Albany Student Press, Volume 62, Number 34, 1975 September 30

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the world press

The World in Cartoons

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In Britain, sales ion yachts
ill soon be tuning in to an electronic
a ae which will allow them to read
the news on their TV screens.

In France, the government now
has a Secretary of State for the Condition
of Women. -

In Germany, there's : plan o
lace workers at the center of economic
Tectaton making by requiring that labor is
represented on the boards o! a
industrial corporations. eee

In Denmark, the
ballet is so well sub-
sidized that it is said
the “artists and staff \¥
positively bask in tax

money. 4
‘ In Sweden, there
are no alarm, 0 one nn
verty stricken or with. | Wy,
oi af tance in times of ill-
ness or accident, and every-
one can look forward to
a secure old age.

Quite obviously, all ;
these countries know something w' don't.
The United States cannot be secure in
the claim that we are foremost
in social and technological progress.

‘And the more we learn about what's
being done in other countries, the more
we can apply that knowledge to our own.
jut where do you get news of
ents?
nese “tere iy through our OWN press,
which barely has time and space to cover
ic affairs. *
Maas could subscribe to a lot of
foreign newspapers, but then you'd need
trdnslators and more time to spend on
reading than you could possibly manage.
‘There's one good, solid source for
information about major developments
not only in Europe, but in all the coun-

tries of the world.

i stion Q
Future of the UN, And we give a clear

{in Kissinger] kernels of Metternich,
plus others of Casanova and, in un-
Atlas has one serious goal: to | uarded moments, of the ari de
keep you informed on what is happening jade. (Barcelaier , maa FFord'lodke
outside America, by bringing you the On Geral i ord: “Mr.
best of the world’s pr as if he might be the most on ;
Each month we cull articles and servative American presiven pee ve
items from more than 1,000 foreign publi- Hoover in 1929- and just migh a
cations. (We read them all, so you won't the same economic crise ETE .
have to, and we translate when (The Economist, England) — biatiet
necessary.) From London to What do our readers think 0!
Zurich to New Delhi to Moscow
to Tokyo and beyond, we present
the views of each country’s
most influential pape and
magazines. The Times of Lon-
don, Le Figaro. Dev Spiegel
La Prensa. The Peking
Daily News. Pravda,
In fascinating arti-
cles, departments, cartoons,
and an absorbing monthly “Atlas
Py’ Report” we focus on issues like
The Mideast, Women Today, Abor-
“Oil Shock,” Recession, and The

It's called Atlas World Press Re-

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Allas? .
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more than ever. . .
Isaac Asimov: “Absolutely
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as itis...”
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.: “Little
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PAGE 16

16, 1975
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS SEPTEMBER 2

by Marla Abrams

According to Kathy Maloney,
Athletics Advisory Board (AAB)
Chairperson, “Title IX is being
adhered to bythe AAB, although the
author of the bill did not wish it used
in the manner that the Federal
government enforces it.”

Title IX of the Education
Amendments of 1972:states that “no
person may be subjected to dis-
crimination based on scx in any
scholastic, intercollegiate, club or in-
tramural athletics Offered by a
recipient of federal education aid.”

Dave Coyne, Central Council
Chairperson, feels that the
“vagueness of Title 1X * allows for
misinterpretation of the law and
possible discrimination, For exam-
ple, he states that students who excel
in football “are admitted under the
Special Students Admissions
Program, but this really only applies
to males.” He also says that “the
overall increase in men's athletic
budget fi 1974-1975 was ap-
proximately 16 percent as compared
to .6 percent for women.”

According to Athletics Director
Joe Garcia, “Its impossible to com-
pare the women’s budget to the
men's due to differences in the
number of teams and participation.
“Presently, there are eleven men's
varsity teams and nine junior varsity
teams, while the women have six var-
sity teams and one junior varsity
team.” Mr, Garcia cites the 1975
budget as about $149,558, with
$124,168 for men’s sports and $25,-

Women's intercollegiate sports at SUNYA: Will they catch up to the men?

390 for women's sports, However, he
adds that “a lot of the money in the
men’s budget is also applicable to
women’s sports.”

Garcia explains that “when the
AAB was formed around 1952, the
people involved in the bourd were a
far-sighted group who tried to
develop a co-educational athletic
program. They set up criteria (or for-
ming teams which apply equally to
both sexes.”

“the AAB does not deny any
sport to come under AAB,

Maloney, who is also 3
the women's swim team. three
years, a sports club can petition to

become a varsity or junior varsity
team, It doesn't work on a male of
female basis.”

Several members of the AB who
were interviewed agree tht the “lack
of womens participation” is the
feason for what may be considered
“unequal” funding of men’s and
women’s sports.

Leslie Hour, women’s coordinator
on the AAB states that “we are
following the guidelines of Title IX,
but we can’t do anything untess the
students comeandask forthe sport.”

the lack of women’s participation is
due to “apathy of the student body

New York City Loses Use Of Pension Aid;
Default On Municipal Debts Draws Near

ALBANY,N.Y.(AP) Themandated
use of public-employee pension
funds to stave off default by New
York City was ruled un-
constitutional Monday by the state’s
highest court, raising thedanger that
the city could collapse ina matter of
weeks. The 6-1 decision by the Court
of Appeals struck down legislation
requiring the use of $725 million in
pension funds as part of a $2.3
billion en-ergency financing plan to
keep the city from default through
November.

The decision did not ban the use of
the funds if state Comptroller
Arthur Levitt and other trustees of
the pension moniesdecide voluntari-
ly, in their discretion, to use them.
But it said the legislature could not
require them to do so. And Levitt
previously had balked at investing
pension money in borrowings of the
city or Municipal Assistance Corp.
without such a legislative mandate.

If the pension funds are not used,
the rest of the financing plan will
provide only enough funds to stave
off default through mid or late Oc-
tober, according 10 estimates by
MAC.

The court ruling also may in-
directly threaten other parts of the
plan, particularly the efforts of the
state to borrow on behalf of the
city. The coun''s interpretation of the
state's constitution of the state's con-
stitution is final and cannot be
appealed.

Gov. Hugh Carey issued a terse
statement declaring that the court
ruling *has clearly complicated our
problem" But he pledged to
all possible alternatives and proce
with thejob of saving New York City
from default.”

The state Civil Service Employees
Association and the Police Con-
ference of New York had brought
suit arguing that the legislation
violated the constitutional guarantee
that the pension rights of public
emplyes not be impaired. Their suit
was aimed directly only at the $125
million designated from their
members’ pension funds, but the
court threw out the entire section,
which mandated $600 million in
other investments.

Chief Judge Charles Breitel, in the
majority opinion, acknowleged the
“obviously compelling and urgent
stringency with which the city and
state are faced.”

But the court held that to strip the
state comptroller “of his personal
responsibility and commitment to
his oath of office, is to remove a
safeguard integral to the scheme of
maintaining the security of the
sources of benefits for over a half
century.” “The legislature is
powerless in the face of the con-
stitutional non-impairment clause to
mandate that he (the comptroller)
mindlessly invest in whatever
securities they direct, good, in-
different, or bad,” Breitel continued,

review

Levitt directly controls only the
state employes’ retirement fund and
4 statewide fund for retired
Policemen and firemen, which were
tapped for a total of $125 million

Other pension tunds- including
the New York City employe
Police, fire, teachers’ and statewide
teachers’ pension funds—are con-
trolled by others, and could cone

aibly be persuaded to invest
arily in the city’s borrowings,
the Court of Appeals rule
ing, they could invest not only the
$600 million mandated by haw, but
enough to make up the $125 million
under Levitt’s control if
use it, However, some Carey aides
expressed fear that the adverse psy-
chological impact of the niling
would not only make the trustees of
those other pension funds reluctant
to make voluntary use of thei
monies, but also make it harder for
the state to borrow the $750 million
itis raising asa direct contribution to
the bail-out pac

Moreover, some other partsof the
$2.3 billion bailout package, in-
cluding up to $436 million in bank
funds, were supposed to have been
contingent on the entire package go-
ing forward intact, and officials
were concerned those parts of the
plan could now fall apart

State Supreme Court Justice A,

Franklin Mahoney of Albany had
ruled last week that the investment

of the $125 million was not

uses to

towards women’s sports.” She adds
that th ber of competition is
different.” ,

Ms. Hoar feels that the problem
also stems from “a lack of adequate
coverage in the ASP.” This attitude
is shared by Ellen Deutschman,
member of the Coulition for
Fd ial and Cultural Freedom,

“if women were made
aware of the sports je
would increase participation.

Dave Coyne believes that the
NCAA‘s interpretation of Title 1X,

as AB's present funding
policy “reinforces the way men and
womer

The Fields Inaguration: SUNYA Pr

women's sports.” He says that more
money for women's athletics would
“generate a greater degree of par-
ticipation.”

Ms, Maloney, however, states that
“men's athletics funds should not be
cut to increase the women's budget
since the smaller number of women
participants would not justify totally
equal funding.” She adds. that
“H.E,W. reviewed AAB's policy and
felt that it fully conformed to the es-
tablished guidelines of Title 1X,"

Use Excess Money

Ms, Deutschman feels that, ay a
solution to the problem of additional
funding for women, “Central Couns
cil should take the money they an-

i 10 be in excess at the end of
the term to provide for a women's
sports program, if the women 80
desire, instead of spending that
money on beer, Otherwise, this
money should be available to
minority groups such as Feminist
Alliance, Fuerza Latina and EOP-
SA.”

Nonegheless, Ms, Maloney and
Mr. feel that women’s par-
ticipation is increasing in. sports,
“Women are presently developing
intramural programs in so
well as flag football,” says Garcia,
Co-eduentional volleyball» and
cross-country
petitioning far a club,

Ms. Hoar

Kathy Maloney: addy that
women’s teams have increased their
schedules, while contests have ine

d onthe women's swim team,

ident Emmett Fields and SUNY

Board of Trustees V.P. James Warren (|) and Chancellor Ernest Boyer

constitutional, But he was reversed
by the high court with only tudge
awrence Cooke dissenting. Cooke
wrote that “there is no
finding of the majority that the dis-
eretion of the comptroller, as trustee,
isa benefit within the contemplation
of the constitution.”

Breitel acknowledged that the
non-impairment clause of the con-
stitution applied “literally” only to
the maintenance of financual benefits
of the pension systems, But he
argued that the constitutional provi-
sion also implicd a protection of the
sources of the benefits, and thus for-

continued on page two

Art
Central Council

2
wo THD,
Ly

‘Thalidomide Retums

see page 2
\

Second Gun Theory Examined |

time.” é
Lynch, who heads a committee of
lawyers representing the various in-
terests in the case, said he did not
know how. long the investigation
would last, But a spokesman for the
Los Angeles County Board of
‘Supervisors, which is financing the
+ Probe, said it would last at least until
the end of the week.
Robert Pratt, a spokesman for
Supervisor Baxtor Ward, said all
even experts test evidence
simultaneously, using a
sophisticated comparison
microscope,
The panel was assembled and

‘assassination of Sen. Robert F,
Kennedy.
‘The experts are looking into the

involved in Kennedy's murder other
than the one. used by convicted
assassin Sirhan B, Sirhan,

‘The seven worked all day ina
locked jury room Wednesda;
County Counsel Robert Lynch said,
“They pretty much set their own
hours, but they work most of the

ordered to conduct a “miniprobe” of
evidence after the Columbia Broad-
casting System and Paul Schrade
filed suit to reopen the investigation.
Schrade was injured during the
assassination as Kennedy walked
through the pantry of the Am-
bassador Hotel after winning the
state's Democratic primary,

Sirhan, a Palestinian refugee, was
convicted of the assassination and
serving a life sentence at San Quen-
tin, His conviction did not quiet
criticism of the investigation,
however, with some saying the
evidence indicated a second gun was
involved.

Thalidomide Helps Fight Leprosy

NEW YORK (AP) Thalidomide,
the sleeping pill that deformed
thousands of babies, has become a
Jekyll-Hyde drug, tt ‘damaged
babies, But now it is helping victims
of leproy.

‘When pregnant women began tak- *
ing the drug some 15 years ago,
many of their babies were born with
misshapen or missing limbs or other

ait was the “Mr. Hyde” of

pense, with serious threats to health
and life.

Given thalidomide, within 12 to 24
hours “many patients tell how
wonderful they feel. It often works
like a charm” in controllingthe reac-
tion, says Dr, Carl D. Enna,director
of clinical medicine and the depart-
ment of surgery at the U.S. Public
Health Service Hospital in Carville,
La, The hospital is well knownas the
National Leprosarium,

Before thalidomide the main
weapons against the leprosy reaction
were cortisone-like drugs, but these
had many side effects, Dr. Enna said.

‘The first clue about “Dr. Jekyll”
camein 1965 when Dr. Joseph Shesti
of Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem
gave thalidomide asa sleeping pill to

Contrary to general opinion, leprosy patients. He noticed the im-
leprosy is not a sure death orhorror provement against the leprosy reac-
sentence. It can be controlled or tion.
cured with dapsone or other drugs. Beginning in 1966, free supplicsof
And leprosy is not highly con- the drug were given to Carville, the
tagious, U.S, Public Health Service Hospital

But many patients are hit with in San Francisco, and University of
severe attacks of reactions that put Southern California Medical
them in hospitals, at high daily ex- School, Los Angeles, by Merrell-

BIBLE STUDY

Every WEDNESDAY 4 P.M.

CHAPEL HOUSE

Book: PHILLIPIANS
Toward Fullness of Life

Thalidomide now is proving high-
ly effective in controlling peculiar
reaction that strikes many lepers,
bringing intense pain, high fever,
damage to nerves, disfiguring out-
breaks of skin sores, and sometimes
blindness and even death, This boon
is the new “Dr. Jekyll" side

National Laboratories, a division of
Richardson-Merrell, Inc, in Cincin-
nati.

That supply now has been taken
‘over by Chemie Grunenthal in West
Germany, which licensed the U.S.
firm to distribute he drug, a Merrell
official said.

“Thalidomide” has drastically
reduced the morbidity illness and
mortality associated with the most
frequent and most serious complica~
tion of lepromatous leprosy,
erythema nodosum leprosum. It has
dramatically improved he manage-
ment of hundreds of patients at Car-
ville alone, and thousands of leprosy
sufferers throughout the world,”
Drs, John R. Trautman, Robert R.

kson and Robert C. Hastings of

rville wrote in a letter to the U.S.

continued from page one
bade legislative tampering with
them. ‘
The $23 billion pla +» ap-
proved by the legislature earlier this
month, setting up a state-controlled
Emergency Financial Control Board
with broad authority over the city's
budget in an effort to restore in-
vestor confidence in the city
securities. The Municipal Assistance
Corp. had been set up carlier this
year to borrow on behalf of the city
The state had held up the part of the
plan using the pension funds pen-
ding the Court of Appeals decision

The Atbany Student Pres

Audiess mail to: Albany Student Press, CC 326, 1400 Washington

DANIEL GAINES
Editor-in-Chief

SUSAN COLEMAN
Managing Editor

PATRICK McGLYNN
Production Manager

NEWS
Editor: Stephen Dzinanka
Associate editors: Betty
Winzelberg

Associate for off-campus: Randi Toler
‘AP Manager: Matt Kaufman

OPERATIONS
Assistant Editor:

Stein, David

ARTS
Editors: Hillary Kelbick, Spencer Raggio
Preview: Joyce Feigenbaum

PRODUCTION

SPORTS
Editor: Nathan Saiant
Associate editor: Michael Piekarski

EDITORIAL
Editor: Andrea Herzberg

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Photcgraphs supplied principally by University Photo Service and Camera Club

Mare Weiger

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enstein

Chiao Gives Approval to Ford's Visit
UNITED NATIONS,N.Y.(AP) Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and
Chinese Foreign Minister Chiao Kuanhua have cleared the wayfor President
Ford to visit Peking in November. The two men met over dinner for four
hours Sunday night and hada “complete and friendly talk about every aspect
of our relations,” Kissinger reported, When asked if he and Chiao had set a
date for Ford's visit, he added that “everything is on schedule.”
Azevedo Seizes Control of Media
LISBON, Portugal (AP) Premier Jose Pinheiro di Azevedo today declared
“real emergency” and sent troops to take over Lisbon's leftist-
mn stations, Adm. Pinheiro do Azevedo
broadcast he acted to prevent the stations from “manipulating” information
“to undermine the base of discipline and order,” and to “avoid de«
‘a state of emergency.” Communists and ultra-leftists have been in co
the radio and television stations,
Basque Workers Prot
MADRID, Spain (AP) More than 50,000 workers in the Basque country of
northern Spain began a 48-hour strike today to protest the execution of wo
Basque nationalists and three other terrorists convicted of killing policemen.
Prime Minister Carlos Arias Navarro called the cabinet into emergency
session to discuss the government's response to the protests at home nd
abroad against the executions at dawn Saturday. There were violent
demonstrations in Western Europe. Twelve nations called their ambassadors
home from Madrid to show their displeasure with the regime of
Generalissimo Francisco Franco. The Mexican government ordered all
connection between Mexico and Spain broken.
FRAP Gets Rap for Armed Robbery
MADRID, Spain (AP) Three men and two women armed with submachine
guns and pistols robbed the pay office of the Spanish social security
administration in Barcelona of $600,000 today and seriously wounded two
armed guards, police said. One guard was reported dying. Unoffici
blamed the holdup on the urban guerrilla group Revolutionary Ant
Patriotic Front—FRAP—which lost three members to government
execution for the of policemen.
HEW Sets New Rules for Day Care
BATON ROUGE, La.(A P) New U.S. Department of Health, Educationand
Welfare guidelines for federally funded day care centers across the nition
were blocked by a federal court in an order made public Monday. he
guidelines, which were to have gone into effect Wednesday, would have
tightened the ratio of children to adult attendants. Auorney Jay Scale of
Hammond, representing day care center operators in five states, told 1! S
District Court Judge Gordon West at a hearing that the new regulations
would put many centers out of business.
FBI Finds Bombs in Gas Stations
PITTSBURGH (AP) Pipe bombs set with time-delay fuses have been
discovered in underground storage tanks at three Pittsburgh gasoline
stations in what the FBI says was part of a multi-million dollar extortion plot
against major oil companies. Federal and local authorities dug out the
explosives late Saturday and early Sunday after evacuating nearby residents
None of the bombs exploded. Authorities would not say what led them to the
devices, Authorities said payment demands were made to Gulf in two letters
received Sept. 20, threatening that bombs already set would be detonated it
$6.5 million was not paid. Identical letters were eceived by six other vi
companies,
Hearst's Mental State Deteriorate:
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) As a magazine article pictured P:
willing revolutionary, her attorneys said Monday that her mental state ts
deteriorating swiftly in jail and called for her transfer to a hospital. Attorney
Terence Hallinan, when asked about a taped jailhouse conversation in which
Miss Hearst described herself as a revolutionary feminist, Hallinan said:
“The Patty Hearst that is in jail in Redwood City right now is not the same
Person who made those tapes and is not even the same person that Jack Scott
says in the Rolling Stone article he met or that participated in the Hebernia
Bank robbery.”
New York City Must Fund For Itself
NEW YORK (AP) The top Republican in the House of Representatives said
today it "just isn’t rational” to think that the federal government would do
anything to help New York City through its financial crisis. John Rhodes, R-
Ariz., shrugged off warnings from Walter Wriston, chairman of ‘he First
National City Bank; David Rockefeller, chairman of Chase Manhattan, and
Elmore Patterson, chairman of Morgan Guaranty, that a default by New
York would have catastrophic effects on the rest of the country. “They are
trating as corporate citizens of New Yor,” he said in an interview. “They
ave drasticallv overstated New York's problem.
Musicians Reject Beame’ Propo
NEW YORK (AP) After a gructing, grinding all-night session at Gracie
Mansion, Mayor Abraham D. Beame, sleepless and weary, appealed (0
Broadway's striking musicians this morning to go back to work and light up
the Great White Way, His appeal was rejected. The musicians called the
latest proposal on job security by the League of New York Theatres and
producers “fraudulent.” Its terms were not disclosed. State Mediator Vincent
McDonnell, who presided at the meeting which beganat 10 p.m. S
was for almost 12 hours, said no new meetings were scheduled but he
would be in touch with both sides later in the day.
Udall Enters Presidential Race
NEW YORK (AP) Rep. Morris K, Udall, D-Ariz,, said today he will enter
the New York presidential primary next spring because it may well prove
be “the pivotal primary election in the 1976 campaign.” Udall called for the
federalization of welfare as onemeasure to help New York City, and all other
cities in trouble He said “caring for the poor is a national responsibility
which cannot be adequately dealt with at the local level.”

rol of

Council Bill Threatens Non-SA Price
Differentials Charged by Some Groups

by Neill Cohen

Membership groups funded in
part by Student Association may
cither have to cease operations or
find alternative means of keeping
financially above water if a bill
recently introduced to Central
Council goes through, The bill,
which would go into effect next fall,
aims at preventing such groups as
quad: boards from charging higher
prices for non-members.

In a nutshell, the bill states that

w SA-funded group or any group
associated financially with an SA-

funded group not be allowed to
charge a membership card differen-
tial other than an SA tax card
differential."

ay As You Go

Jay Miller, the bill’screator, terms
this a “pay asyou go system,” ending
membership fees for all practical
purposes, The billdoes not explicitly
state this, because certain groups
which are not eventoriented need to
sustain themselves. through
membership fees. These include,
among others, the fencing. and
karate clubs.

Coalitions Sweep Central
Council Commuter Seats

by Daniel O'Connell

In last week's elections for the
son Central
Couneil the two coalitions involved
captured all of the positions, Their
nominees proved to be the top twelve
Note getters of the twenty-eight can
didates who ran,

The Activist Coulition, composed
fof groups like the Feminist Alliance
and the F.O.PS.A.
spots
Dianne Piche, Cathy Davis. Fie Ax
elroth and Denixe Fuller

The Wellington Black mobilized
Robyn

seven commuter se:

through the victories of

enough support to get
Perel Ka wt Anne
Markowity into offige. In fact the
Block came very close to winning six
todo so
nly by lasing the other nices where

‘1 the seven seatsaan

the margin ol victory never exceeded,

twenty-live votes. According to the
Block's spokesperson, Bart Minsky
who himself lost ina very tight bat-
tle, one important reason for noth
ing able to produce these few critical
Notes way the effect that an article
appearing in last Tuesday's A SPhad
on the voters. The article, written by
Larry Lopes, took a clase look at the
polities of the Wellington Block and
their attempt to capture as many
seats ay possible

Regardless of how anyone judges
the valig of these two groupsor th
goals, they proved to everyone t
power ol the organized action. The
elleet uf thisaetion can beseen in the
the candidate cap
luring the least amount of yotes of
cither of these groups beat the most
successlul independent by more than

fifty votes,

results whe

“I'm a strong believer in the
tax card,” said Miller, “and 66
dollars per year is enotgh (to pay) so
that it should be the only differen-
tial,

State Quad Board and their
Tower East Cinema group areprime
examples of groups that would be

fected, Miller claims hedid not in-
tend to affect any one group
specifically, but rather have an
“overall effect”,

Any organization involved in SA
that maintains an agency account
would have to change its financial
practices, At present, funds raised
from involving non-SA.
money are routinely held in FSA-
controlled accounts. ‘The money
from one year is frequently reserved
for use in the upcoming y

These
primarily by the stle of qu
It Miller's bill zoos through, prac
tically all of these accounts will rua
dry. This would end prictice which
Miller feels is. diseriminatory. He
feels that funds raised one year
should be utilized in the same ye
procedure would be
beneficial to the student who loses

events

accounts are

the new

money by paying a membership fee
even though he or she doesnt attend
many events,

Miller feels that yustd board in
itiative to come up with successful
parties would. still exist,
extent

perhaps
even to at greate This is
because. under the new system, the
groups would be faced with wo
alternatives.

According to Mille
cither “make a shitload of money

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“I'm astrong bellever in the tax card,” says Council member Jay Mil
“and 66 dollars per year Is enough [to pay)...”

and return it to SA or serve students
through providing [ree events, or
cheaper events.”

The bill has already been exphain-
ed to Council by the Ad Hoe Com-
mittee on Membership Differentials
Committee Larry
Schwart4 has announced that any
group whieh Leely it would adversely
be allvcted should appear before
Central Council on September 30th,

Chairperson

Directed by James M. Symons

. 8:00 pm
2350p

Voting on the bill is scheduled for
October 8th.

Miller hesitated to predict the
bill's chanee for passing since hedoes
nol yet have a good indication as t0
how Counei’s 16 new members are
likely to sote, But generally, hegives
ita “damn good hance of passing,”
especially since many of the new
members, since they ane commuters.
would “tend to vote for it.”

$3,$2with educational 1.D., $lwith tax card
‘omnes TEAS 8E08,

TE UNIVERSITY,
f NEWYORK. ALBANY, «

FUNDEO BY STUDENT ABBN.

978

PAGE TWO

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE THREE

With the Unemployment rate up,

1d job opportunities scarce, there
femains one office where the
‘operations are characterized not by
repeated layoffs, but successive staff
increases: the Unemployment In-
surance Division of the New York
State Department of Labor:

‘Traditionally associated with long
waiting fines and longer streams of
ted“ tape, the Unemployment In-
surance, Division has had to
redrganize and ‘streamline its
procedures to meet the demands of
the influx of claimants over the re-

District alone. or8.4 per cent

k force. Over 428,000 per-

s unemployed
July 1975.

The increase in the aumber of
cliimants, according to Matthew
Rourke, Employment Security
Superintendent for the Albany Dis-
trict (liam: Glenys Falls jo” New=
burgh). iy due not only to the high
wumber ol layatts, but also to the
“ public sentiment that onew a
jb iy lost. securing another will en-
tail a long search ahead, Said Rou-
the, “Hor yeaty ago, it might have
taken two weeks to find a new jab,”
and mun persons did not file for
assumption.
Now, however, “mare people

claiming. and sooner, be

benetity bayed on t
eat the
discomnging economic situation.”
Most formy of employment, with
the notable exeeptian of
cinployment, are covered by une

financed by an employer-paid tax.
‘The prospective claimant must have
worked at least 20 weeks over the
previous year, and cared. a
minimum of $300 in a calendar
quarter, with some flexibility of re-

through verification with former
‘employers, the claimant isassigned a
benefit rate of approximately 50% of
the previous weekly gross income.
not to exceed $95 per week.
Questionable Efficiency
It is the procedure of reporting to
the Unemployment Insurance Office
to sign for the weekly check and to
verify com
employment-secking activity that is
the cause of that office's reputation
for long lines and questionable ef-
ficieney. In onder to combat the
overflow of impatient claimants, the
local Albany office adopted a pra
tice of alternate mail-in or reporting
weeks that is now common to local
offices throughout upstate New
York, According tw Herman

hay proven to bemoreelficient™ than
the weekly reporting system.
While the problems associ
with the attic
of cheeky and illegal benefit ekiims,
continue to ph
and Unemployment Insurance ot-
licials, Rourke and Lurey expressed
a desine to Lurther invest
to increase theellicieney ol theolfice
effort to diminish the problems,
nt in the recent overload.

uated,
such ats non-reevipt

Saturday Night
October 4
CLASS OF 1976
OCTOBER
CELEBRATION

Admission:

$.15- Class of '76

Includes 3 Free Beers or 3 Free Glasses of Wine
and All You Can Eat!
Kegs of Michelob & Genesee

Red & White Wine
A complete Buffet including:

40 Ib. Cheese Wheels
Cheese & Wine Spread

9PM

$1.25— All others

Assorted Salads

Potato Chips Pretzels

Dance to the Contemporary

sound of

AKIMBO

wing availability and

Assorted Sodas

"TIMES ARE-TOUGHER THAN I THOUGHT — I WAS LAID OFTHE UNEMPLOYMENT LINE!”

NYPIRG Runs Registration Drive

by Bey Szarck
As part of an ellort to raise the
iousness of student voters.
NYPIRG, SASU, and SA are now
spamnyering it registration drive, He
sluve will rin UN FH, October ¥and
stud fer at tables set

J in the Campus

Ay may
arene the quid
Center

This etlort way prompted by sur
Jey Lollowing the [974 elections,

young New York

f mningly low rate
Many citizeny may be caught un-
€ When next year's presidential

id NYP

coordinator

roll around.”
student lobby
Low. "Unless they are

IRG
Fries

registered belore this November's
1. they will be ineligible to

sated on the fet that

ins in which to

to make things: worse.
wre days lell,

register
there are only two
October Mth and Gth. wh
polling phices will be open for
registration
Tables Fully Equipped

The tables will be equipped with

addresses af local polling places.

time of local registration, a copy of
the elvetion kaw, and request forms
lor absentee registration,

“We tried to hi
bsentee tegistnation forms so the

students could dircetly mail them

© the actual

in J Paul Hudson, SYPIRG
stall att
law states
the farm are permitted.
be asked lor by andav adits

ym Vibany, “hu

Ho tmiys hata

qquest form was the best w
do.” Requests must be pesanaiat
no ater than Hit
The registe

part ol a stunten
by NYPIRG. \
available, allowmng
students to reeene ale
lobbying and statew ul
cording te Law, “W
student record he ki

1 students Hd
register, they wall hay
no intlucnee

ERO

Notice to Officers~of the
Following Groups:

AFRICAN STUDENTS CLUB
AMATEUR RADIO CLUB
ARAB STUDENT ASSN
BICENTENNIAL SUNYA
BLACK MINISTRY

INTERCAMPUS FELLOWSHIPIGERMAN CLU
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

ORGANIZATION
CAMPUS CRUSADE

FOR CHRIST
ENGLISH STUDENTS COMM
GIRL SCOUT CAMPUS GOLD
HELLENIC STUDENTS ASSN.
INDIA ASSOCIATION
LIBRARY STUDENTS ASSN.
NEWMAN ASSN.
STUDENTS FOR BETTER

SUMMER JOBS

UKRANIAN STUDENTS ASSN
VOLUNTEERS FOR

MIDDLE EARTH

These groups have not recorded officers in the SA office:

H if you are an officer o}
H come to the SA office
H Fiday, October 3,
H their members are
Rnition is sub;

GEOGRAPHY
CLUB
KARATE CLUB

ECKANKAR

PEACE
PROJECT

COMMUTERS
BOARD

CHEMISTRY
CLUB
ZETETIKS
RUSSIAN CLU
SKY DIVING
CLUB

HISTORY
UNTOUCH-
ABLES

ponds.

PAGE FOUR

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

HEBREW CLUB |

DIORINANMMEA SARS

UNDERGRAD |

f any of the above groups, please)
CC 346, no later than 5 pm,

1975. All of the above groups and |
warned that each group's recog-
lect fo revocation if no officer r

i

by Judy Jaeger

Every spring, the University facul-
ty vote on whether o not students
should be allowed to hold office in
the University Senate for thecoming
year. The vote this year took place
on August 26, and resulted in 156
against, and 174 for student
membership with 24 abstentions.

Many Interpretations

Discussion with various members
of the university community resuited
in many interpretationsas to why the
vote was the closest SUNYA has
had.

David Coyne, senior and pre
dent of Central Council, feels that
much of the problem originiates
from the recent stripping of faculty
power by their union. Coyne ex-
plains that all SUNY faculty
members belong toa mass statewide
union andare, aslegislated
by the Taft-Hartley Act,not allowed
to form their own local University
union despite the fact that only a

very small percentage of faculty are
paying members.

Coyne further explained that the
faculty as a whole here have a more
liberal outlook towards the students
than do most of the other faculty in
SUNY. Thus, the union's involve-
ment in what used to be strictly Un-
iversity issues has weakened the local
autonomy of the faculty, and
diminished their voice in University
policy greatly. Coyne feels that in
eliminating students from the
Senate, the faculty hope to regain
some of this lost strength. °

Faculty Seeks Power

Phillip Tompkins, Chairperson of
the Rifetoric and Communications
department, outspoken supporter of
student membership in the Senate,
and this year's Senate Chairperson,
explains the vote asa sign that many
faculty members want back some of
the privileges that they gave up dur-
ing the student movement of the 60's,
one of which w

Senate Chairperson Phillip Thompkins is an outspoken supporter of
student membership on the University Ser

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consisting solely of faculty members.

Senator David Lemer, a senior,
feels that the faculty who voted
against students did so mostly out of
ignorance. He felt it to be a case of
emotionalism versus logic. “It didn't
surprise me that it was close," he
said,

Lerner saw part of the problem in
the students being spoiled, “They
have nothing to fight for," He seem-
ed critical of Student Association's
fecling that a sit-in would have been
detrimental to thestudents' position.
Lerner sees a grim future for the
students’ position on the Senate.

The major arguments presented
by the anti-student faculty included
objection to the student’s power to
vote on his/her own degree re-
quirements, complaints about the
trivial nature of the subject matter
presented by the- students at
‘meetings, and thepoint that students
have their own governing bod
tral Council, devoted to student con-
cerns, which the faculty has no such
body

Malcolm Sherman, a professor in
the Math department, last year's
chairperson of the Educational
Policies Committee, and presently a
Senator, is felt by many 1 be the
most outspoken faculty member
against student membership. He
complains of a “polarization” of
issues into anti or pro-student, as
Well as cooperation and organiza
tion of the students before meetings
resulting in a type of student
solidarity. He also feels that many
students approach the Senate as

Not that I believe th

faculty ean run it properly

“There is just too big a gulf of age
st.” He feels that the facul-
be frank in the presener of

students. He mentioned also the

“irresponsibility of many student

Albany,

SEPT:

AY IN THE

senators," and calls this a "natural
consequence of youth.”

Coyne called Sherman's attitude a
“mockery”. He pointed out that
students attended Senate meeings
even before they received the right to
actively participate (in 1969), and
that faculty members managed to be
frank then. He also mentioned that
faculty members seeking tenure need
to build up “records” as well as
students,

Coyne also disagrees with the
point that students polurize issues
saying that the only such issue that
he knows of is the question of stu-
dent participation in the Senate,and
that he knows of many occasions
‘when there has been obviousstudent

nsidn on issues,

we agrees with many faculty
ly ineffective but
attributes this greatly to Sherman's
refusal “to deal with students on the
Senate us equals, making it difficult
nate to function.” *He is
fighting a one man, full-time battle
to dump students," Coyne said, “and
1 have no respect for him.” “He
carries a torch everywhere, and
won't accept his lass and try to work

together with students.”

Many university community
members, both students and faculty,
support the idea ofa faculty forum in
addition to the Senate comprised
only of teaching faculty for the sole
purpose of discussing faculty related
ind acudemie issues, $.A, President
Andy Bauman pointed out in his
speech to the faculty at the August 26
meeting, that all iysues ina university
community affect all members of the
community in way, and
therefore each facet should share in
the decision making of the com
munity. The University Senate,
therefore, would be a place for
university-wide issues tobe taken

some

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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

after discussion in the respective stu-
dent and faculty forums.

Professor Richard Kendall, Dean

the School of Social and
Behavioral Sciences, though not in
favor of eliminating students from
the Senate, does not feel that
students should have the power to
vote on academic issues, calling it a
“conflict of interes He therefore
feels that such questions should be
turned over to the teaching faculty of
ch individual college in the Un-
iversity, While noting the ineffec:
liveness of the Senate in past years,
he added, “I don't believe that the
of the Senate are
becuse of student involvemer He
also noted thatit was the faculty who
acted to allow studentson the Senate
at the mecting on September 1,
1909,

David Coyne noted.
Kendall's proposal, that all students
graduate under the requirements
that existed when they were

n response to

ly legislite their own degree re-
quirements any more than faculty
do, Kendall feels that students are
nots qualified to muke such
decisions ay are Professors, though:
he does not object to a student
curriculum make
recommendations.

committee

The question of students on the
comes up eich year, because
law amendment passed in

1969 does not have to continue each
term, This makes it a sort of long
term experiment continuing until the
faculty chooses to end it, The vote
hay never been ay close as it is this
year, however, anda lot depends on
how well the Senate works during
the coming term, Coyne said that
hrough informal meetings, student
Senators have decided to makean
fort to be responsible and ope
minded, while not being cohesive.
One ean only hope that the facutyis
Willing to make an equivalent effort,
aas the position of students in univer=
sity policy is at stake, Coyne sees
great hope with Professor Tompkins
aay the new chairperson

Got no credit?
We don't care!

Got no references?

We don't care!

Got no car?

We don't care!

Absent from meetings?
THEN WE CARE!

‘Come to the
ASP
REPORTERS

MEETINGS.

PAGE FIVE-

‘The Veterans Information Center
offers & very worthwhile service to
Student Veterans. However, many of
_ these veterans are unaware of the op-
portunities offered to them.
Located in Draper’
Ne Hall, room 141, the
Newt Veterans Infortaion
, Feature Center's primary pur-
Pose. is to distribute
information regarding ’Yarious
‘educational benefits that thegovern-
‘ment offers student veterans. On Oc-
tober (0, 1974, the Vietnam Era
Readjustment Act of 1974 was pass-
ed: by Congress, increasing the
monthly educational assistance

veterans, The maximum entitlement
was extended from 36 to 45 months
for undergraduates, This extension
‘cannot be used for graduate work, A

¢ veteran who qualifies as a full
time student is eligible to receive
benefits up to ten years after
severance,

Ed Tillistrand, one of the co-
directors of the Veterans Informa-
tion Center, feels that many of the
veterans on campus aire unaware of
the benefits offered to them by the
federal government. His primary
concern is helping to implement a
work-study program that all full-
time student veteransare eligible for.
This program is sponsored by the
Veterans Administration (V.A.).

Tillistrand feels that “it’s a very
Mlexible program in that you can
work out your assignment with your
supervisor.” He stressed that the vet
can work varying hours depending
on his.agreement with his supervisor.

The financial aids office assigns
different work areas throughout the
campus. These inclide the library,
the veterans representative office, or
the ‘Veterans: Information Center.)
Under this program the veteran is
eligible to work up to 250 hours a
year for which he would receive
$625,

Many veterans are hesitant when
dealing with the V.A. Tillistrand
feels that although in the past the
V.A. has had a reputation of
bureaucratic foul-ups, “the situation
has changed, Over the last yearand a
half our relations with the V.A. have
improved 100%, due to structural
changes within the V.A. itself. The
biggest improvement has been the

nment of V.A. representatives
on campus.” He feels thishasput the
student veteran on a more per-
sonalized relationship with the V.A.,
rather than phone or mail contact
which was the original procedure.
These V.A. reprewentitives were

wally located i ‘Campus
‘Center but have since heen moved to
room 153 in the Administration
Building.

Tillistrand stresses that the role of
the Veterans Information Center is
to distribute informati Presently,
according to Tillistrand they have
been unable to locate all eligible
veterans on campus, He says this is
because of the “unavailability of a
complete mailing list with the ad-
dresses of student veterans qualified
for V.A. benefits on campus.”
Tillistrand states that this is due to
the fact that the school’s computers

n't programmed to give w list of
these veterans, ‘The Veterans Infor-

Madison
at

mced fruit top
with a taste of
rum

$.5/ special

near the intown quad
evenings ‘till 10, closed Sat.

have any qualms with the university.
It’s‘just a technical foul-up that I
hope will be shortly overcome.”
‘The track record for the Veterans
Information Center is a very good

one. A year and a half ago there was
only one student vet on campus us-
ing the work-study program.
Although Tillistrand says that he
‘can't quote an actual figure, he es-
timates that this amount has. in-
creased overa hundredhold. Hefeels

lata

that, “since we've gotten a working
relationship between the university
and our office, we have managed tp
provide plent of work-study oppor.
‘tunities for veterans.” He ‘also adds
that, “there are still many oppor.
tunities available.”

Veterans, where are you? Located In Draper Hall, the Veterans Information Center has had

difficult

ATTENTION
SENIORS!

There will be a class meeting to

discuss plans for the coming year

contacting all eligible vets on campus.

by Anthony Schmitz

A change in food stamp eligibility
Tequirements scheduled to take
effect in many states this fallmay cut
thousands of students from the food
stamp rolls, according to
Agriculture Department officials,

An cligibility revision made early
last year will bar students from mid-
dle and upper-classhouscholds from
the food stamp program. New
Agriculture Department regulations
require that students whose parents
claim them as income tax
dependents be dropped from the
Program unless their parents arealso
receiving food stamps.

The ban applies to students more
than 18 years old who attend any
post-secondary institution and get
‘more than half of their income from
ahouschold with too much money to
qualify for food stamps.

Accurate figures on how many
students will be eliminated by the
change in regulations are
av le, according to department

un-

bfficials, but some non-goveriiment
studies have shown that “many
thousands” of students receive food

stamps, officials added.

Although the eleigibility change
was sent to county and state a
ministrators in February, difficulties
in implementing the changes have
forced many states to postpone any
Policy.changes until this fall, depart-

s said.

stamp program ad-
ministrators felt a crack-down was
needed, according to Bob Welch, a
food program supervisor, because
“so many people claimed thai college
students were abusing the program.
There was so much bad publicity
about students that we wanted to do
something to assure people that the
needy are the people being served by
the food stamp program.”

Welch said the change was “one
way of squelching the idea some pet
ple had that food stamps were being
abused.

This year’s change in cligibility is

Ambulance Retired at Las

Five Quad Volunteer Ambulance
Service will finally be able to retire
its old, white 1960 ambulance that
many of you have seen at athletic
events and around the campus, Last
Friday Five Quad finalized the
purchase of a 1968 Cadillac am-
bulance in excellent condition,

The replacement was made
necessary by the large repairs that
would have been needed to keep the
1960 ambulance running. Even with
the repair work that vehicle would
still be poor as a regularly used

ncy vehicle 7

The purchase of the 1968 am-
bulance was from  Sloper-Willen
Community Ambulance’ In Wap-
pingers Falls, N.Y. Their offer was

very generous as the ambulance
could easily have sold for $2,300
Five Quad was given a price of SI,
300, Several ambulances had been
investigated and since thisone wasin
such good condition and at such a
low price Five Quad accepted, and
purchased the ambulance with its
own funds.
‘Almost Ready

Within four weeks thisambulance
should be ready to enter service as
Five Quad’s second ambulance. It
will cover sports events, provide
back-up for multiple-injury calls,
serve as back-up when the other am-
bulance is down for repairs, and
assist with the many training courses
offered by Five Quad.

receiving less opposition tha
another Congressional restriction
passed in 1971 which was designed to *
eliminate students from the
program. That policy change,
“written specifically to get at
students and eliminate hippies,” ac-
cording to department spokesper-
sons, was struck down by the
Supreme Court. The Court ruled
that the restriction was too broad,
and would cut groups other than
students from the food stamp rolls as
well.

Students who aren't claimed by |
their parents as tax exemptions will
still receive food stamps if they meet
income qualifications. Currently
anyone with an adjusted monthly ine
come of $215 or less is eligible t0
receive food stamps. Scholarships
are deductible if they go to meet
educational expe and ad-
justments are made to account for
medical costs, rent, child care and
other expenses.

A $1500 limit is set on theamount
of liquid and non-liquid

savings accounts.
or other readily convertible sou
of income. Non-liquid assets could
include luxury items, stich as a boat,
that could be converted into cash less
easily

Personal possessions such as a car
OF stereo are not counted as assets
under eligibility requirements,
however

Students still eligible for food
stamps could be left completely out
in the cold ifa billintorduced by Sen,
James L. Buckley (R-NY) is passed,
Buckley claimed that students at
colleges arid* other post-secondary
institutions are voluntarily un-
employed. Going to schoo! should
not be considered a substitute for

Parklane is

Danskin Leotards

the “source”
for

and Tights

Bucktey’s Beet: Sen. James Buckley hee recommended thet etudents
be eliminated trom the food stamp rolls altogether .

employment, he maintained
Buckley recommended that students
be eliminated from the food stamp
rolls altogether

The bill is scheduled for hearings
beginning in October,and according
to Rober Grippin, al

tant for Buckley, the “billshould not

he dismissed” as another piece of

legislation tha

food stamp rolls has become an “ex
tremely popular” idea in Congress,
he suid, and warmed that the
response to the bill “should not be
underestimated,” «CPS

Council Rejects Proposal
For Rating Administrators

by Daniel O'Connell

At last Wednesday's Ci
Council meeting opposition lead by
Rich Greenberg (Colonial) forced
withdrawal from potential use of an
“Administrator Evaluation Form",

The form asked SA personnel
and others who have meeting with
administrators their reactions regar-
ding the encounters. Afterwards, the
forms would have been used as
background information for persons
going into a meeting with any par-
ticular administrator for the first
time, Various members charged such
a system of file keeping was in fact
CIA, FBI

reminiscent of and

Watergate tcties,

Also at the meeting, SA President
Andy Bauman announced the

SP Editor in Chief Daniel
Gaines, The resignation sprung from,
question being raised as toa possible
conflict of interest created by his
holding both jobs, Gainesdenied the
conflict but gave other reasons for
his teaving the court,

Gainey also wamed the President
to beware of rumored attempts of
Council Chairperson David Coyne
to stack the court “with anticAAB
people so cases would be decided in
his awn philosophical direction over
the next few months”, Coyne stated
flatly that these rumors were false,

Lunch is served

daily.

Ranch Tavern

Featuring the 6 oz, CHARBURGER
68 No, Lake Ave.
(between Wath. & Cent.)
463.9070

Ontario including a December graduation

Dantkins are for everywhere and everyone.
For partying and playing, exercising and
dancing, and for just plein wearing around.

Return
of the Dragon
King of Kung Fu: Bruce Lee
Also directed by Bruce Lee
Friday Oct.3
and Sat.

Tuesday Sept. 30

Made of 100% easy care nylon.
‘Available in a rainbow of colors and
a multitude of style

at these Parklans Stores,

Mountein Productions Presents
in Concert

BONNIE RAITT

AND SPECIAL OUEST

TOM WAITS

8:00PM

MOHAWK MALL

CC Assembly Hall

NORTHWAY MALL

Get Involved! ALACE THEATRE

FRI NOVEMBER 7th
OPM

Tickets Available at:
JUST A SONG and the Palace Theatre

PRICES: $4.60 $6.60 $0.25

PAGE SEVEN

$.75 w/tax $1.25w/o tax

sponsored by Chinese Club
and Chinese Studies Club

Refreshments will be served

tunded by SA

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975 SEPTEMBER 30, 1975
PT :

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

‘about the health hazards of smok-
ing, it's interesting to note that Con-

this week approved another bill
to subsidize tobacco growers.

The new bill, forwarded to the
White House, proposes$48 million a
year in tax tionies to be spent on
tobacco price supports. President
Ford isexpected to sign the measure, .

SEARCHING THE SEAS

The United States government has
quietly been conducting a series of
teats to determine the feasibility of
establishing a major “nuclear dump"
three miles under the ocean off the
coast of Hawaii,

The Honolulu Star-Bulletin

reports that government scientists,
while admitting the tests are being
cartied out “quietly”, insists there is
nothing *seeret” about them,

The government is frantically
looking fora method for disposal of
millions of gallons of hot atomic
‘wastes which are being generated by

GRAND PRIX UNITED STATES

4 growing number of nuclear plants
being built in the U.S,

The undersea proposal calls for
cannisters containing the hot wastes
to be deposited on the ocean floor,
16,400 feet below the surface. The
problem with nuclear wastes is that
they remain toxic to all forms of life
for up to 250,000 years—a period of
time 25: times longer than all of
recorded human history.

Critics of the undersea dumping
proposal warn that smail leaks could
‘occur hundreds or even thousands of
years from today,and that theescap-
ing radiation would pollute sea life,
the base of the human food chain.

FORD DOWN ON DOPE

President Ford—in his first public
statement on the marijuana question
since becoming president—sayshe is
‘opposed to the decriminalization of
marijuana,

‘The President was asked during a
press conference this week if he
favored the removal of criminal
Penalties against persons who smoke
pot in priva

Ford replied: “! do not believe we
have sufficient evidence at the pre-

added that, because he found “no
consensus" of opinion about the
effects of pot smoking, he remains
‘opposed to the d

grass.

OSWALD THREAT
DESTROYED

The New York Times reports that

J, Edgar Hoover may have personal

ly ordered the destruction of a letter

delivered by Lee Harvey Oswald to

the FBI just 10 days before President
Kennedy's assassination,

According to the Times, Oswald
hand-delivered a letter to the Dallas
office of the FBI reportedly warning
that he intended to “blow up” the
Dallas police department.

The newspaper quotes current
FBI sourcesits disclosing that onthe
weekend following the asstssina-
tion, FBI officials in Washington
ordered the Dallas office to destroy
the letter, According tothe Tims. its
sources report that the ordersalmost
certainly were approved by Hoover

Vhe Warren Commission was
never informed of the Oswald lette
and both Hoover and the FBI agent
who received the letter. Jamey P.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y.

OCTOBER 3-4-5

‘A weekend of fun and
race in North Americ

The croam of the world
Niki Lauda, “Emerson Fi
Clay Regaztoni, Carlos

itement for all
year counting for the World Cham’
plonship lor Orivers

+ featuring the only

Hosty, later told the commission
that Oswald had never demonstrated
any propensity toward violence.

In addition, it is not made clear
why the FBI took no action against
Oswald at the time over his reported
threat, It would seem to be a depar-
ture from normal FBI policy to per-
mit a self-avowed Marxist, who had
recently returned from the Soviet
Union, to walk into the Bureau's
headquarters and hand-deliyer a
letter threatening to dynamite the
local police department

The FBI indicated to the Warren
Commission that it had complete
knowledge of Oswald’s work and
home address in the weeks preceding

Iso not clear why Oswald
inst the
police
to thisday, insists it had

ce Harvey Oswald

prior to the assassination,

MUSICAL WEAPONS

Pacific News Service reports that
the Pentagon has covered up an in-
vestigation into charges that U.S.
nuclear warheads in South Korea
may have been dangerously mis-
handled, and perhaps even lost.

Pacific News writer Guy Gibson,
in a copywrited story for The Dallas
Iconoclast, has released a copy of a
letter which triggered the Pentagon's
investigation two years ago. The
letter was written by Wisconsin Con-
gressman Les Aspin,

Aspin’s letter quotes sources as
saying that at least three army of-
ficers discovered that there were
serious inventory discrepancies
regarding nuclear warheads being

itis
would make threats

held at maximum securit t
South Korea. in

According to Aspin, the dis.
crepancies, in some cases, involved
nuclear warheads listed on inventory
sheets which could not be located,

Aspin told “the Pentagon that
when a high-level defense depar.
ment official visited Korea from
Washington, army officers in Korea
conspired to hide the discrepancies,

According to Aspin, nuclear
bombs were literally moved around
at night so that the inventory records
appeared to match the number of
warheads in stock,

TRAINED KILLERS

Columnist Jack Anderson reports
that the Senate Select Committeeon
Intelligence has obtained first-hand
information about a “domestically
trained assassination team,

Anderson says that this tcam has
been trained to kill “without
clues”; he says, however, that
investigators have been unable to
determine if the team has carried out
any successful assassinations cither

00

Is AUVE
ANP WELL /

inside the United States or abroad

The columnist also says that |S
intelligence agencies have purchised
dozens of James
assassination devices including ev
ploding light bulbs and a machine
gun equipped with a silencer digs
ed as a harmless attache case

Bond-ty pe

EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
AUDITIONS ONE-ACT MUSICAL

“The Diary of Adam and Eve”
- S. Harnick/J. Bock

Dir.
J. DeRuvo

Auditions: Oct. 1, 2:00, 6:30, 9:00 pm
Lab Il PAC
All invited! Bring own sheet music

passes

Also open al Spirit of 76
Malt, Menands,N.Y.

>

: Taco J’s
577 New Scotland Ave.
(opp. St. Peters Hosp.)

438-7073
TACO EATING CONTEST
limited entries (20)

Sunday, October 12

-3 PM
come in to sign up

ent, fee $2.50
465-7743

fa,
foe

hours
Tues.-Sat. 11-8 pm
‘Sun. 3-8 pm

Internal
Affairs

by Arthur Bedford

Ithas been repeatedly stated and reaffirmed
by Education Opportunity Program Student
Association officers and members, past and
present, that EOPSA represents all minority
students on campus; meaning Afro-American
students, Caribbean students (West Indian
students), Spanish-speaking students (e.g,
Latin-American students) and other minority
students. This “idea of representation” is in
fact a myth. EOPSA may be opened to all
minority students to become members, but it
does not represent all minority students.

The time has come to shed some light on the
facts concerning the relationship. between
EOPSA and Caribbean students. We are all
well aware of the hassles that went on between
SA and EOPSA during: the ‘75 Spring

semester, and that at tat time Fred Stokelin,
then’ president of the orghaizition was often
heard to aay that it represented all minority
students, At this same time, Mr. Stokelin was
approached by some Caribbean students with
the idea of a Caribbean’ Club, and they
proposed that it be recognized as a subgroup

“of EOPSA, funded and controlled by that

organization. Mr, Stokelin's reply to this
proposal was to the effect that, we (meaning
EOPSA) plan for “home” first and then think
of “away” later. This clearly meant that there
‘was no consideration for Caribbean students
on campus, by this organization that was sup-
posed to represent all minority students.

‘A look at the officersand members of EOP-
SA.pastand present, will reveal that there has
beenand are few minority students other than
“Afro-American” students in participation.
Its’ subgroups, Black Gold, etc, are populated
if not totally, then primarily by Afro-
American students. And EOPSA's biggest ac-
tivity, Black Week, should in fact be called
“Afro-American Entertainment Week", since
there is no representation of African, Carib-
bean, or Latin-American cultures.

‘AL the time of the planning of last year’s
Black Week's activities the idea was put forth
by the Haitian students to give a performance
portraying their culture. This idea was turned
down.

How can there then be participation by
Caribbean students in an organization where
there is not consideration for them and where
there is no encouragement given them? For
these reasons, most Caribbean students take
the view that they willnot tread where they are
left out and forgotten.

This piece is not intended to create “bad
feelings” between EOPSA and Caribben
students or any other minority students but
rather it is intended 10 improve the
relationship between the two, and to bring
about an awareness to the concems of Carib-
bean students, and to create a better un-
derstanding in the future. It is hoped that there
be closer ties and greater cooperation, now
and in the future, amongst all minority
students and that we work together to achieve
our goals.

External
Treatment

by Arthur Hidalgo’

With the inception of every freshmen year.

actions that were new the preceeding yearturn
‘old. and those that wereold become passe. This
in evident in the following areas: thedrift, orin
other words, the unfortunate “self-chosen
segregation” of blacks and whites; the rising
freshmen disaffection with an age-old school
policy that accepts more students than can be

and, a practice

whether is new
or not, the “Tough luck!" syndrome faced by
the Educational Opportunity Program
students.

EOP is an extremely worthwhile and
necessary educational program for students
whe -ouldn't have otherwise entered the state
university system, Students enrolled in the
program are in it because they don't have the
high average required by regular admission
standards and/or the financial resources to af-
ford them a university education, However,
they have special talents and personal
characteristics to offer to the university. Ina
sense, they arein the university to add aspecial
aura to it and to make ita fuller, well-rounded
institution of learning.

An act that should draw attention to the
plight of the EOP students is the “cold treat-
ment” they received in relation to their hous-
ing contracts (and other freshmen info),

When EOP students arrived registration
week, it was a minor miracle that they found
thems!ves rooming with other EOP students
(That ..as true, at least, downtown; where
most EOP students were placed in triple oc-
cupancy, no less.)

When an EOP student tried to inquirein the
Housing office as to the reason why he had not
been placed with his requested roommate (a
regular admissions student), the first thing
that was asked of him was when had he mailed

SUNYA Concert Board

presents...

Herbie Hancock
& Headhunters

The

- AND-

him.

In,more down-to-earth language they were
saying that it was the student's problem, not
theirs, if. he/she received all their SUNYA
freshmen material late. After all, the offices of
housing, financial aid, etc.don't have any
moral obligation to EOP students to see to it
that they are wellinformed and comfortable
in their future “home".Or do they? They
better, or else we're in serious trouble,

‘Such arrogance and enmity on the part of
the administration is especially not requisite
so early in one’s collegecareer, And to be prac
tically told that if oneisan EOP student you
have to take things as they come isa sad thing,
ceapecially if it's true.

‘My main concern is the way that the ad:
ministration “takes care” of these students
Educational Opportunity Program students
are no different from any other students on
this campus, Their objective is to continue
their education and have a decent chance to
et a satisfactory job on the social scale thus
bettering themselves. It is hard to accomplish
this when one is, literally, thrown around,

The school administration may do this
“juggling” uninter tionally, but the fact of the
matter is that it is happening. It should end
before EOP students goin the same direction
as some regularly admitted students, That i
dropping out of school at the end of oneand a
half days on campus, as a result of their di
contentment with the way things are handled
by the school,

More than that, EOP sutdents should be
treated as individuals and given the human
courtesy that everybody so deserves, They and
no one else on campus merits a "Get lost, kid,

You bother me!"

LITE INN

256 Karner Rd (Rt 156)
Colonie (Albany), NY 456-3371
WILD WEDNESDAY ROCKS
ON THIS WEEK!

TEQUILA 30¢
| tow PC

OPEN AT 9:
% m5s5|CM ae

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS SFP TEMBER 30, 197°

FIRST NATIONAL CITY TRAVELERS CHECKS

The US. Grand Prix wosksnd at Walking Gl
Te us. a Wattns Glen v8 more than uta race. has become
happening win someting fr everyone Tens ef thousand of fare have mad
feta traditional gather for aft summer ting, Ths year w

Mahavishnu Orchestra

(Featuring John McLaughlin)

at the Palace Theater

Sunday, October 12th
7:30 pm

CAMERA DAY
Cars and drivers {rom woekend's
Feces and Navy Parachutisis on
Saturday,

FILM FESTIVAL
hours Fr, and Sal. nights

. Friday ard
Butch Cassioy” Saturday,

VW ECONOMY RUN
Media and quest teatherfoots in
WW rat and a quart of gue

SCIROCCO RACE

{$4,000 race for showroom stock
Seiroccos with ace drivers.

BOSCH GOLD CuP
{$10,000 race for Super Vees pro
vides keen compalition

CAMPING

100 scree -- plenty of roam to
thare'ne tn

NAVY PARACHUTISTS
Crack U.S. Navy Parschut
in 2 weekend exhibitions

VINTAGE RACES
A rostalge trp ino the past wi
2 vidage oper tar races

$3.50 w/tax $5.50 w/out

Tickets go on sale Thurs., Oct. 2nd at 10:00 am in C.C. Gameroom & everyday thereafter
from 10 am - 2 pm

THCKETS: species oiscunt “Super Tickets” at your leas VW am
FURTHER WFO: Write or call Grand Pris, Wath

Wehe- Ai desler.
to NAY, 14801 => 607-496-4701 oF 407-838-4000,

Bus tickets will go on sale next week funded by SA

booked by SASU

PAGE EIGHT
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

CLUBS & MEETINGS

Community Relations Committes for Telethon ‘76 is meating

Wed. Oct. 1 at7 p.m. in the State Quad Flagroom. Allinterested

people are welcome. For info call Jerry at 7-7472 or Sue at 7-
4068,

NYPIRG will hold a General Meeting, totight, Tues. at 8:00 p.m.
In LC 20. All students waleome, For further info call 482-0414,

Telethon '76 Gimmicks Committes—will mee! tonight, Tues. ot
7400 p.m. in LC 19. All are welcome, For info call Kathy or

tent meeting of the History Club Thurs.
in BA 118, All interested students are
welcome to attend.

There will be an interest meeting for the Undergrad Psychology

Society on Wed. Oct, 1 at 7:30 p.m, in SS 256, Prevent and

Potentiol members of Psi Chi also encouraged to attend. You
don't need to be @ Paych Major to join,

The Linguistics Colloquiem willmeet on Mon. Oct, 6at7:30p.m.
in HU 354, Professor Paul Boomulitter of the Dept. of Speech
Pathology and Audiology will speak on the development of
speech perception in children,
General meeting of SNO, Oct. 2, at 7:00 in BA 130, Come and
find out what we're all about. All are welcomell

Sociol Committee m
Thursday, Oct. 2, Dutch Quad flagroom at 8:30 p.m. Help plan
‘events, All interested welcome.

i Club—Information and discussion open to all, Tuesdays
a 7:30 p.m. Room 373 Campus Center. Discussion topic:
Relationships between the sexes.

Jarael—isn't it about time you got involved? Come to the first
mecting of the Student Committee for larael, Thurs. Oct, 2, 7:00
p.m. Look for lacation on posters.

Camera Club's non-credit course in Fundamental Photography
starts tonight, Tues. Sept. 30, In CC 375 at 8:00 p.m.

Duplicate Bridge Game meets Weds. at 7 p.m. Beginner's class
at 6. Ailwelcome. Cash prizes, refreshments. For into call Andy at
7-7705,

Albany State College Republican Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. in

HU 27 on Thurs. Oct. 2, Executive Secretary of the State Young

RepublicansDoug Stroup will address the group. All interested
are urged fo attend! For info call 462-5210,

Undergraduate Political Science Association will hold o
mandatory meeting, Wed. Oct 1 ot 7 p.m. in CC Assembly Hall.

SPORTS MINDED

The AMIA is offering o basketball officiating course worth one
credit towards graduation. Students who poss the course will be
le for the highest poy for AMIA-basketball officials. 1
course begins during the second week of October. Sign up with
Dennis Elkin in CC-356,

Due to the overwhelming interest in bowling, the Jewish
Students Coalition is organizing its own intra-mural bowling
league (tor all bowlers! No matter what your average is) Anyor
who is interested, please call Sam at 7-7874 immediately
because we want to start as soon as possible,

Judo Club meets in Gym Wrestling Room, Tuesdays at 7 p.m.,
Thursday at 6. Beginners class starts at 7:30 on Thurs. For info call
‘Andy at 7-7705 or Bonnie at 7-7875,

Albany State Archers meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Women’s
Auniliary Gym on the 2nd floor of the Phys Ed Building. For
information call Dale at 7-5228.

There will be an
Oct, 2, 3:48 to 4:

$33,500,000

| UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS |

Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and
it list of these
Sources researched and compiled as of September 5, 1975.

fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000, Ci

UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
369 Allen Avenue, Portland, Maine 04103

‘Anyone interested in working on layout for Torch Yearbook.
‘Attend meeting CC 305 Tues. Sept. 30 at 8:30 p.m. orcall Claire
at 7-2116 or 7-4761.

SASU the statewide dudent lobby, needs on assistant
legislotive coordinator and an assistant services coordinator
for SUNY Albany. If interested call 7-6542 or (472-8620.

All those interested in Adopting A Grondparent there is an

orientation meeting at the Daughters of Sarah Nursing Home,

Tues, Sept. 30. Meet at the circleat 7:00 p.m. All Welcome.
‘Sponsored by the Jewish Students Coalition.

Interested in meeting people?” People poxing through Albony

need a place to stay fora nightortwo. If you've got the room and

the interest drop into Middle Earth, 102 Schuyler Holl on Dutch,

‘and become part of the Crash List we're compiling; or call Marc

‘ot 7.7950 or Jim at 7-8933. Signup inside CC Wed, Oct, | after |
pm.

Friends: Tools Project Inc. of East Graenbushis nowin the process

of establishing a 24 hour community service line entitled

Outreach Switchboard. It's goo! will be to provide a listening

ear for those in need of someone to talkto, os well asinformation

about various services in the area, Volunteers are desperately
needed. For further info, call 477-8990.

The Music Departmentsof SUNY and the College of St. Rose are

joining in two performances of the Requiem by Hector Berlioz.

Singers are invited 10 contact Stephen Osmond, 7-4889 or Robert
Sheehon, 489-4929.

tial ireatment center for adolescent

boys, located across the street from St, Rose, still needs co

volunteers who will act asBig Brothers and Big Sistersto some of

the boys. Volunteers are asked to please phone Ms. Osborn at
489-4731

you are interested in ‘assisting students who have physical
disabilities, please contact Al De Graff, Rehabilitation Service,
CC 130, 7.1296, These positions are for poy and orvolunteer

Musicians needed... Drums, bass, flugal horn, or trumpet. For
‘musi¢al production on-campus, Call 482-2496, or leave name on
Th Dept. call board.

OFFICIA NOTICE

taw School Interviews with Dean Lyle of Ruigers Law School,
Camden, N.J., will be held Mon. Oct. 6, Make appointments in
University College, ULB 36,

All University groups, ossociations, ‘or people interested in
collecting for UNICEF (Oct. 31 js the Otficiol Fundraising Day)
should call Claire 7-4761.

Community Service Students—evalvation sessions hove
started—please remember that you must atiend one session in
order to receive a passing grade.

Information on various Fellowships’ including the Danforth,

Fullbright, the luce Scholars Program and the Marshall

Scholarships is available from Robert H. Frey in Administration

218, The deadline date for receipt of applications in his office is
Oa. 20.

Notice is hereby given of a meeting of the Faculty Student
Association membership on Fri. Oct. 3, at 2:00 p.m. in
Administration 253. Agenda items will include election of
Directors, @ proposed alteration of the Bylaws, a review of the
Auditor's report for 1974-75 and any other business to com:
before the meeting ting of the membership will be
we newly elected Board of Dir

INTERESTED FOLK

The Diary of Adam and Eve—A one act musical directed
Dakuvo, Auditions: Oct 1,2—6:30—9:00 p.m. Lob pac’
Invited! Bring your own sheet music.

People for Secialism presents film on Martin Sost ite
prisoner, this Thurs ot 7:20 p.m. in LC Allinvited octendc,
participate. Call Nancy at 434-8451 for details.

Friends of the Farmworkers’ presents @ I-hour color fim
Fighting for Our lives, Mon. at 8:00 p.m. Call info desk oy
Jennifer at 489-8698 for room number and info

The Department of Slavic Languages presents MUMU, o fin
bosed on |. Turgene’s story of the same name. The film wilke
shown on Tues. Oct. 1.at 7:30 p.m. in HU 133. It will be in Russian
with English subtitles
‘ Ghargorrs
Rising Sun Coffee House, Thurs, Oct 2in Dutch Quad U-Lounge,
8 pm, $25 with Quod Cord $.50 with tox cord ond $75
without.

Meditation takes you there! ‘Introductory discussion on the
meditation as revealed by Guru Maharaj Ji, Thurs. Oc). 2, 4)
69, 7:30 p.m.

Contribule your stories, poems, graphics, and photor to
PHOENIX Literary Magazine. All welcome at weekly soli
imoatgs fo toloct ores for euRpeaton, Fs fo. call7-3074 +7.

Vladimir and Estragon
Wait for me by the tree. | will surely be there soon
incerely, i

Social Welfare Assos. presents a seminar on "Sociol Work
Graduate Schoo!” on Thurs. Oet 2 ot 7:30 p.m. Mohawk Tower
22nd floor, All are welcome.

Anyone interested in ‘attending an Orthodox Christion

Fellowship groups is urged to attend our meetings on Sundays

ot 6p.r CC Patroon Lounge. For further info call Terry at 436-
1535.

The Albany Chopter of the Caucus for Women’s Rights of

SUNY will sponsor a reception and informal meeting on Fri, Oct

3, 1975 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in HU 354. Alll interested in the

Caucus are cordially invited toattend the meeting. Relreshmens
will be served.

Anyone interested in joining a Whistling Choir contact Aliso
jeligman 472-8200. Everyone welcome

Solo Actor, Jahn Stewart Anderson will oppear on Oct. 19 ot
8:00 on the Main Stage. For further info call PAC Box Office, 7
8606.

Celebrate the 26th Anniversary of the People's Republic of

China! Friday, Oct. 3, 7:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church,

‘on State and Willet St . Refreshments, arts and cath.
Sponsored by U.S.—China People Friendship Assn

Women, interested in forming a Feminist Theatre Group, coll
438-3886,

Efforts are being made to establish o unit of Omicron Delto

Kappa, the national leadership honor society for students and

faculty. ODK members from previous institutions ond non.

members interested in forming a local circle, please leave a note
for A. Dolan in CC 346.

The Many Uses of Classical Mythology, on exhib»! of
photographs and graphics will be in the PAC, Recital Holl from
Sept. 27 through Oct. 22
Oedipus the King, a feature film in color with Christopher
Plummer and Orson Welles, presented in conjunction with the
Dept. of Theatre, tonight, Tues. at 4:15 p.m. in LC | ond 7 15
pom. in LC 23.

Local craftsmen, artists, oF groups interested in setting up booths
ond displaying their wares at Mohawk Campus Crafts Fair,
Oct, 4, call 371-6941

Fall is here at beautitul Mohawk Campus serving the student
‘community with 284 acres of rolling hills and wooded land Just
15 minutes on the Northway off Exit 8.

Empire State College in recognition of InternationalWomen's

Year, is offering o three-day residential seminar in women’
, Oct 16-19, on the Bennet Collage campus in Millbrook
N.Y, For further info call Ms, Ogden ot 587-2100

Merce Cunningham, whose avant-garde expecments 1

choreogrpahy and’ performance have offecied many

contemporary orts, will lead “An Experience in the Fine Ars,” 0

four-day residential workshop sponsored by Empire Stole

College, Oct. 10-13, in Manhattan. For further info call Ms
‘Ogden at 587-2100,

Ios ICAI
a

1 I VINO! iQUESO! ;MUSICA!

. Amigos: Come to the first meeting of el
CLUB ESPANOL ON on Thursday October 12 at

FOR SALE SERVICES

1973 FORD LTD. Very reasonable. Call
between 6 and 9 p.m. 674-2844,

1970 CHEVY Impala. Excellent engi
A.C, Contact Howie, 472-6326.

1968 FORD Custom 500. 4-door—8
olinder. Excellent condition. Owner
must sell, 438-4332,

1968 DODGE Polara, P.S., P.B., auto,
very clean. Runs wal. Sacratice $400.
Call Scott 438-8350, 438-4794,

1967. PLYMOUTH Fury Ill $200. Coll
449-7320.

YAMAHA 72 200 Electric, Excellent con
dition, Best offer takes it, Must sell
within September. 374-1689.

Motoreyde for sale. 1966 DUCATI 250
e, 10,000 miles, excellent condition,
$350. Call Todd 489-0814,

Four Bedroom, 1% bath, family room,
‘authentic sauna. On private lake with
mtn. view, 25 min, to Albany. Owner,
895-8973.

Porachulists: used TU7 triconical 23 Ft
‘w/baby hustler mod. 2 supersport con-
toiners. 377-9331

Brand new quod stereo wit! AM-FM
receiver, 8 track tope ployur, turn-
table, 4 speakers. $200. Call Phil 482-
0178,

Bruno Venture Wide necked nylon str
ing guitor with case—excellent condi-
ton, $50, Call Ellen 472-8737.

Guild Elediric Bass. Kenney 7-5438

Hort Cutlass skies. Excellent condition,
Also binaings and boots (8M). All for
$100. Debbie 7-8975.

Used science fiction books, 377-9331

lorge country home, furnished, gar
dens, acreage. Suitable for two
married couples or fomilies. $350 0
month, plus utilities. Call 861-6908 or
phone number with 489-7512.

HELP WANTED

AMIA—2_ winter student ossistonts
needed. $300. each. Apply in CC 356
by 0%

Port time student accounts clerk, 15
hours per week at $2. per hour are
needed immediately. Contact Alfred
C. Werner, in Phys Ed 133.

LOST&F

loit—Maroon nylon jacket at Ithaco
game behind the players bench. Call

Send now for free information te:
INSTA-MATE
Box 6175-0

Albany, New York 12206

Bored? Single? important free info
rite INSTA-MATE, Box 6175, Albany,
N.Y. 12206,

Elephant, :
How's the music playing 10 far? A lit-
fie too much Beach Boys, fd say.

Loggins forever!
Jeuse ond Elvin

Decor T,
He
Welc

your very fit penional.

MASKS.

indion Sondwich Moker—
For future reference: Ears ond neck.
The’ Frog Lady

STATE QUAD:
Thanks to all those who helped in the
lection. | hope | can return the favor
Council. My number: 7-4

TYPING—Ltd. pickup/delivery,
tearenable, my home. Call Pat 765-

Sth SUNYA European Ski Tour Schruar
Austria, Jon 4, '76—Jan 14, '76, $449
all inclusive, Contact John Morgan—
457-4831

lynn:
Why don't you call, writ
municate. I'm getting frustrated.
Desparately, Rob
Attention Colonial 1903 rules.
Hud, Joe, Rich, John, Sal, Garth

Attention oll sof Naturalist

Guitar Lessons from music graduate.
Beginners ond advanced students
accepted. Kyle 456-5241

Club and Rehibition Society! Man:
datory Meeting this Thurs, Oct. 2 at
W.1's 8 p.m.

sLASSIFIED RECORD EXCHANGE
SESSESEPEEDE

THE RECORDS YOU WANT AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD
THE EXTRA CASH YOU NGED BY SELLING THOSE RECORDS:
YOU DON'T LISTEN TO ANYMORE

the ASP is beginning 2 special classified tection where sellers and buyers
of used records can get together for their mutual advantage, Special
forms will be available starting in Friday’s ASP, so check out your record
collection now.

Graffiti Form

Dates graffiti is to be printed,

Monuscrip typing service, Mrs. Gloria
Cecchetti, 24 Wilshire Drive, Colonie.
869-5225. *

PHOTOGRAPHER, Weddings, por-
traits, albums, ete. All your
photogrophic needs. Coll Joe Ingoglia
ot 457-3002.

‘And | don't know why, she swallow:
ed the fly
Fred & Matt

A rose isa rose is 0 rose!
Thank-you for being so thoughtful
whoover you ore.

Graffiti is to read as follows:.

SA Poster Service. Beat the Xerox!
Colored inks printed on 14x 22 colored
poster board. Inquire CC 346 0r Bob at
475-7841,

Hi Lucky 71 miss you, Hove you, Iwant

you. Though the words may not be

‘original, they're genuine. I'm yours.
The Tennis Pro

Free kitten—lovable 9 wk. grey tiger
needs a good home. Female, litter
trained, shots. 436-8967,

Yellow Power Student Coolition—now
forming. State Quad Flag Room Thurs:

Entertaining? Experienced, highly
competent couple available to help
moke you party successtul. Will cook,
bartend, serve, clean. Telephone: 463
oni.

day 8:00 p.m
Trish,

Happy Birthday! 'm happy that we
con celebrate together. What are you
doing tonite?

Wanted: Marvel Comics 1961-1975.
Buying in bulk lots orindividvolly to suit
needs. Also interested in other comics,
comic-related material, comic art, etc
Chorlie 482-7887.

Darkroom equipment, Tommy 472
8754.

DES/RIDER
VAN

Ride wonted to Potsdam—weekend of
Oct 3:5. One way ok. Will shore ox
penses. Corole 457-8733.

ERSONALS

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write INSTA-MATE, Box 6175, Albany
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To Our Favorite D.W.,
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Love, Ken, Stan, Bill, and the Hick

Michele the Snorkasourus strikes

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Moy one 60 chin with IZA. Ths
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SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

ts
SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

PAGE TEN ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

letters

Censorship

on Colonial

To the Eéltor:

Last week, in order to advertise a social
function, the members of Zenger hall placed a
large banner in the Colonial cafeteria. The
banner displayed, along with all pertinent
data, a slogan whereby members of the female
sex who chove of their own volition to remain
at the hall the entire night through would be
‘entitled toa small monetary compensation for
their thoughtfulness, To be exact, the slogan
read, “Rebate: Any woman who spends the
night gets one dollar’ back.”

It appears that certain members of the
cafeteria staff looked on such a proposal with
great disdain, The announcement was remov-
ed and a cloth used to cover the slogan,

I find this a deplorable act which could very
well pave the way to severe setbacks in our
freedom of speech. Perhaps you do not con-
sider it so serious, but consider the conse-
quences, That banner was protecting our
rights — even our right to say insignificant
things like “pine cone”, 1 mean as long as it
isn't prohibited to say “cunt”, I'msure it won't
be illegal to say “cake”. In fact, I would go'so
far as to make it a law by which all public
buildings would be required to house a banner
with the word "cocksucker" prominently dis-
played in 12 inch block eters.

Perhaps you think Lam pressinga point too
far, but as soon as one little miniscule right is
abused and goes undefended, then a little
larger right is abused until the NYS Depart-
‘ment of Education places the novels Breakfast
of Champions and The Winter of Our Discon-
tent on its list of books not to be purchased by
public high schoo! libraries,

‘Afterall, aren't we here to learn, toexplore,
to widen our experience, and to have a fine
time in the process? Isn't education the cor-
nerstone of freedom? Isn't knowledge of the
alternatives the only way to act responsibly?
For such actions to take root here would be far
greater than disastrous, Freedom is too hard
won, and too easily lost, Let us never forget
what Lenny Bruce said, “You (society) need
your degenerat

G.M, Macdonald

The Other Side

of the Moon

To the Editor:

The September 9 issue of the ASP con-
tained an article on the Unification Church en-
titled: “Exploring On the Darker Side of the
Moon" by David Winzelberg, As a graduate
student who met and joined this movement
about ten months ago, and subsequently
represented CARP on the SUNYA campus
lust spring, | am well aware of the controversy
surrounding both the Church and CARP. Out
of consideration for CAR P members on cam-
pus, as well as those who expressed support
for us, | feel compelled to make some reply to
this article,

Despite the fact that CAR P is for the mo-
ment not recognized by the Student Associa~
tion, [ean sce no excuse for theASP toviolate
its responsibility for objectivity and fairness
by featuring this collection of untrue and un-
founded statements asa legitimateand factual

The Albany Student Press reserves the sole

right 10 print or edit letters to the editor,

Submit leners TYPEWRITTEN to Cam-
pus Center Room 326.

news analysis. With respect to the article as a
whole, | cannot but question the reaton why
Mr. Winzelberg or some editor failed to take
the time to do some basic, responsible check-
ing of facts with Church officials. Had this ef-
fort been made, you would have easily found
the facts to be quite different than what
appeared in the article.

‘The articleis most seriously damagingin the
author's allegation that Rev. Moon “has been
married four times” and “served a three month
jail sentence for conducting group sex
orgies...” This is absolutely untrue. The facts
are that Rev. Moon wasimprisoned on a draft
Jaw technicality and his critics later added the
charge of conducting sx orgies. The charge
was subsequently dropped for lack of evidence
after a thorough government investigation.

As to the allegation of being married four
‘times, Rev. Moon has been married fifteen
years to his second wife. He was divorced by
his first wife mainly for the amount of time
Church activities demanded of him. Rumors

concerning sexual misconduct and multiple
marriages originated more than twenty years
‘ago in Korea through the efforts of a minority
of hostile opponents because of Rev, Moon's
popularity.

It is interesting to note that in support of
Rev. Moon, 100 Korean professors issued a
proclamation stating in part: “it is regrettable
that a small minority of Koreans have misin-
formedly or maliciously slandered the Un-
ification Church,...Reportedly, such slander
also has been spread in America, misleading
the honest public of this fron-
ticrsland.,... These charges ure truly senseless
and are to be lamented.” (New York Times,
12/13/74)

The few out of context passages quoted in
the ASP came from freely translated extem-

Moon, These talks
deal primarily with specific religious concerns-
God's work in history, love, spiritual growth,

Yet, none of the quotes given presented
any of these aspects,

In the article it is stated that the Church
employs “brainwashing™ tactics and tries to
supress the thought processes of its members
This is not only absurd, but an unsubstan-
tiated allegation. The Unification Church has
a message, and this message has been able to
inspire and motivate people to lead an active
and purposeful life, This message is. being
taught by experienced members through
dialogues, lectures and group discussion-
standard educational procedure

It is claimed that members are constantly
exposed to lectures and to Rev. Moon's
writings which leads to “mind manipulation”
One has to ask if it is possible to learn
something new without studying it. Does “ex-
posure” to lectures and an author's writings
constitute “mind manipulation"? Do  ex-
pressions of interest and excitement in having
a new and comprehensive frame of reference
presented to you automatically make you a
“psychological slave™

A more realistic viewpoint is that people are
joining this movement because they see it as
something positive, creative and valuable for
themselves and for the world, They stay
because their ideals are being concretely
realized in a practical step-by-step way
through their own hard work, giving them the
joy of accomplishment and a sense of growth
and purpose.

Accusations of brainwashing stem almost
entirely from members who had been
physically kidnapped and forcibly imprisoned
while undergoing highly questionable tactics
to change their thinking. For example, one
member who refused to submit to
“deprogramming” offers a view of this
process; “About charges that the church
“brainwashed” her, Christen Ausenhaus said,
“the only brainwasing that took place was

when 1 Was deprogrammed....Mr. ” Patrick
hadn't researched the Unification movement
atall and kept making accusations that had to
do with other groups that have strong Satanic
leanings...” (Dundee Sun, Omaha, Neb.
11/22/73)

Dan Burke who had attended several
workshops, although not a member, had this
to say about deprogramming: “Nobody at
Barrytown (workshop location) ever held me
in a room by force fora marathon,
session the way Patrick does when he's hired
by parents. Itscares me to think that Patrick's
methods are viewed as being socially. accep-
table.” (Knickerbocker News, May, 1975)

Besides this misrepresentation of the
“deprogramming” experience in the article,
many other statements made or quoted about
the Church are totally untrue and derogatory.
For example, the statement that Church
members “are threatened with death...if they
leave the Church” is definitely not true and an
absolutely outrageous attempt to discredit the
Church and the real work weare trying toper-

ae Waher Ruf
President of SUNYA CARP,

1 know from the past that the majority of
people running for Central Council have never
attended a Central Council meeting. No
wonder so many people quit Council after fin-
ding out it wasn't for them.

‘As voters, we are supposed to cast an
educated vote. In the spring. S.A. elections
the ASP providesa great service by publishing
the platforms for the SA executive branch
candidates. Nothing is done for Council or
University Senate, Most students when voting

are faced with a list of names, in many cases
names they have only seen plastered on
meaningless campaign posters.

This year, a student was elected to serve on
the Universities College Council. SASU work-
ed hard to obtain this right for students, it is
too bad that the significance of this seat was
not made known publicly. ! would hopein the
future that Student Association and the ASP
will combine forces to insure in the future an
election in which the average student will be
able to cast an educated vote.

Participation in SA elections is low because
many people feel that it doesn't make a
difference. Maybe an informative campaign
giving the goals, platform and experience of
each candidate would help to combat this
-apathy.

which lost SA recognition this past summer.

Poster Voting

To the Editor: ;
The fall S.A. elections are now behind us,

‘the results are now out. As usual campaign
posters were once again plastered upon the
pillars and halls of this campus. Once again,
we witnessed the usual campaign rhetoric, but
to my surprise we did not see the candidates.
Only a few candidates had the courtesy to run
a door-to-door campaign. These are the peo-
ple | hope won. Last year while serving as a
member of Central Council, | learned a Cen-
tral Councilperson should be a visible and
‘outgoing person—a door to door campaign is
‘one of the best ways to gain visibility.

Castles Burning
My T.V. Game Show

Gary L. Bennett
University Senator

by Ken Wax
_ Gameshows mean big dollars to television networks, and they've proliferated to the point
where almost every conceivable game idea is already on the tube. This presents a problem to
network executives who are hungry for more of these low-budget, high-profit shows, and word
has trickled through the broadcast business grapevine that $10,000 awaits anyonewho comes up
with a really new idea for a game show. So, I've taken a stab.

As | see it, the inherent weakness found in all the current shows is that they're boring. Sure,
there are screaming audiences applauding houschold appliances and money hungry contestants
shrieking for prizes., but there's no real excitement. You know someone is going to leave the
studio a few thousand dollars richer than they entered, you know the emcee will havea sparkling
smile and impeccable manners and you know someone will win that new car. Game shows areall
happiness and smiles.

's meet the contestants. First there’s the returning champ. Having won yesterday, she’s
‘come buck for a second big try today, and we'll be getting another twenty second glimpse of her
existence, (this one perhaps even more revealing than yesterdays where we learned her kids’
names.)

“Welcome back Jean! Yesterday Jean won $—--—, and she's back today to increase that
amount, right Jean? (Jean nods dumbly and mutters something in the affirmative, but the mike's
not on.) With interest as genuine as his smile, the emcee continues.

“Yesterday you told us that you like to knit, Jean, Tell usa little more about that. . ." And
Jean tells him that she likes to knit scarves. Or maybe she makes beaded flowers. Or she likes to
bake. As long as its boring. Because they'realways boring. Just once I'd liketo hear, "Well, Jean,
it says here that your mother isan alcoholic, Just how much can the ol’ lush down ina day, Jean’
But no, you'll never see that on any show that's on TV now.

Which is where my show would pick up.

y. Jean, the card here says that your husband was arrested a few years back and charged
with bestiality. Tell the viewers a little about that swan . . ." If Jean wants chance to win my
show's money, she'll have to give a little

My emcee will not be the stunning, nice-gyy type you've come to expect. Nositree, my emece
will be grubby, obnoxious, and definitely threatening. I'm tired of these. guys who always keep
their manners, Jean and Tom have 106 and 94 points respectively, and Sue is sitting there in front
of 20 million people with 9 meascly points. And she just blew her latest try. . . “Gee I'm sorry,
Sue, but the answer is Washington. George Washingion was the first president. But maybe you'll
brat your unlucky streak with this one, . ." and the show moves right along, Not so on my
show.

“And Sue got to her buzzer first, what's your answer? Columbus? Jeez, Sue, you are a stupid
one, ain't ya"? Whew, I'd be mortified if 1 was you, kid, half thenation knowsyou'rea dunce.
Columbus. Wow, you qualify for the idiot award, Tell me, Sue did you cheat on the contestant
qualifying test? Huh, didja? Cmon, you can tell me..."

And lastly, no more of this something for nothing set-up. There's simply not enough pressure
& tbe ‘tube today, for if worst comes to worst, a contestant’ll leave the show with no winnings. Big

eal.

W'Il be different on m'show. Sure, you'll sill be able to win an all expense paid trip around the
world, but you may lose the deed to your house. Or your car. And on the night-time version,
lucky contestants may have a chance to win $25,000. But if they blow it, they will have to give up
their first born to slavery,

Now, are you going {o tell me that you'd rather watch Beat-The-Clock?

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

‘Quote of the Day:

“1 don't think they'd have the nerve to raise roomrates upstate when the city schools have no

tuition.”

James Warren, Vice Chairperson
of the SUNY Board of

Trustees at the recent SASU conference
in Loudonville,

“Dear Sydney: Had to drive over to mother’
with the kids, Break in aad ey -

SS

ye
(a

On Friday, September 19th case no, 74-304
was called up in United States District Court
in San Francisco: the United States. vs
Patricia Campbell Hearst, Att
month manhunt, she has finally been ap-
prehended by the EBL, As one FBL agent put
they had the “Big Apple Patricia Hearst

AU this time, there is apparently 0

definitive explanation af Miss Heary’s 1c
tions, motivations or activities during her diy
appearince, There are certain indications,
though, that alter her kidnaps
Symbionese Liberation Army was wot
od affair, but rather was willful and in-
tended on her par.

On April 4. 1974 she announced that she
Was no Idngera captive. | have chosen to stay
and fight," she deckired, Len days later the
EBL identified her as one of the SLA members

Who held up a San Francie bank, In a se
sage she prockiumed: “Ihave learn
how vicious the pig really 1s.and our com
teaching me to attach with ge
Viviousness in the knowledge that the people
will win,”

A year and a hall is long time. Il she was
not willfully involved why didn’t She cantact
her parents and turn hersell in’? ft stretehes the
imagination to helieve that she did and sud so
many things under continual coercion

As a so-called “urban guerilla” with the
SLA, her mission was to bring about revolu-
tion; to obliterate the injustices between rich
and poardpherent in the capitalist system.
Tronicallggatsle yigaeld be willing to goitulone
in coum Without her family’s wealth Upping
the scalet of justice, Miss Hearst would find

herself’ doing something of a truly
evolutionary nature.

Contrary “to Miss HeapSt's (and other
revolutionaries’) dogmatic thinking,
differences in the distribution of wealth in our
sociely can be tolerated because it is a system
based on differences. The capitalist system is
Rot of un egalitarian nature. But differences,

yourself to dinner...”

ae

by David Froeger
betore the legal system ean not be tolerated
hecaure it, ay apposed to our economic
aan Wels, It is the
one mshtubwin an-our society. which ty supe

posed te be blind to those factors which make

system, is based on eg

us dlilterent

Inerctors hy repudiating her family’s
capabiity for intivenemg the process,
Miss Hatst woul! be helping to restore part
ob that te
shuaticred since September X. 1974 when Ger-

I adeal which has remwaned

wld Fond pardoned lis predeeessor and subyc-
quently set up st dhichotomy af justice between
the pawertul and powerless. The Hearst eae
hay the potential to treshly erase that tine
which delinewtes between the one and the
other m the adaunistiation af sustiee, Hen
reayvert nice again the basi principle al equal
yustage tor al

The gave cammeassert the equa justice prinese
ple but forces m mation make M appear ay a
won't, His is where the wleal meets the real

Hearst's attorneys are naw trying to draw
the prcture of Patient Hearst ay that ob a
tertonved prisoner, who, they argue, should
be examined by a psychaattist picked and paid
for by het wealthy timuly. One ean already
senve the upping af the scales of justice,

FBI Director Clarence Kelly did net en-

the lait pursuit of justice when he in
at weight should be given to the tact
that Patty “wants to be reunited with her ki
ty and will be taken back into the bosom of
that very close group.”

Why do we continue to sho
sion for the rich when it is the pe floshould
he the recepients of our benevolige? People
like Richard Nixon or Patty Heat have their
own power or wealth to protecgtthem, They
don't need our sympathy. Fggethe poor,
though, there is little to temper 1@Ppold winds
of injustice. They can't undetiahd why a
criminal president or a criminal. newspaper
heiress get off while a man stealing a loaf of
bread out of hunger goes to jail,

compas:

editorial /;comment

Fields,

Saturday's inauguration of SUNYA President Emmett: B. Fields reminds the
university that he has been on campus less than three months, It is still too early to
detect in what direction Fields will move the school, but it is clearthat he has taken time
to understand this university. In his remarks before the Senate, the community and in
private meetings he has shown the firmness that had been lacking here for the past five
years,

Of course, his position must reflect political as well as administration influences, At
times he is deciding emotional and complicated issues between segments of the
university community, and: until he knows the proper action he must avoid
committments, At these times, he speaks around issues and cannot always reveal his
opinions. It is important that he prevent alienation or demoralization on campus.

Fields will encounter issues throughout the year, and some decisions may be tough.

The university should remember that an evaluation of SUNY A's president should not
rest on his actions in any one particular issue. An overview is essential and, as yet, is
impossible.

Mohawk Tower,

Recently Student Association officials have approached the administration and
asked that Indian Quad’s Mohawk Tower be returned to dormitory status, It now
houses the offices of faculty members in Economics and Sociology, among others.
Fields, Vice President for Management and Planning John Hartley and Dean of
Student Affairs Neil Brown agreed to study such a proposal

It would be difficult to makea final decision on the use of Mohawk Tower before the
October deadline for submission of SUNY A's 1976-77 budget to SUNY Central, But if
projections of student housing needs can be made in time, they should be. Fields should
make every effort to find out if the conversion of Mohawk Tower will still make sense
years hence, and if it does make sense such a change must be reflected in the 1976-77
budget.

Hopefully the offices now in Mohawk Tower can be moved without causing serious
faculty crowding, Draper Hall should have extra space next semester with the demise
of the Milne school and the James E. Allen Collegiate Cente

Mohawk was designed fgr students, and the direction of the economy does suggest
that student demand for dormitory space will hold up over the next few years, A
demand presently exists to fill Mohawk Tower, and a speedy transition will serve the
greatest number of students

And SA x

Student Association President Andy Bauman, Vice President Rick Meckler and
Controller Stu Klein have shown a surprising naivity about administration polities
with their actions on the Mohawk Tower issue, Converting Mohawk Tower back to
dormitory space is not at new idea, but they have presented it to theadministration only
weeks before SUN YA is required to submit its 1976-77 budget to SUNY Central, They
wanted a Mohawk conversion reflected in that budget, Ata meeting SUNYA
President Fields agreed to look at the space priorities in Mohawk, Yet, the SA
executive branch returned to SA's Central Council to say that Fields is anti-student,
Apparently Fields would have had to conver’ Mohawk Tower to dorms the day after
their meeting to satisfy the SA officials. Considering that SA could have brought this
proposal months ago and that Fields has done asmuchas could bees peeted so far, the
comments the three student officials made to Council about Fields on this issue were
quite rash,

10 Messrs, Bauman, Meckler and Klein want to embarrass Fields in his maiden
month? Iy Bauman desparately looking for an issue with which to make his mark on
this campus?

Surely it doesn't make sense for Bauman to put his relations with the new
administration at stake so quickly, It is a disservice to all students to rail against the
administration on Mohawk, thereby raising unwarranted sympathy for Fields and
antipathy towards students,

SA's Central Council should be aware that the negative impression of Fields they
may have ‘ived from the SA exec branch is unfounded, Fields is still a new
president, and a real perspective on him is months away.

é BEN
Ss
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WH ARE FUNDED MY STUDENT ASSOCIATION

Oppressing Women

by Dianne Piche and Ellen Deutschman

One of the basictenets of the feminist move-
ment (and indeed many “feminist” institutions *
as well, ic, women’s studies programs,
‘women's publishing groups, counselling
groups) has been the belief that womenareop-
pressed. Once agreed upon that, this is
something not requiring much debate or con-
‘troversy, women may then go onto working
‘against their oppression using this as their
basic “forming priciple”, or political platform.

But what exactly does it man to say that
women are oppressed? We can start by defin-
ing the word oppression in the several ways
Webster has done, or in terms of our own ex-
perience with the word, But, more than defin-
ing the actual statement, we must begin to
answer the question that the statement seems
to beg every time we hear mention of it.
Women are oppressed - agreed - but by
whom?

Usually one would answer, hy men of
course, Others with more of an understanding
of the problem might clarify that to mean the

“male-dominated” society or culture, the
patriarchy, etc, All these answers may of
‘course be valid and indeed true in many cases,
and even politically powerful when expanded
upon in one’s ownanalysis, However, such an
analysis that puts the blarie on men and men
only suffers from oversimplification, Because,
‘more often than not, women are the victims of
their own oppression- of themselves and of
each other,

So the truth comes pouring down on us -
women oppress each other. Just take a look

‘around you as you calmly walk along minding
{your own business. two women spitting out
‘curses to each other over a guy, playing games
with words snobbishly, women ignoring
another woman as she walks by, white women
getting down on third world women and vice
versa, women being catty about how other
‘women dress or look or act.

Women have hot yet begun to see
themselves as bound to each other cither in
terms of identity,or in terms of their human
condition —roles and myths have been cast
upon them by virtue of their sex alone.
“Sisterhood” is not just a catchy word adopted
by the women's movement to be thrown
around casually because it sound nice. In fact,
it is something of an ideal more than anything
else now. But until itis realized, women will
have no more power than they did when Eve
‘was cut from Adam's side, at a time when
biology had no idea what its destiny would be

Perhaps the idea of being “free” or
“liberated” is a frightening thing. We say we
want power and/or equality, but power to do
what? Hopefully not to be like men or to be in
the coveted positions men have clung to for so
Jong, Perhaps we want to reshape ourlivesina
way that will reshape all of sociey and com-
pletely change or revolutionize our entire
culture, Or, maybe we want toenact somecon-
structive reforms in legislation like the Equal
Right Amendment and develop more humane
and fulfilling systems of child-rearing,
socialization, and even sometimes marriage.

Regardless of what we want to do as women
or as feminists, it still remains that for every
woman who goes through the nightmarish
process of becoming “conscious” (of her life,
roles, images, powerlessness, etc.) there will be
countless moments of feelingalone, frustrated
or hopeless, This very process is one that
challenges and sometimes threatens the very
real sensibilities that women have had since

{ they were old enough to talk.

Thisis where thenotion of sisterhood comes
in. Women need the support of other women,
not the condemnation or hatred they've ex-
perienced before, Perhaps this is the greatest
failure of the movement. Women must learn
to love and respect themselves and each other
before anything else can happen,

Of course you would.

first day on the job,

Would you hire you?

You work hard, Care about what you do. And you
know your job inside and out.

That's what everybody says.

And for most of us, it's true. But it’s also true that we
could all do better. Whether we're doctors or teachers,
lathe operators or telephone operators, legislators or long-
shoremen, bankers or union officials...every one of us.

And we'll all have more to show for it.

More money, for one thing. Because we'll be giving
each other our money's worth for the products, the services
and even the government we pay for.

For another thing, we'll be giving America better
ammunition to slug it out with our foreign competitors.
Not just here. All around the world. That would help
bring the lopsided balance of payments back onto our side.
And help make your dollar worth more.

_ Best of all,as we hit our stride, we'll be protecting jobs
here at home, For ourselves and the future. And we'll have
a deeper sense of pride in the jobs weve got, So maybe
welll find our work as fresh and challenging as it was the

Which brings us back to the original question.

America. it works
main, heel yet

me he afc ap a ca a aC a A 2 IFC I I OK IR I I a A a MC a acai ae a a ca ak

| Ghef Italia “0...

Spt eadodennioniolecnosiee eect

Wouldyou; TORCH
hire you?

THE-3:DAY-ALL-YOU:CAN
EAT-ITALIAN:FEAST.$2.95.

is
Every Sunday, Monday & Tuesday
A Feast quaranteed 4 stagger the imagination, starting with our famous
ANTIPASTO Buffet and followed by heaping platers af Si IHETT |, PIZZA,
LASAGNA, MEATBALLS, SAUSAGE ond MORE. And to top it off, an iey
mug of BEER, goblet of WINE, or ary other beverage.

CHILDREN 1.75 uncer 0

served Sunday I2Noon to 1PM + Monday & Tuesday 4PM to 1PM

ALBANY

will have another week of
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in early November.

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interested at the
CC Information Desk

ELLE LELEEeerrre reer tects

Fiske HdeocKndddbicrobodenciiukeiekocuvocekicioiekiciissickieiesitelesetot

PAGE FOURTEEN

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

an...

2 her Bet P A Ste Unt os Yow tay

untimeted

eer i

The Classical Forum*

On the subject of women,the Greek poct Semonides,
of the seventeenth century B.C., shared the bias of the
times and the society in which he lived. More than that,
he helped to perpetuate and to strengthen this bias by

ich, like Juvenal’s famous sixth
Satire, might be entitled “Against Women,” “Women
are different,” he confidently announces at the
beginning of this poem and then proceeds witha catalog
of undesirable female types. We encounter the sloppy
housekeeper, the meddling busybody, and the
compulsive cater; one woman is ugly, another stupid,
and a third one promiscuous. The rest of the poem
follows in a prose transiatio;

“But one woman Zeus has ¢
man who gets her is lucky. S
and flourish. She and her hush:
reach old age together; but first she bears him beautiful
and renowned children. She is outstanding among all
women; she radiates divine grace, She des not
sit with other women when there ts loose talk about sex.
Such women area gift of Zeus to men; they
and the nicest

But all the other types are Zeus’

fe the best

ign too, and men

sell atsell as
rock and roll future

And his name is Bruce Springsteen.”

These lines, spoken hy

producer John

Bruce Springsteen's acceptance into

On Thursday
record NY peuple
Landau, reflect
the rock musicworld two years ago.
His new album, Born To Run, was
released two weeks ago. In it are all
of the elements that have made
Springsteen's efforts
fine com-

previous
successful musical
positions, arrangements and lyrics
Someof the album's songs
weakness of being overloaded with
musical instrumenution, On the
whole, however, the record is able to

cabaret
The ticket
ethe — mysell

“oll night”? Bev

masterwork by a multilaceted arist

ined themselves up
seuss the street tram New York
City’s Bosom Line
cate m Greenwich Vilkige. Hey were
there at 4:30 p.m. on the chance of
being given the privilege of buying,
one of 7S standing room tickets Lor
the 8:30 and 11M) shows at the
a night, Ne.
holder's

mber, didn't look much
better. Why such insanity on suct

teen was to give his thitd ina series of

The Evils of Ancient Women

‘cannot get rid of them; for Zeus hascreatedwomemasthe
.8reatest evil on earth. Even when she seems to be useful
8. woman is a pack of trouble to her husband, Any man
who lives with a woman cannot be happy for an entire
day. Nor can he keep from his doorstep hunger, that
nted houseguest and dreaded demon. Just when @
happy in his home, whether by
or by favor of men, that's when
finds fault in him and gets ready for battle,
Wherever a, woman is present 1 man cannot graciously
invite the stranger who comes to his house
The woman who most seems to be chaste, she is the
one who commits the greatest outrages. Her husband
nds with his mouth wide open, and his neighbors
laugh at him seeing what w fool he is. Each man will
Praise his own wife when he has accasi
but will er

tomentionher
ce. We men all hear the
ow it, Zeus has created
women as the greatest evil on d bound us with
tnbreakable chains, It all sarted when men suffered
death tight for the sake of a woman,”

The modem reader will be amused, or perhaps
angered. but not convinced.

ze another's
same cross and do not e

carth

ten performances (all sokd out) that
might. Aad when it wasallover Hfelt
completely justified in my belief that
Thad witnessed the greatest rock and
yund today

mgsteen, a native of
Asbury Park, New Jersy. Masachiev=
ed moderate lame with the release of
his first two albums: Greeting From
Asbury Park, NJ. and The Wild,
The Innocent and the E Street Shuf>
On these first two records,
Springsteen is accompanied by one
ol the tightest and most talented
bunds ever heard, The
nbers then included
Clarence Clemons (saxophone),
Danny Federici (organ), Gary

Aupuist 14, at least

rll pert
Bruce Sj

manee a
4 rock cabaret:

line, with
backup

ise Bruce Sprit band’s om

3 THE

3. Go.away.

golden, viscous liquid.

‘

Cuervicie: p

1, Find someone who has a freezer. _
2. Puta bottle of Jose Cuervo Gold in it.

4. Come bagk later that same day.
5. Open the bottle and pour a shot of the

6. Drink it with grace and dignity.
Or other people, if they're not around.

Fatlent (bass), Vini Lopez (drums),
and David Sancious on piano,

AC the Bottom Line as well as on
the newly released album Born To
Run, Sancious is replaced by Roy

another fine keyboard
though Sancious is. still
featuredon the album's title’ track.
Onemightsay that the band’sincredi-
ble power remains intact on the ne
scord, with the exception of Lopez"
replacement by drummer Max
Weinberg whose work doesn't come
anywhere close to the “fancy stutt™
nes spoiled by when

with a feeling for Springsteen's com-
positions aind the arrangements of
those compositio!
these men_ sur
hackup band of other contemporary
soloists
The few problems that I find with
the new Bom To Run album stem
inainly from the anxious public ane
ticipation of this album that is t0
Springsteen a superstar,
nticipation,
es too hard on

make

lose the “making it look easy” feeling
that i such a clearly refreshing part
of Bruce’s last two efforts.

Though the arrangements, lyrics
and music still possess the originality
and versatility of the profession that
Springsteen undoubtably is, there is
a certain “overdoing” that was never
4 part of the “less is more” attitude
that comes across in songs like
“Growing Up", “Fourth of July,
Asbury Park(Sandy)", and "New
York Serenade”.where a just-
effective amount of instrumentation

IMPORTED AND HOFTLED BY ©1073, HEUDLEI,

a

. #9 PROOF
JOSE CUERVO TEQUILA BOPHOOF. ony conn

is used

A terracotta statuette of a Greek woman,

For instance, towards the middle
of the August 14 concert, Springs-
twen took over Bittan’s place at the
piano and brought down the house
for his sensitive solo rendition of
“Thunder Road,” which is also the
first song on the new album. After
that solo, 1 literally counted the days
until the record's release
Except for a deceiving piano-solo
beginning, however, the album ver-
sion is severely overdone, complete
monotonous drum-
enspeil that gives
the song a silly cuteness detracting
from the power of the lyrics
Clemon’s perfect saxophone pl

sounds out of place onthis particular
song.

A similar instrumentation is used
on the title song “Born To Run.”
But, in contrast to the effect of the
music on “Thunder Road,” this same
musical zest makes “Born To Run” a
tour de force that is bound to give
Springsteen his first hit single. The
song fully illustrates Springsteen's
amazing verastiliy as an effective
co-producer, arranger, and par-
ticularly as a lyricist:

In the day we sweat it out in the
streets of a runaway American
Dream

AL night we ride through mane
sions of glory in suicide machine

Baby this town rips the bones
from your back

Ws a death trap, ity asuiciderap

We gotta ger out while we're
vung

“Cause tramps like us, baby we
were horn tw ran,

For thoye of us who loved the
stories Springsteen wove about
characters such as “Crazy Janey",
‘Spanish Johnny" and, of course,
“Rosalita” and “Kitty.” this album
also offers a wealth of Springsteen
creations. Ther Bad Scooter”
and “Big Man" in “Tenth Avenue
Freezeout.” There are “Eddie” and
“Cherry” in “Meeting Across the
River.” Finally, we have "Wendy" in
“Born To Run.”

The stories of these characters are
more than merely entertaining
however. In “Backstreets,
Springsteen's simple statement that
“Me and friends”
leads into

topic you ask? Not the way Bruce
Springsteen presents it, He is a true
poet whose depth and poignaney of
lyries are best appre
careful listening to them in his uni-
que voice

In closing, it is only fair to warn

pressive
arrangement

probably like nothing more than the
music itself, It is sometimes delicate
and sometimes very lively,

It is impossible to pinpoint just
what makes Springsteen's com-
positions so fresh and tireless ut
every listening. But, whatever this
force may be, it is putsuung
throughout Born To Run. ‘Though a
bit “too much” in parts, the album
stands as a near-perfect product
from an unbelievably talented artist

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

w,
PAGE FIFTEEN

{SPEAKERS FORUM

PRESENTS
A PROGRAM ON

MARIJUANA:

t
H

COIFFURES APPAREL

482-7560
238 NORTH ALLEN STREET
ALBANY NY 12206

The New Prohibition

By Frank Fioramonti, Legislative Counsel

fo NORML

(National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws)

The presentation examines in detail the historical,
medical, social and legal aspects of Marijuana use.

-Comes with two short films
“Marijuana: Assassin of Youth” and
“Highlights of Reefer Madness”

Thurs., October 2nd
C.C. Ballroom
8:00 P.M.

Free w/tax $.50 w/out
funded by student association

J

THE WILO, THE INNOCENT 8 THE & STREET SHUFFLE
ALL 3 ON SALE
Bruce Springsteen
Born To Run
including
Jungian

ust ACROSS THE street LIST 6.9

Night
‘Backatreets/ Thunder Road/She's The One

PINK FLOYD
WISH YOU WERE HERE

including:
Shine On You Crazy Diamond
Welcome To The Machine
Have A Cigar/Wish You Were Here

ON STUYVESANT rin BOF

Bruce Springsteen
Greetings From Asbury Park, MJ

COLUMBIA

SPLIT COCONUT
Veta |

Two Guitar Lovers
She's A Friend!You Can Love t
Give Me A Reason Why/Long Lost Friend

DRIVEON

including:
{By Tonight / Mone Carlo /Love How
Here We Are/TTel You Something

DAVE MASON

Columbia

THE EDGAR WINTER GROUP
WITH RICK DERRINGER

|] Diamond Eyes/JA Just Another Punk)
CChainsaw/People Music

herbie hancock
man-child

On. ites
FIVING AGAIN one. a
Easy To Get On/Bullding Fires/Hot Burrito = 3 iy fom inl
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PINK FLOYD

WE'VE GOT
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AND SO

SHOULD YOU!

Women’s Sports:
‘Free Meal With No Takers’

by Christine Bellini

The Women's Intercollegiate
Athletics program at Albany State is
in better shape than most expect, ac~

cording to its coordinator Leslie
Hoar.

There are no cries for financial
help, nor complaints of poor

Women’s sports such as track (above) and softball (below) are
suffering from a lack of campus interest.

EMM MAN. GE PY 8

The Ground Round
‘COLONIE
72 Wolf Rd.
459-1411

2 ee ee ee
Offer expires October 31
The deal: On any check of $2.00 or more, we'll
give you $0¢ back. All you have to do Is bring
your body and this coupon. Eat your way through
@big lusty hamburger, drink at the bar. Just enjoy
yourself and save money at the same time.

(Across from Colonie Center)

facilities or lack of coaching interest,
‘Theoretically, the program should
be a success, And yet something is
missing.

According to Hoar, the problem
lies in misinformation,

“The campus attitude still remains
that women's sportsare second-rate”
said Hoar. *T ined with the
misconception program is
Rot funded, continues to hold us
down.”

The existing intercollegiate team
sports in the women’s division are:

nd junior varsity tennis,
diving,

what is kicking.
is general support trom all facets of

s community as at whole,

record straight,
tive member of the

nd New York
sol Intercollegiate

tor both men
aand wamen,” expkuned Hoar
In relationship ta the logistics af
sports, the women's progrim iy
equal lo the men’s
We are presently ollering a

Program that meety the women's 1st

aware of the possibilities that da ex

In comparison ty most other
il private institutions
netically a head.
verything, but in
fe nol very strong

or women's div

needs,
facilities, oF transportation.” Hoar

he it in finance, proper
public
sud. "Theonly pice wherewe're not -Mbany ty
getting afuir shakewinthepubheny — “We
area peution
either the
sion,” said Hosur
that the athletes aren't walking

hey just haven't

Hecauye al thiy situation in the iy ts ML sity

past years, Women’s sports hats fallen
sidelines, entoreing the
Ua at hats ery little im
things."
nluct of not

tion, the studentyare not

A Girl Doesn't Have To Be
Flat -Chested

For a more attractive shape

Call: SENSORY PROGRAMMING
438-3313

SUNYA JAZZ SOCIETY PRESENTS:

Virtuoso Jazz Gultarist

CHUCK WAYNE

JACK SIX, bass
TONY RONGO, drums

Fri. Oct. 3 SI w/tax

8:30 pm CC Ballroom $2 w/out

Women hoopers (in white) walt for tebound,

Whew asked il any thought at ex
pansion wary planned for the near

the men's or
0, Hovtr said, "here

future for eith
women'sdivi
aie possiblea teas ol expansion being
considered, although the progr
nny be curtailed diet present
ceotiomie conditions.”

Women
Lose, 6-1

The Albany State women's varsity
tennis team met mor
mateh Friday wh
Middlebury Coll

Ihe only Alba
mate way Sandy Horn (number six
singles), who dow ned Robin Wighey
46, 7-5, Tb,

Second singles Helene Kamisher
and filth singles Mary Bock forced
their matches into tiebreakers before
bowing 146, 63. 7-5 to Sally Lent;
and 4-6, 663, 7-6 to Judy Breck,
respectively

panied by double
Joyce and Lerry

Louie Cavittand Mary Lynn Bock,
when the women tray elto the ECAC
Fenny Lournament at New Palla,
October 44. 5,

SAVE YOUR ASP!

Co, rve your copy of the ASP,
Ne ‘nt costs are increasing, so
i’ —¢ more and more to,
? slbany' Student Press,
t 4 ever gone to pick up a
4 nl feund al taken? Please

unsiderate 10 others and take

‘only one ASP, Buena leer.

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE SEVENTEEN

continued from page nineteen
has characterized. recent SUNYA
soccer teams, a

“Our strong defentive showing
thus far is especially pleasant when
cone considers that our number one
center fullback, Ricardo Rose, has
missed our last two games with a
badly sprained ankle,” said
Schieffelin. “Arthur Bedford has
played an outstanding center
fullback in Rose's place. (Bedford
would normally start at the right
fullback position.)

Schieffelin also said Obwald is in
the best shape he hats been in since his
freshman year.

“Henry has finally gotten off to
the kind of start we have always
hoped for,” said Schieffelin. “His
timing is at mid-season form, and he
has made several outstanding saves,
although he has not faced a powerful
offense as of yet.”

Overall, the team hasimproved its
teamwork and attitude miles beyond
that of last year,

“Our passwork is becoming very

Selca Nets Three

efficient, almost automatic,” said
Schieffelin. “Take Ruano’s second
goal for example, Selca had the ball
and drop-passed it, ‘knowing’ that
Ruano would be there. He never
looked, never signaled Chepein any
way, and Chepe was ready for the
ball. That't the mark of a solid
team.”

However, Schieffelin struck a
cautioning note when he reminded
several fans that the team has yet to
face a strong opponent.

“Cortland will be the first test,”
explained Schieffelin, “They are 4-0
in the conference, and while they
have not scored many goals, they are
as physically tough asany team we'll
see, and area fine defensive club. If
we get past that one, we face Oneon-
ta, Keene State, and Hamilton at
home starting the following
weekend, Then, everyone will really
know what we have,”

The Booters return to action F
day, at Cortland, in a night contest
scheduled to begin at 7:30, WSUA
plans to broadcast the game live.

~AMIA Sports Roundup

by Gary Greenwald

Despite the rain which plagued the
Albany area this past week, a few
Association of Men's Intramural
Athletics flag football games were

* played.

In League INA action, the Perverts
edged the Flintstones, 9-6; marring a
60-yard touchdown pass from Mark
Weyman to Rich Garfinkel.

The Skulls committed 270 yards
worth of penalties, and were shutout
by TXO, 13-0.

In League IIB, Don Brown notch-
ed a 4yard touchdown run, and
returned a kickoff 70 yards to lead
the Fulton Falcons to a convincing
25-12 win over Trojan-Enz.

Blew Gas trounced the Bleeker
Bombers, 34-13, as captain Jeff
Weverman broke, the game open
with a second half 60-yard return of
an intercepted pass fora touchdown,

Bill Heath scampered 40 yards on
two separate nuns to lead the
Original Derelects past Electraglics,

Harriers Drown

continued from page nineteen
The coach was happy with
Shrader’s and Jackson's perfor-
mances, Shrader, coming off u first
place run in Tuesday's junior varsity
meet with Oringe Community
. was in a tough position
throughout the race, "ganged up on
by four or five guys,” according to
Munsey, Jackson, who was almost

NEED AFRIEND? CALL

MIDDLE EARTH
457- 5300

Se

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HELPING ‘US WITH

dropped to the J.V. renewed the
coach's faith in him after poor per-
formance last week.

Kevin Burnett finished twentieth,
Fred Kitzrow 22nd, Tom Ryan
24th, and Brian Davis 26th,

Davis was the big disappoint-
ment,” said Munsey."He's either
great or terrible. If he'd have been
right, he'd have been right up there
with Beaman and we would have
been right up at the top team-wise.”

n not making excuses,”
Munsey continued. “They did exact-
ly what we did to them last year,
when we put five guys in front of Ar-
my's third man Both Army and
Syracuse are super tough, and they
respect us so much thal we've rea
ed an agreement which will make
this triangular a regular annual
event

The Harriers travel to RPI
Wednesday for the Annual Capital
District Quadrangular versus the
hosts, Siena and Union colleges.

“Rathskeller Bub

Campus Center

—SERVED FROM THE SNACK BAR—

THE CELEBRATION

e AAA AAAS

The Popular Jazz Group
“NI-RUMA”

John Esposito on Piano

James Coles on Drums
George Kaye on Bass

BUBBLING

14-6,

In League IV action, the 19th
Floor shutout the Lumberjacks 3-0,
in a game highlighted by a Dave
Rocci lateral pass to Paul
‘Tebsherany who then threw for 85
yards and a touchdown,

In the only soccer game, the Mix-
ed Nuts squeaked out a 6-5 victory
over Indian.

A mandatory meeting for all
AMIA Flag Football officials is
scheduled for September 30 at 7:30
p.m, in CC3IS. Discussion of rules,
schedules, and general procedures
will be covered.

Anyone interested in takingthe
AMIA Basketball Officiating course
(PEC-301) should see Dennis Elkin
in theintramuraloffice (CC3.6) im-
mediately. The course will be given
on an afternoon to be determined by
Elkin. A maximum of 20 students
will be allowed to enroll.

Applications for two winter stu-
dent assistant jobs with AMIA are
now available in CC356. The job
begins with the winter sports season
(approximately November 1) and
ends in March

Student assist
work approximately
wee

nts atre expected 10
15 hours a
son the site supervisors af ae-
tivities, and as clerical aids. They are
alo required to have Red Cross
First Aid certification, ar must ob-
tain it, Familiarity with the AMIA
winter sports program (primarily
basket ball hockey
) will be advantaged
not a pre-requisite

The annual AMIA Field Goal
Kicking Contest is scheduled for Oc-
tober, See Dennis Elkin for details

floor
volley

NEW YORK STYLE

SOFT PRETZELS

HOME-MADE PIZZA PIE

25* By the slice

HOT DOGS
STEAMED IN BEER 30¢
w/ Sauerkraut 35¢

15¢

SUNRISE COCKTAIL 85¢
GENESEE CREAM-ALE
& BUDWEISER BEER

Small 25¢

Thursday October 2nd
2:30 pm—l2:30 am

For Our Grand Opening Celebration

aaneianaseanersocoecnti

si

ON DRAFT
Large 40*

sassansanseasnasnennne

PAGE EIGHTEEN

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SEPTEMBER 30, 1975

Danes Flag Down
Golden Eagles, 45-9

by Craig Belt

Ina game marred by penalties, the
Albany Great Dane football team
raised their record to 2-I asthey out
classed the Brockport Golden Eagles
45-9, Saturday at University Fick!

The game. which saw the Danes
take 143 yards in penalties, was a
sloppy affair, missing good crisp ex
ecution

The Dane defense. which played
good tough defense all aftemoon,
held the Golden Eagies the first time
they had the ball and it appeared the
Danes would get the ball in goat
field position. However. Ray Gay
fumbled the punt and Brockport
Wook over on the State 4 yard line

One play biter quarterback Mike
Karuch hit running back John Smith
for a 34 yard touchdown. The bill
was tipped by safety Skip Scurry but
Smith made a fine diving catch. The
point after was good and Brockport
took an early 70 lead,

On the ensuing kickoff, Albany
took possession of the ball on their
own 40. Bertuzzi then engineered
drive that ended with Tom DeBlois
crashing over from one yard out,

Hertucei’s 28 yan pasto Orin Grife
tn and Griffin's 17 yard cunwere the
big plays of the drive.

The Danes pulled a take on the
polntafte. and Roy Billbrook ran in
the Iwo point conversion as the
Danes took the lead, 8-7

The Great Dane detense cone
tinued to frustrate any attempt
Brockport the ball

“We shut dow their insite game
sand they don't really have the spesdt
sant Danes? coach,

Wo get outside
Bob bout
The next time the Danes had the
ball, John Rertus
his speedy split end Jim Pollard fora
4? yard touchdown. AL Martin kick
ed the po ve Danes kat

hooked up with

The second quarter again saw the

defense playing exceptionally well

However, State was

custly mistthes by way 0) penalties,

and finding themselves deep in their

own teritory time Jud time again
Orin Gut

into his own hands. On a second and,

13 with the ball resting on the Dane

then took

Brockport picks up some scarce yardage.

Syracuse, Army, Drown
Harriers in Triangular

by Jon Lafayette

In the driving rain, on a course
that could best be described as a
quagmire, the Albany State cross-
country team lost a triangular meet
to two extremely tough teams:
‘Syracuse and Amy

‘Syracuse won the meet despite the
fact that their first runner finished
behind wo Amy runners and
Albany's Chris Burns. Cadet Dennis
Trujillo, last year's N.C.A.A. cham-
pion, finished in a first place tie with
teammate Curt Altiz in 25:59.

Captain Chris Burns, Albany's
“runner of the meet” looked ex-
tremely good finishing third in the
Meet and taking a win against
Syracuse, according to Coach Bob
Munsey. Bums, Artiz, and Trujillo
led the race the whole way, and
Burns stayed very tough, staying
with the two Army men and oc-
casionally setting the pace

Carlo Cherubino followed two
Syracuse men, Bill O'Brian and John
Magner, finishing a cautious sixth.

“Those Syracuse guys were flying
down those hills but I didn’t want to

ke a chance and fall,” said
Cherubino

Freshman Keith Benman out-
ducled one of the two Syracuse men
he paced with through most of the
race, giving Albany eighth place and
making the meet very close at this
point

“L was really pleased with Chris,
Cheri, und Keith,” said Munsey.
“Burnsy looked real loose and relax-
ed. | was worried about Carlo, but he
rama strong second half, When Ben=
man came in eighth, the other
couches were very worried, but when
they saw that we didn't havea fourth
or fifth man, the meet was over.”

Munsey coukln't have been more
correct as seven runners, four from
‘Army and three from Syracuse,
finished between Benman and Don
hrader, Albany's third and fourth

men. One more man from each team «

beat Albany's fifth man, Eric

Jackson.
continued on page eighteen

sports

State University ot New York at Albany

Tim Ridgeway deeaks around the right side in route to 2 12 yerd gain during Danes‘ win

> Grttin deo

ie Outside a

tackle. yo tw

ashe scampeced $7 sands untouched
for the sore, Martin sdded theientra
point and State upped its lead wo 22
At time Albuny got the ball
a trom One:
again it was Gatlin on ex
sime play racing SY yards for the
sere, When Mart
was goa! Albuas

sentra peune

game way all but ove
Gnitin rushad

first half, ang sat ou!

cond halt. setting 4

for most yards re

ac the alt
much to be des

The Danes
times for 99 ya
Were 40 tumbles. oe Hoot
interceptions

The stats. n-
Allsany had 429 sau toca
offense wn the tinst halt to E12 to
Brockport

The much talked at

Booters R

by Nathan Salant

Frank Selea scored three goals,
and Matty Denora and Chepe
Ruano added twoapetce. to lead the
Albany State varsity soccer team to
an 8-0 win at Potsdam Saturday

Goalie Henry Obwald also scored
as the Booters opened ther 1975

howeve ¢

prewive

Matty Denore bearing

versus Brockport.

une cusmimg guine had
gocen on

imaliy

wR ay they cused tr

we, as Albany continued
accumulate penalbey and the
¢ couldn't sustain a deve,

ath hind just

suuida’t move the bull against that
songy
Their vatly seo

dune det
Mike

head and gut ob he end tame tor 4

went over punzer Marnn’y

Frank Vilanova whe sullsrat 4

snoulder ust week. aw
og Wis

we agcunding

ena wurTng g

agam added the extra
Ane

punt ad the Dies ied

Shas Moarue ered the: tim!
suchdowmayhe burst up the
ye 12 vardy and tought hy

omp; Selca:

New York
Contgrenge (SUNYAC)
season on 4 Baaght mote, sual casied
their overall revond to 34)

Albany outshot the husts, 37+,
and controlled the ball un Poosdam’s
halt of the field for more than $0
minutes of the 9 munute pame.

State Caivenity ot
Athletic

down on Potsdam goal.

Aten the game Cough Fond said
hat he way peared with the xure
Me ft the eiterse finally gotoe the
mack amd! that the defense played
oily aya wi

Hie wayalabappy withthe ply ot
puch quarterbacks. Join Beets
Nhonee

substinuted all ganse

weuliaely happy with the
lay ot Jove Shiels.
Bob Allison and Monroe

Semiclds. 4 tresherwn linebacker
Hieiat mang tacklin
im addattoa to hareasning quarterbuck

and Du
tend

aint wy pr

subbntitutess

ween yh oa
The Dunes thucough's outplayed

Ursin Broekpurt Ny oy

Brock port tin week,
the Dunes tke

a what should be eon

Dunes

ot there

andar
sehedule

Hat Trick

Mtauy Denora opened the soning
cmuidweay through the first halt wher
Potsdam defensive mucup resulted in
4 back puss intended for the goalie
wound up un the net, Deora was
credited with the goulas the Albany
player closest to the play

Selea soured the tirst of his three
gouls ten nunutes liter, and the half
ended. 20

The second half was all Albany,
with Odwald’s goal, which came ona
penalty hick, the unigule hightight,
only to be eclipsed by Selea's thin
sevre late it the game.

The Booters managed only 25
gouls all of bist season, but have
already scored 18 this year. The
eadling soorer is Sele, who now has.
seven gouls in three games.

“Frankie has been playing out-
standing soccer," said Booters’
coach Bill Schieffelin, “He haskramn=
ed to discipline himself and no
longer over-handles the ball, Even
when he knew the hat trick was
possible, he still gave up possible
shots on goal in favor of better
percentage shots by other players.”

‘The last time an Albany soccer
team scored 8 goals was in 1967 in a
10-0 win over Utica College.

The Booters have yiekled one goal
in their theee games thus far, a con:
linuation of the strong defense which

continued on page eighteen

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