuition hike in store

e_It Official

for them. Freshman and sopho- respectively. The hike will not
mores will pay $1,075 and upper affect community colleges. In all,
elassmen will be charged $1,300, the inerease will hit some 148,000
Out-of-state graduate and prof- SUNY students,

essional students will find their
fees set at $1,500 and $2,000
respectively. Currently, all Ne
York State undergradvates, pay T*Ustees increased the basic dorm-
$550 and out-of-state under i!0ry room rental from $550 to
graduates pay $900, State grad. $650. In addition, there will no
uate and professional students longer be a state subsidy for
currently pay $800 and $1200. students’ dorm phones, Students
respectively, OULO state grag, who desire a phone will assume
uate and professional students are full responsibility for the full
now paying $1000 and $1500 cost# incurred,

Room Rate Hike
In another action, the Board of

Net Taxable
Family Income Rate

$20,000+ 650

800
800
800
800
800
800
800

1972-73 Tuition Model

sip SUS Waiv Net
FRESHMAN AND SOPHOMORES

0 t)
12-20,000 650 100 0
8-12,000 650 100 C)
6-8,000 650 200 0
4-6,000 650 300 0
2-4,000 650 300 C)
0-2,000 650 450 200

JUNIORS AND SENIORS

Net=actual cost to student

S1P=Scholar Incentive Pro:

gram

SUS=State University Scho-
larship Program— fund:
ed by SUNY

Wair= Waiver—granted by
SUNY

editor's note
The following are the

of the SUNY Board of Trustees
They are charged with the gen
eral management of the SUNY.
system and have legal authority
to make statewide regulations
involving tuition fees

Ms, Maurice T, Moore
Address; 1000 Park Av
Nyc

esd Warren, View Chairman
Address: 70. Hackett Blvd
Albuny, NY 12209
Mr. Warren W, Clute, dr

Address: P.O, Box. 150, Watkins
Glen, NY 14891
Mr. Manly Fleischmann

Address: davckle, Fleischmann,
Kelly, Swart & — Augspurger
Liberty Bank Bidg., Buffalo, NY
Mr. doh: L.8. Holloman

Address: 2160 Madison Avenue
NYC 10037
Mr, Morris lushewits

Address: 386 Park Avenue, NYC
Mr. Hugh R. dunes

Address: Evans, Burdick, Sev
& Jones, Mayra Bldg. Utiea
Mr. Clifton W. Phal

Address: 330 Madison Avenue
NYC
Ms. Bronsun A, Quackenbush
Address. 1 Purk Place

rkimer, NY

Mr. John A, Roosevelt

Address Bache & Co., 46 Wal
St. NYC 10005

Mr Oren Root

Address: 1 Wall SL, NYC 10015
Mr. Roger J. Sinnott

Address: Bank of Utica, 222
Gennessee St, Utiea, NY 13502
Mr. Don J. Wickham, Hector, NY

Students Organize

by Debbie Natansohn
tian to the Chancellor's announced tuition hike, SUNYA
ts filled the fireside lounge Wednesday night and called for a
complete tuition rollback
‘The students will be supporting three demands developed at a
statewide conference of campus representatives held here two weeks
Ko
No tuition at SUNY or CUNY
No cutbacks in education
No public aid to non-public schools Other campuses throughout the
state are mobilizing under these demands, and will join Albany in
denouncing the tuition bikes
Various committees were set up at the mevting to begin work on
petiioning, lobbying, and community organization, A rally at the
Chancellor's office on Thurlow ‘Terrace is scheduled for this Monday
at Noon, A statewide demonstration is planned vor Mareh 14 at the
Capitol; thousands of students are expected to rally in Albany to
Impress upon their legislators that they will not vote for unyone who
supports the Governor's cutbacks in
A large number of students at the meeting expressed the willingness
to close down the university should the budget go through and the
luition hike remain, Others suggested that no one pay their bills, and
that the bursar's office be blockaded so that it would be impossible

for anyone to pay
Stressed at the meeting was the Lime element involved in the

tuition campaign is of the utmost importance. ‘The legislature
will begin deliberating on Governor Rockefeller's state budget in
March. ‘They must vote on the budget by March 31st for it to take
effect on April Ist as planned. ‘Therefore, there is little more than one
nonth left to urge the legislators to vote against the educational
cutbacks,

Although it ix the Board of ‘Trustees which establishes tuition rates,
these charges are largely based on what the state allots to the SUNY
system. ‘The lobbying committee formed at the meeting Wedensday
will concentrate on enlisting students to go down to the Capitol in
order to convince legislators to allocate money to education. The
students will attempt to impress upon the lawmakers that SUNY and
CUNY combined represents a voting constituency of over 500,000.

Anyone wishing to work on the committees can contact the
following chairmen: Campus Center Publicity, Jay, 482-0412;

Photos by Gary Deutsch
y Gary (across from Draper) Wiliam Biaaset de. Lobbying, 84, 449-88731 Dormitory Onjaniivg: Shera 484-2408
NY Off-Campus Liason, Anita, 457-5356; Information & Propaganda,

‘The ASP is funded by mandatory student tax
Edward Siegal, Plattsburgh | Jack, 4182-68831

Metadata

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Periodical
Rights:
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CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 26, 2018

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