er Wol. LX!_No. 1}, Stale University of New York at Albany ‘Friday, March 8, k
orts
‘Toseday, March 5, 1974
e 9 4
Danes in ECAC’s; Top Ithaca vouiee _ SearchCom: ‘No Recommendation’ On Dean; rcir2t=
cison eponedseveay oie DQOr Opened For Appointment Of Kendall srr ciewe “|
i i Search Co: “Dea
backcoutt, Mike would dribble the earch Ce ened y pena of aeacies We eollte Adee ‘These candidates, he said, were uy
aavioral Sciences wil 80 “out of the question” that even
old Abdut Jabbar — Bili Walton — _had six, and Gary Trevett and Harry
buldge through most of the first half.
i by Doug Lawanda, Byron Miller, one of four seniors UCLA lob pass from the top of the Johnson had four. ball ever so slowly up to the mid- Social and Bel
‘i The Albany State basketball team piaying in his last regularly key to the baseline, The Bombers Second half action\was a carbon court line, using as much of the t release its findings to tion as more intent on furthering sealing apes ncrtehet ase -
a will get a chance to avenge (Wo scheduled game was responsivle for had this perfectly, timed asieither’ copy of the first half,-as Albany seconds allowed as possible. When News Vice President for “management” than academics tedctuiny ue tence
HY previous losses this weekend as the the bulk of the Albany scoring,ashe their forwards Bruce Jones, or John scored the first five points and picked up at that line and double Aa Si Academic Affairs Student opinion against placing PuER i
i regained the lead, 41-38, thanks (o covered, Mike's spinsand crisp pass- YSIS Philip Sirotkin and Kendall in the Dean position had Faculty in the History Depart-
ment said that they had been ap-
Proached by Chairman Kendall
Birr who asked cach of them in-
it Danes received their second con- moved inside once again, hitting Smith, or center Tom Sprague
Bt secutive Upstate ECACtourney bid. consistently on shorter range shots, would be in great position for an Miller and Pete Kola.” However, nthe run strong recently, as the former
ij On Friday night Albany willtravel Probably because of his great easy, uncontested lay-up if notbeing the Borbersthen proceeded to score game. commitive’s opinion that no History Chairman was linked to
7 ~ Ed Johnson hit from the foul line recommendation be made as to a unfair (enure proceedings in the
that it will con
ing enabled the Danes to open up the
} to host Union College to play
Brockport State ina 7 PM start, to give Albany a six point lead, 72- permanent appointee to the Dean David Goodman case and others
Over the Christmas vacation, the 66, with two-twelve left. A minute post fier ee reneecehecer
Danes lost a narrow four point deci. Pt VISITOR later however, that spread was cut in When questioned as to the Student Association Vi Pointment. The question cai 4
] sion to the Golden Eagles in a crucial Hi t E half via two quick buckets by validity of the report, student President Barry David commented the form of an : aye ii
SUNY conference game. Brockport ai Ithaca’s Folkins and Jerry Boyes, member Stan Kaufman admitted that the Committee's failure to Tar ra ean teamagunced poll
will come into the game smarting " . H {¢ j surrounding a Johnson offensive that indeed the committee had recommend any single candidate Bapantiiet Peal i bes
i after blowing a NCAA bid. id is foul. With thirty-six seconds show decided to issue a “ao recomme should be taken seriously. “I think duestioned the propriety of fssuing
Ed Johnson was fouled in the dation” finding to Sirotkin, but,in that the Committeeacted out of the Pear baal eer
best interests of the entire Universi-
ty" David said. “don’t think that
anyone should be appointed to the
4 vested interest in seeing Kendall
as Dewn, Such an appointment
would ensure Birr of continuing as
the Department Chairman, a post
he now holdy only: temparatily,
fact, that report had been released
backcourt. He converted the one
and-one penalty situation ay Ithaca
Albany the umpact of the committee's
q the Danes can get by Brockport, Lo
1 iby foe : : ear INUS >
they will probably face Union Satur-
day night, Union's opponent in Fri-
day night’s game iy Geneso, @ team
that beat Albany by 221 The
late last week
was over the limit, thus,
had the five point lead with
Was the game out of reach? Ap-
22 tett deerton iy eritical in hight ab the
the Commute.” Ayked whether he
dall in
lure of the Search Cod
Dutchmen, who are currently rank= ie
' ed fh ew York Staterdefentes airently not as once again Folkiny for Dean ot the Coltegeat Arisand ——petsunally supported: Ke
\ first in New York State, defeated Pp re ! te hei, me. ilecatioe et Steen said that the poll was
the Danes in last years ECAC finals. and Charlie Johnson scored (the defences teat iveatany acceptable ! “hind of improper” “was: un
| No advance tickets will be sold, The latter basket coming as the ball way, Hnadliate tor itties Conkersiiyinttep: "SUMS An usual procedure to say the least.”
stolen tram Reggie Smith after he cadence post That places the Part ot the objections tansed by Je Steen echoed sentiments of the
Haeuly in saying thee ama such as
doors at Union will open at six
The Danes kept their tourney Social Seine Dean in aan even
hopes live ay they closed out their
History Department personnel is
was knocked down by one of the
Ithaca players and no foul call being
foKendall (meaning someone more
Clock wise fram top left: Richard Kendalt, the Dean on the spot; Beneret,the vise! ini sidnunistuation than
President: Kendall Birr, aggressive Chairman; Sirotkin, powerful Veep. cusdemes ) would be detrimental
bitte aaa that the Commute Chateman,
Ming divwn the tle HOW OL Wissen Ruhertye a high
made). The Danes had to inbound
Jenman
i regular season Saturday night in
i) their typical road game style fashion the hall successfully. and hang on Actiie Dean lor Sucaal Sciences evneeted member wl the Depart:
with « hair-raising 74-73 win over The Albany Sue Goat Dan sketball team made history ‘Wednesday night as they ecause the tead was cut to one 74 Heat Rental toutes haa yen as acho lege ay Kendal’ to the Unversity
broke their scoring record, scoring « hundred points for the first time ever. Pictured Angune who has vreescen the play so aunmernation mght he yh ey aus ses Nad NYPIRG Investigative Team Uncovers
ie gaa tae ial gta above is Mel Brown, who had the honor of scoring the bucket that Oucusesin this uation when camiisied ey Sinuthin’s ollieg asa
ning for the now 16-7 Danes because success against New Paltz, and the fouled beforehand. And when the HC straight with Fotkins once ui) gurt press is being. applied cH sigh (6) appaunt Kendall wy SEM Marclation with Raberty
Albany, which is noted for its slow fact that his longer bombs just were Danes would be looking for this, gsin hurting the Danes. Back came nays that Athans hos the acho tre tdke per ratient Ean a the Ei ar oa sem Wid Di: i T A D St Pri
first-half play whenever they are not not connecting, Byron converted on guard Bill Folkins would hit from Albany highlighted by Reggie Smith... hreakir ' Rabin Hemes ul agrasise ide Lispart n Area rug ore tees
Irom the baseline and Harry John-
guard out of bounds passesacrossto Rumblings of discontent were ea
in the friendly confines of University 7 or 13 for 18 points in the first half Jong range (he scored 14 in the first } id . < inittcenin Kuutinan con:
ad shana the ther guard who comes om hs evident within the History and ceded tr that pont av well duane Find Ghetto Store Grossly Overcharging
Ithaca College
a press. Here, the sn
son from allover. The
Gym, scored the first six points of alone hall)
the contest on superior all-around Yet the Danes could not pull (thaca wasubleto takethelead for hands nine times more during these sition on the court ucross the Pohuval Science departments. ay lent
play, Whetheritwas the fact that the away. Asit has been the style of all the first ime with only four minutes first twelve minutes of the second pen ie uit of hounds, Then rhein taculiy joined in contemaationot gt pause teen cra cnts By Diabla Catied acpi A MTG, MA A WARN Thaadilreconliitle
i Great Danes were looking aheadfor of Coach Sauers basketball teams (a remaining. From thispoint until late all with both clubs kading at Gimes—j.synde pans comes to the open man i Rendattren (ivisioa: Hucully. (anaate cated Mle whe Mreseription drug prices were pree contrat pices the pharmacist agreed. and
4 post-season tournament bid and well-balancedlcoring attck), when in the second half.the squads played by as much as live points works musa etibetien peanaiive SiaNSeS Ray UAL WH AN AOE RO UNE PEE: unt adifienasmad’antvehy ” (hs sive: Bard of Pharmmen the DIAG nédile host therigee
i wanted to make sure to earn one, or one player docs most of the tallying- even basketball, ‘The leud changed —_Albiiny took the lead for good bY anasition i momentarily. stunned Lo MMnceUeiicn: malcom NYPIRG students conducting s sur noutied pharmacists in December Ina short while the man became very
the fact thar| Ithaca had @ season one must be wary of the opposition, hands not fess than five times during going on a 10-0 spurt with only 7:40." thy unorthodoa maneuver be awarded the position at Divi Kaulman said that the result way Y¢y of pharmacies earlier this week. that they are required by law to post nervous, and then hegan to argue
record of 7-17, Albany State looked as they're probably not too far be- the waning moments of thefirsthalf, remaining. Buckets by ourdifferent — Siprunawicr and Ed John ed sian Dean, hut with only accept sctoregone oanelusion, Inreterence SUNYA'S PIRG group checked for a list ol the 150 most frequently with the group, He suid they were
their best during the first ten find. Thisisexactly what happened. The half ended on a Byron Miller Danes along with two straight steals coined. the play perfectly ay. the Somenne outstanding nthe fiekdot tothe consideration given the other 4 legally required drug price listand prescribed drugs, together with their dumb, dul not know what they were
minutes, All five starters drove to The Albany zone defense had specialty from the fou! line, as the by Hurry Johnson gave Staten 68-59 anes ran gut the clock to preserve 1 iucademiu. three candidates lor the post recorded them in stores throughout — usual dosi and current prices doimg and claimed they had no sight
the busket quite frequently, grabbed broken down, and the switch to lane wascleared out for him with:03 advantage. Reggie Smith traded % Gross Sali hay. a Wail © |RUhaed sven ah BVehNG the Atbany urea, NYPIRG students starting Januury Sirk, ‘The'liat tw he Ure, Uhe students ucgued
a large number of offensive man-to-man defense didn't seem to showing on the clock. This bucket hoops with Folkins as Ithaca cut the uets, it was another i iidiairdionsterndorsidihate® Rikers Wence aA ition); compiled the prices in Troy and called the "New York State Official with him tor hall an hour, during
rebounds, and just out-hustled work cither.Ithaca finally woke up cut the BomberJead to two points at lead to 70-66 with 2:34 to go. And first: His first win at Ithaca in all bs svtime-thorSwumeonesucceuifiil lit Water Goldstein of the Gi Schenectady alsu, Preseription Price List” aad failure which Ume the sturekeeper said they
Ithaca on a parts of the loor. With with only ive minutes left inthe half, 34-36. Nobody else seored much for while this way happening, the heads- nineteen yeursol coachingat Atfany Bedell, GEMMBMIC Lad | SALONS Ear, _ NEDRUblrtiennen t(D wenod the (a apinelasereurrent; “wereScucunl ya cosrowsleeand
the Bombers storing their first und begin to connect consistently on Albany State: Reggie Smith and up ball playing of Mike — State, and as he put ut, “with those 1 icaching riMeaivill he plates ‘Geienoeh lcgait hettenenest Way (HELE Nureehy Tvsughadl Che stales jnues are iidernoanvire: “THES That (ne Suede) Kase dbaued:. ‘The
basket after 3:10 had elapsed, State close-in shots from 15 feet or less. Mike Suprunowicz could only Suprunowicz helped the Danes im- mistakes near the end, we're glad to (hat pose Sodnick aid ther bets Jwo minutes and forget it." — some have already been done in must be posted conspicuously at or students did not finish recording the
managed to maintain that 6 point One of their favorite’plays wasthe muster (wo points cadh, Ed Johnson mensely. Not being pressed in the get out of there alive.” 7 Lied ut seemg: persons who, have for the Committee as a Syracuse, New York City and Bul- adjacent to the prescription counter, prices in that pharmacy As Naney
4 fee ov teachers be:rewarded wilt not for himselt, he said tala. The purpose i ta gather — the purpase of the law is to provide Heyman, one at the Albany PIRG
e a ° administrative positions. He tee fell that the other evidence for legislation to permit prige information to consumers studenty there putt, he was “very
racksters Disappointin AC Cte drag ieee AYES ile oy Se RG
\ 7 Objection Voiced To Governance IRG people had littleditticuly: the
i Suansenen each ; required list way legible, They were In another drug store, Amspan on
by Vinny Reda Aside Irom these however, perlor- wha was forced to out the meet usually asked what they were doing, — 71 Madison, Albany PLR Ger Mack
fe Rear semua Gee He ee memes, Seca not eam Com’s Proposed Senate Changes 272.222.0025 Conese
team, over the past (wo weeks, has Albany's two mile relay team of gecord with a time of 9:12.5 at Une excimarconiera were suspicious ar visibly an awner realized what he was doing:
found out just how fleeting success Sorel, Bilash, Cherubino, and Reda jon, and then lollowed with a 9:13.0 . but stated that he would like to see professionaly. Thiy change would goyed Some ignored them, and an Constantines on Hd Cential the
cun be. After showing fine improve- set onefol the many school records clocking at RPL. Carlo Cherubino aking sue with the Governance — students as per manent members. mean a reduction im the number ot oecasional lew, like Pay's in the PIG worker way kicked out with
ment in a quadrangular meet at Un- achieved at the Union meet with an and Nick DeMarco failed to take up multee’s gueapasatl far changes in AL this specual meeting, Senator —stdmunstiatory am the Senate Route 20 Mall, were very threats te call the police. Constan-
won College on March 16, the team 4:09.46 time, but then ,slowed ten — the slack lelt by Shrader’s absence; npositivon of the University Cully’ monon “urge rejection ot One problem brought up at the Gaoperaive, Pay’ list was directly —tine’y owner sad that "you ean look
everged victorious one week fater at seconds in Linishing Hlth at RPLand — Cherubino ran sixth in 9:45.7, ten Athi Collis, of the the Governance Committee's nicely which haya diveet beanie yy tant of the preseryption counter but you can't wate them dowo.
the RPL Marty McDonagh scratched trom their face at Cor seconds slower than his. season's sh department. steed ap prepesatand eeport thistothe icul: 4 these FeApPOFOMMEHT ud very ways tu ead, the awner —Hotkel’y at 187 Centrid relused tw
f Memorial Indoor Track Meet over thind, Tin Bilash and Marty Je best, while DeMarco yssony atid unger reyectiett ol was parsed by at sateal 40-17 pooped. wasgiven bttleamnsdett~ Seemed only. tone lad to help prunisludiaty seventh aepstene
/ ten other schools This past Satur- had finshed one-two at the RPL oll his hest i \ Hus sctusn may haveanettect on tie Mow Hats suggested hab wart When SUNY ANY PIRG students. Same statesiduf wot have the hist at :
' day. however, saw them finish a diss meet in 1-16.6and 1:17.2 respective: 9.57.5. breshin Cat si ate th Jo Dome Laken at thee part atthe pesubletsvoteanwhethorermer te catered Lanstean’s Dawg state a6 all The Assistant Manager ot
mat (1th among [6 schools at the — ly. but their (16.8 and 116.9 pertor in a slower section, almost a sity Sen At Laat commend The Gaverane Coot Delaware thes yaw the hst posted EEE
Cortland Invitational muncey placed them out of the bettered both umes with a 943.0 tat Comtaversy wsertherepnattscemuuittee’y no prort watt Hast tase ee Ties OUR fh ;
; The scorers in Saturday's mect money Saturday eluching * reason Lawcisits ell fasten teomsevctalypeciticttiemy, tliat the (ange al iste ws icant Pg Stee Maton 2 Cabriun Ceaaltharwzine, Sxconal
i were among the few men on theclub Gary Washington lailed to: make Cue stich dem sidered by the Senate ys Deel Tences Daas St “ vfs | osc stu
to make improvement over the past the finals with hts 42 foot, three meh, Added t Albany's problems was ' sctilty stout Levan th Positiany tur scr Hen of service tall and students a AML states) |
two weeks. Hob Malone. after jum triple jump. Up to this potont the tact that solid pettormers, such H Governance Commtice’s propusat aif The service stall isall full, petmantent weMibers, ect |
ingots feet-even in the high jumpin huwever, the clay ffeshmaglhad ay jin Holloway in the shut put, and } at the west faculty meeting, students hing cast ser uice employees ath mn CHabwal tthe Senate ws te be okealinae Ty pp ” yo von foray fp 190
i his two propigegf meets, sct a yehaol shown fine improvement this season, Mike Okutily and. Lom Pardini in | sould lane the oppattunnty tat pet dlesseretanicsand jantonal help witha seat deal of aon academe (tayy Pt
i indoor mark and a personal best at ighhghted by iy school indoor the long jump, could not attend the iauicnt catson the Senate Cuctent Author sqgadiant piaposat sues. but anestimteys i a aster deal |
Cortland RGBPa jump of six teet, record of 43-6 at Union. Not ene meet Saturday The result was a fh the deena of whether or met te would septate. the faculty ont dinest cvchusnely with academe Winnon's KO 0 rw | 250 on) 10
{ four mches. [Cwas good forasecond couraging however’, was Vit season's low total of 9 points lor the | have students on te Senate must be teach Laculty ind non-teaching assties |
placefinigh} Albuny’s best of theday, Reda's tack of progress in the 1000-15 events, he indoor teasn has one Loted on cach year On al the pratessumaly Whereas now, the Fhe mew plan would give cache bshopate Vso ie) ind | aay | xs Ww
Duve Cole equaled his own indoor yard run. Alter shattering the school more chance to get together and jeport’s proposed changes. would Laculty. which presently meludes culty a cheat plurality Woll)
record with «7.9 second elfurt inthe record by4.1 seconds in 2:14.0.witha prove themselves this Saturday, Permanently xOe students these — norteaching profersonals, isdivud — sepacating UL the mate teaching
q 60 yard high hurdles, good for third victory at Union, Reda finished third however. They return to the seene of seats ed into 12 elected at large, 9 ap-—protessionaly, and redueme the Wines Atd an iy ee 170
place and Rich Langtord's 422.6 at RPIto.u2:19.2 timeand thendid their finest performances, Union Wrestling Co-captain Larry Mims (pictured above) completed his | However, at the meeting Mon pomted. and 36 elected by school, number of admmnstratars, Martin Kj yitdertand
one mile time was rewarded by a not capture any of the ‘ering College, for the Union Inivtational three year wrestling career here at Albany in fine fashion as he finish- } day the important question ~ do under the new plan this would ali he — Fdelman, head of the Guvernance
i fourth place “finish Saturday, places at Cortland in running his ct, isthe astevent onthe team’s eq fifth in the NCAA College Division Wrestling Championships | Students belong on the Unversity — changed. Comnnttce, hay enaphase iS ites Aid 479 tay 27 | 1 sx x0 tas
although his slower 4:23.6 tine had slowest mark of the yeur Winter seliedute, and Couch K. Keith eld tast weekend. More on the story on page 15. i Senate — way tased Speaking alter The new proposal provades ford — punt that uy would gue the fF. peut
| been good enough ta.win at the RPL The two mile lacked Albany's Munsey would like to see signs of an the mecting Barry: Davis, View teachingtaculty members, elected to teaching laculty & Nery enitcal sty a 17hry «furs reprevenisw sampling of die mformation NY Pl Rergathered. The complete
invitational the week belore most potent threat, Jim Shrader, upswing us thoughts tum to spring. ‘Preademt of Student Assueration, the Senate by schouls, and creates recommending: acadenme poets 10 ft uf 70drugs in al Albans area pharmacies can be obeainesd ahrough SUN YA NY Be
aduntied that at imeshehasdoubls, seats for seven non-teaching — the admumistration 116. by sernding a ell-auldvessed stamped envelipe to Bo 2192 Indean
Proposal Would House Elderly
In State College Dormitories
the Problems of the Elderly un-
covered the fact that present state
law forbids unused college dor-
mitory space to be used for non-
student purposes said no specific
campuses have been targeted for
siderly housing and the actual
amount of space available for hous-
ing is us yet unknown.
Both Farrell and
emphasized that the
tion would administer the dormitory
(R-Montauk) has proposed legisla- and the local college would maintain
tion that would allowelderly citizens the building and provide other
throughout the state to return to agreed upon services. Arrangements
college not to attend classes, but to. would be negotiated through the
live, State Dormitory Authority and the
The uncommon sight of elderly collected rents would be used to pay
‘men and women strolling across the olf construction bonds.
grounds of State University cam- “I regard this concept as a prece~
puses arm-in-arm with younger dent for more efficient use of state
students might become an everyday fucilities...it is to the state's interest
‘occurence if the legislation is ap- {0 ensure that these buildings are ef-
proved and signed into law by ntly and fully utilized...",
Governor Malcolm Wilson. The bill Duryea continued,
would allow unused college dor- A pilot project housing elderly
‘Assembly Speaker Perry Duryea
H
Duryea
proposed
burden to localities, since the Dor-
mitory Authority will require spon- ©
soring agencies to be “sound, con- di
tigover
strike spread across the coun!ry.
WS BRIE
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Hundreds of students chanting 3
nment slogans marched through Addis Ababa today while a general
Helmeted police earrying rifles and tear gas forced the students to ret
Haile Selassie University after an hour of demonstrations, There was no
jolence,
Land for the tillers! Work for the workers! Down with the prime
minister!” the demonstrators shouted. Thousands of other students looked
legislation will offer no tax or social on quietly
The Confederation of Ethiopian Labor ‘Unions claimed near 100 per cent
sectiveness for the strike, planned to continue until the government mects
lemands for pay increases and labor reforms.
mitory space to be made available sitizens in unused campus dor- tinuing and fiscally independent 4x y¢, Japan (AP) - North Vietnam today issued partial identticat
for senior citizens from local com- mitories hus existed for almost two agencies or organizations of 12 American prisoners of war whose remains were flown to |
‘munities who are currently housed in years at the State University at Buf- “The dormitories are not gga,
Projects or homes they cannot af- {alo A soca bainies ae cuuipped to qualify as nursing (5. Air Force planes took caskets containing the remains to Uta
ford. dla en the nearby Erie homes”, Duryea udded. Nordoesthe i,j haitand for positive identification before their return te the | «uted
Farrell committee intend they be
used in this way."
County Home and Infirmary was
renovated, some 300 senior citizens
‘were moved into a vacant dormitory a
on the campus under a three year Str ik g ¥
ease, State University Chancellor eaking. "
Ernest L. Boyer is known to be a
strong supporter of the concept
because in his view it encourages
diversity on the campuses and allows
wasted space to be better utilized:
“We may have available space that
can be utilized to house the elderly:
and at the same time provide our
Senior Citizens with much needed
educational, social and cultural op-
portunities”, Duryea explained in
outlining his rationale for the bill.
xisting services at state, city, and
private universities could provide
clinical and nursing benefits, poten-
tial access to academic classes and
possible use of
transportation services.”
jon, a govern-
wency oF nonprofit corpora-
Rumor has it that a streak will he
aking place sometime next week
down on the Alumni campus
probably next Wednesday in Alden
Hall, ‘The info comes in the wake of
reports of a streak held Wednesday
night on Indian Quad. Supposedly
the streakers were co-ed. No info on
the make-up of next weeks streak is
hvaitable.
Dormitories Not Nursing Homes
Assemblyman George Farrell (R-
Floral Park), whose Committee for
FRIDAY |
MARCH 8
THE WITTIEST, WARMEST
AND MOST INGRATIATING
Me care BuO auf $.75 with tax $1.25 without
SATURDAY}
MARCH 9
Neil Simon's #
. 7:30 and
9:30
LC 18
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A SPECIAL SHOWING 9F F
YELLOW SUBMARINE 1
BE HELD ON ALUMNI QUAD,
ON FRIDAY MARCH 8 AT MID-
NIGHT IN THE ALDEN HALL
vv
An Elaine May Film
modation difficulties it has been switched to Cairo,”
industrial fair in Tripoli made the hotel situation difficult, he
that Bandi
day that the state would grant xen
could est
States
The U.S. Embassy in Saigon said earlier the men's ni
withheld until the identifications were established and next of hin were
nontied
CAIRO (AP) - Arab oil ministers are scheduled to meet in Catto on Sun
day to review their policies, an Egyptian Oil Ministry spokesman saul 1)
fitting of their oil embargo agi
1 the United States is expected ts
1 topic
“The meeting was scheduled to convene in 1 “due 1
poli but
the spokesman sad) \n
-w oil policies. Our policy 1s hs
the spokesman saul 1
Egypt invited ministers to meet “to rev
yn adapting ourselves to changing circumstances,”
would not elaborate.
WASHING TON (AP) -On President Nixon's orders. the Jusbce Dept
ment iy tring to draft legislation intended to strip away one of the news
media's principal shields against libel suits by public officraly «
'
The presidential move was disclosed by ranking White Honye ollie:
whe sid Nivon’s objective was to give political candidates better det
against slanderous or libelous campargn attacks
WASHING LON FAP) - Gosernors of both parties say the counts
he better off President Nixon is impeached or resigns because
problems are creating a crisis Lor the rest of the country
nter meeting al the National Gos:
moa by
Several of these attending the ¥
nee vs ‘ed Outright Wednesday far Nixon's
major figure in Nae
Conte
smother ancluding lor the Hirst time
Othery sid their problems at long gasoline
‘until the question of Nise
s. unemplo
Angry Voters are not going to be sol
settled.
Hyen Nison’s triends among the governors talked 1 the cortutors
atergate cloud over Washington that 19 taking
consentisn hotel at a
Lieult ty lace mushrooming emer
WASHINGION (A(P) ~ President Nixon hay offered 0
testimony, 1m writing oF in a White House interview, to speed the I
peachment inquiry, But some congressional Republicans questo
Whether he would be open enough
Niven told a telesision-radio news conference Wednesday yt he oil
surrender t0 the House Judicury Committee all tapes and dacuments 10
availble carler to Water ar Lean Jaworski. bs
Le Spectal pros
making himyell available lor questions.
Although Nixon labeled his otter a
Promising to provide other evidence the panel might seek \vil by
Nery forthcoming.”
would he improper Lor him to submit te eross-exsam
Rep Anvona, the House Repu
appears Nixon “hay vpted
every relevant Huet and piewe of evidence simply must be frist
Jolin Rhodes af
1 disclosure and cooperation.” Hat hie 8
Hudictary Committee if we ate to hase any hope of resolving thes ath
DNI But Key Ke
form Hetter trom Nixon lawyer James 1) St 1
Charman Peter Radin
MeClors. RUE sand at
respo
tng shuntly helure the news conterenee (atc
feyuest bor dats
F don't think a's satisfactory It doesn’ appear to be resp
WASHING LON TAPS New Watergate mndictments were expe
# the wake ol ul announcement by the special prosecutor's allic
dows
+ Proceeding” an gout
“The special prosecutor's atlice has
Seca’ court at HL today, Copres of filing will be asiathable 1
alte the proceding. No hurther detuls until that tne,”
ny
the annus
ALBANY (AP)
Uhe New York Stateenergy ehicl annauniced Wed
Ped Petvoniy have been exempted trom the state's snuanabl
phine Getomng
O'Hara, director of the Emergency Huet Olive, hit sant
deen
Almerin (
ptions te the handicapped as wot 4
ish appropriate procedures,
He sud Wednesday, however, that the exemptions would be cltest
mediately and that the vehicles af handicapped petsuns would be
nergency vehicles until the state publishes
tructions Lor reversing esc1up
PAGE TWO ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH #, 19/4
Council Rejects Kaplon, Discusses Compute
by Mike Sena
For almost five and a half hours
Central Council met and talked
And debated. And talked, And
argued. And talked, It led one
member to deem the whole Wednes-
day night aftair a “circus”
1 Councilmen running
to buy food, yelling out
Pointy of information and personal
privilege, Chairman Erie Lonschein
drinking Heinekin beer (which ac-
cording 10 Vice Chairperson Charley
¢ paid for out of legitimate
SA operating expenses), and verbal
Councilme
fisticulls hetwes few
hilly were passed
One bill requests President
Henevet to reject the application of
Morton Kaplon as Dean of the
* College of Arts
Sciences. he
bill was introduced by Lewis Fidler
and Chairman Eric Lonschein, The
bill’ way introduced to the Central
Council at 1:20 in the morning
Alter discussion and debate the bill
Way passed on a voice Vote at 1:25.
An
sirma
her bill gives Mike Piraniaa,
of University Concert
hooking lee of S301. This
nied as a token of esteem for
his services in the booking of univer-
Board a
wats BF
sity concerts. Piranian commented
that "$300 is a pittance as to what
deserve.” In the past, except for last
year when the UCB chairman refus-
ed the money, the chairman has been
awarded this fee, according to SA
President Steve Gerber, — Alter
‘chatte on at technicality, the
Dull wa ystssed on a Voice vote
lenge
Erie Lonschein reintroduced
another bill whieh was passed in eX
ceutive session last time, The bill
calls tor $1,500 to be donated to the
Washingion Park Spirit for partial
payment of copies to be delivered to
the university, Council directed SA
President Gerber to draw up a con-
tract with the Spirit, if possible, The
hill also direets that the bill come
hack to Central Couneil in not more
than 2 weeks
£. Norbet Zahm, general manager
OL FSA, way also at the me
spoke about the new scomputerized
check-in system to be used in the din
ing halls next fall, According to
Zahm, abour30 students” on cach
quad “sneak” into meals every dat
He noted this costs FSA between
ing. He
Security To Resume Towing
Removal May Begin Early Next Week
by Daniel Gaines
The ability of the Motor Pool i
provide University Security with a
diver means that once agnn eampus
tow trucks will be remos img illegally
parked cars. On or about March
thirteenth, cars parked as abstrue
mps cat aithier wise
1s. blocking «
breaking parking regulations will be
fawed to sume unidentiied spot on
campus
fhe tow tucks have not been
operating the past few months as a
feult ol the change im pronties
Prompted by the enegy ctists, The
Diaper busses had protty aver the
haw trneks: the ticks have: been
“towing campus: vehicles
that baeak down.
The taming rs expected ti be con:
contsated ont cars hay mgan anusuatl
number ol outstanding
tans oe anicitcting with the spaces
Jud ramps reserved feo handicapped
Dont bake lowing Personally
' Securit s enare that
' vonal mstances where
nave been aitested lor
Hes useall cat their
He desk eticct an the
. hurley. whee teally 1s not
degpronaatle tor the tow Lames R.
Withee Director at University,
secunts sand dist (lies waderstand
people's comphamty, thes “dow take
1 petseonall
50 Cary In One Day
Jay the past years the Unsvensity
hastowed asmuany astitty cary inane
Lihey average four or tive. In
197%, tor example, HL
day.
Fetnnaty
cary were towed
A diiver naw available to dive
the tow trucks because ob the new
sgrevment between the Ollice
General Serviees (OGS) and the Un
concemmg the Draper
The University Matar Pool
arsse
‘cut seme aah then suis, the OGS hay
adkded mute
Since OGS 1s sunning past ot the
sistem, a driver has heen treed to
work elsewhere = sn the tow truck
Security is Mast concemed with
the plight of handicapped people m
ke SUNY A cammumity: abstrue-
Ling the whee! chait camps mane al
the few tive dollar fines (mest are
three de
handicapped people be able to park
wl without
set totts dittieulty, Security, has heen
Ms Hay ftevessery that
Men cats amd et atte
shed to cleat ont legally parked
cats and make at sabe lor the han
dicapped
fo Keep Cs On Our Loey
Secumts hepes that the remstitte
Hiow ail Josng wall end the
4 Mbany’s campus Thee have ae
tential iemovamge masse
numbers al cary. they ust want te
y cveryone an then wes Hay
inch better tes have Menu cat towed
by the Emmersity than bya
mumiespabty. the mcomyenmwnee here
It is also hoped
relatively smal
14. Col. Anthony Herbert (Ret.): *U.
IThe ASP will n
| 3/12 due to
that hy towing gary that have been
ticketed often but whose owners
hase continually neglected 10 pay,
the backlog of unpaid tickets might
he reduced,
People whose cats have heen tow
ed can have them returned by paving
1 ten dollar towing tee and any
Lickaty that may he awed
$35,000-S40,000" each year, ‘The
new system will cut that figure in
hall, Zahm noted. Only one checker
will be needed per quad which will
sive $9000 per year on student
employment, std FSA manager
Zahm.
This is
“not a great big faney
system”, he said, Zahm added
hat it was designed for one thing, to
cut down the number of students
sneaking in for meats
The meal card will look the sime,
hut on the back there will be a
magnetic tape, said Zahm, Henoted
that checkers will “slip the meal
card” into a box. The box wil light
up as to whether the student can go
awa ta cat, Zahm added.
He noted that this system would
tually cust between $K.000-89,000
pluy a yearly maintenaneecost and
Would stop the use of stolen meal
cards
Other bills Central
Cone gave $1.20 tor publiety ol
the Student Association af the State
Universities (SASU). and set up an
funds ap
yw PM
ny. thete Way
passed by
ageney account for
propnuited tor WSE
AU 130 in the monn
Still a garbage ca Hull of Hemekin
snd Budweiser on we felt This way
served to the Couneiimen, whe ne:
doubt by then had asererecasent the
hy thrsats
r Blood Drive Tues.
Psi Gamma Sorority is sponsoring
a blood donation day at SUNYA.
The Red Cross will be here on Tues~
day, March 12 for the drive, which
will be held in the Campus Center,
Joraine Costisick of Psi Gamma
points out that due to ite nation’s in-
creasing population and expanding
hospital facilities the need for blood
is climbing, and is now greater than
ever, Although the demand for
blood never sluckens, there is a
decrease in blood collection during
the winter months, she says. As a
result an increased effort to make
donations at this time fo the year is
necessary in order to meet the need.
The sorority's members are
hopeful that a large number of
students will make a personal com-
mitment 10 share their good health
with someone less fortunate than
they. There is a strong. personal
satisktetion involved in blood dona-
fiom. utes Loraine, Justask anyone
who has donated blood.
One herelit of donating blood
anterest ty the tact
that the donur’s Lumily becomes en=
tutled to recerve any blood neede
dung the following year without
whieh may be
vst
Donors have through Fridity
Murch 8 to make reservations tor the
donation ime nest Fuesday, Reser>
saan cat be made in the Campus
Center at the blood drive desk
Herbert Indicts U. S. Military
Says Generals Had Interests In Vietnam Oil
by Nancy Albaugh
Weaving his way through a series
‘of gruesome stories about military
sctions wm both the United Stitesand
m Vietnam, Lt Col Anthony
Herbert (Ret) ckams Huvter's
Brave New World may become at
teality oa tus counter
Speaking here Wednesday might
Herher estotled the conmion soldier
iy ideal of the democratic min
S the thard-lutting, etsp.
F and Haldeman harrcur ab the days.
Generals are dictators”.
not publish on
mid-semesters .
!
|
! Review Courses
| Evening classes
| College of St. Rose
L
For info, contuet;
Joseph Urso
42 Norwood Ave.
Albany, N.Y.
489-1254
12208
(ihe ay
The German
$3.50 w/ tax
Costumes
Hasching - A Mardi Gras
Brubacher
$5.00 without Di
Tickets available from the German Office (2nd floor
Humanities) & from German professors
Club presents: niaon
Celebration
March 9
8:00 pm
ining
Hall
dictator-tike
NH
while decrying the
generals who he clams ane nannn
the country
The war erimes he told are not
Herbert as
new, hut good
Son tller aiid had people weaing
As i paints of the speech In
eidenty he the Armiy’s steingung
Vietnamese childien together by
passing a we theaugh one ear and
Gut the «ther to the west child, and
Whe the tom diay rape by fourteen
Ameticans at ten seat alt South
Vietanumesc gitl created the mood
the test it the spevelt
Hethert claus the medtat and the
Army havg "a censpaniys bedliseredat
4 Mike Wallies CBS
documentary “00 Munutes
publeshed om the
with stitutes
snd
May
September-Oetaber 1970
Faumabsin Resse ant the
YN Atlante Mecnsit
Though he thas been pensioned a
Herbert stil retany
Army amaze
alitany duty
when he won the coveted post ol Lt
3 Colin the 17d \uborne Division
in Vietnam
Stating the poliey ur Vietnam had
been to Lind scapegoats among the
blacks and the “long-hiurs,” Herbert
found these minorities “he
smarter and ait least ay brave as thett
The Army couldn't stand
gdp.” he said.
Herbert found fault with the
Domino theory in Southeast Agua
Governments, when they fall, hall to
athers,
their be
| emia CAMP CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS |
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
THE ASSOCIATION
- comprising 350 outstanding Boys,
d throughout the New England, Mid:
‘and Co-Ed Camps, loc
he sud,
South
the night. not to the lelt
the examples ol
ean dictatorships hy the
Prvates don't averthiow
governments, generals do,”
The auteome of the Army's pro
wet 100.000 way another ste ol
lite
cuits at Herbert, Lhe tags
plan was ter take slows hearers. must
I blacks. whe Westmoreland sid
Svs not he sent yo wan, bat would
undergsy military tram te became
Kilph Nader
that these peopl
Hot only Weak La wat BEL Were sett
Hane as olten as the ci Le
beserves hicks. cantinued
Hyrhert cetnprised 186. at the
rental attny An Mad A git the
anahinie
Herhert praised ie calisted men
hs wh
He nated
wveral Sasa
Contyals on power the aha bad
Tscry country that tay stowed
sell Une Husary at doit Cluiets ot
Stall hay lost the mest waar
Herbert Herhewt
shamed the general lost the war a
prophesized
Vietnam. impart beeauive at thet
drive Lor power andl an part becuse
fof their traning in only “War kd War
Huoties
Herbert made vague reterenee to
oil nteresty a South Vietnam hemg
J major teason tor oUF entry, and
sud the generilyand military school
studenty bad bought stock in cu
planning on
. Pamiey that were
developing that oil
LOR CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS | .
‘and FACULTY MEMBERS
OF PRIVATE CAMPS
Girls, Brother-Sister
dle Atlantic States and Canada,
| GRADUATE STUDENTS
B .. INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concerning summer employment a: Head
{j Counselors, Group Leaders, Specialties, General Counselors,
Write, Phone
or Call in Person
Association of Private Camps — Dept. C
Marwell M Alerunder, Execulire Durector
55 West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N.Y.)
FRIDA { MARCI 8, 197
1
ALBANY STUDENT PRE
3S
PAGE THREE
RITE AID DRUG.
1400 ALTAMONT AVE,, ROTTERDAM
AT BOTH
THEATRES!
1S AN EXTRAORDINARY
‘A branch of Rite Ald Drugs near he Route 20 Mal (left) and another branch
at SI North Peart in Albany's ghetto (right). The ghetto branch lists prices as
much as S0¢ more than the suburban branch on the
the New York State Board of Pharmacy.
legally required by
HELLMAN'S
“IELLMAN|PLAZA 1&2
WASHINGTON AVE, ALBANY 4. 200d
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THE SCREEN
cunt, from page one
Klein's on New Scotland Road was
unable to find it; he told the NYP-
IRG students to return when the
manager was there. Albany
PIRGers went back six times; the
manager was never there.
The law requires that the list be
posted “conspicuously at oradja
to the place in the pharmacy where
prescriptions are presented for com-
pounding and dispensing.” Gerald's
at 217 Western posted the list back
where the ceiling meets the wall:
PIRGers said it was illegible without
a ladder
Blocked By A Pipe
‘One list was aetuatlly in the
boiler room: high and partially
locked hy a pipe. At Branche
macy at 202 Western Avenue the
NY PERG students noticed the list in
1 hallway between the storeroom
When they
shed to yee at, they were told t
bach
and the cash register
customers are not allowed
there: no information way recorded.
From that store, Many lists were a
peneil or pen and then olten times
were plaved very high
Rarely was at presenption drug
tently the same price at even
H paces i the areit. One
Lug would be moreespensive man
store than wanuther. but eould have
ther deus less expenwve alo, tty
herelure dithieull to sey where the
best hans ate. ohdependson which
tn pen mever, Mbany
Hwdenty would be interested to
w that Hall's Piru an Stuyvesant
renetally
while M
yeher prices: than
k's Drugs and the
Woll Road
the Western Wwenue entrance to
vs xonerally. higher
an Halls
ng Differences
the Cnnversit
The mast striking dillerenees were
tound between two branchesel Rite
\d Drug stores. One store, in sub
urhan Ciuilderkand next to the Route
20 Mall. was among the lower-priced
stores. The other. at 51 North Pearl
NYPIRG Finds Prescription Drug Price Disparities
ty cents more for most drugs thanike
store in the suburbs
The drugs om the lis
most commonly prescribed: they
usually baught hecause somone «
sick. :
the ones
isp
Iso. an antidote Ww
drugs.
Pharmacy’s
It is listed or
chant
lets: it isatt this strenpt
this many tablets that 1
usually sold. All stores
chart their prices to
specific strength ant
Sixty"O0" capsules ot |
$4.20 at Atnspan (7
$7.95 at two
Albany Medical
Peter's Hey
New Sent
ital
uly stat
Vabramyen texpht
1s sold for S670
Wolf Road but St
Drug in Stuyvesant
Birth Con
Hirth os
and Ovvat
Aruginst
ww
Chan
SLAY: Wo
stuudents participa
Steve Nardi, Moss
Schoenberger May
Hernstem, Hinde ¢
Heyman, Jol
Sirs, Linda, Kathe
Hucadanw
SUNYA and RET I
cumpailed the surses
ts coordinating the ¢
Center, which any
Leon Van Dyke Battles Local Job Discrimination
by Richard Nordwind
Leon Van Dyke had moved to
Albany from Philadelphia and he
needed a job. The year was 1965.
Since he had experience as a
construction-laborer, he went to the
Laborers Union in Albany (Local
190) for work, but he was informed
that no job was available.
For two months straight Van
Dyke went down to Union head-
quarters, only to be told each day by
the union boss, “No work today.”
Soon Van Dyke realized that as @
black man he stood little chance of
getting work with a white Laborer's
Union, unless he took matters into
his own hands
So Van Dyke came home one day
alter being rejected lor work once
and fashioned a picket sign
trom homemade materials
the Union's div
hiring practices. the
he marched with
the sign in front of the Union ollices
in downtown Albany, by himselk a
fone man picket line. The lonely vga
struck responsive chords throughout
the city.
the story
“a new spapers picked up
id gradually the one n
protest turned into a wide scale
demonstration against Union dis
auion. Eventually the Union
Not Looking for Construction
Career
“1 never did see myscll as a lite
Jong construction worker.” Leon
Van Dyke says mow, recalling his
carly protest. ut deeply angered
over unfair Union practices, Van
Dyke vowed to stay with construc-
tion work until these practices were
eliminated. As opponents of Leon
Dyke hi
rs, he does not quit easil
Instead of launching a career as a
Laborer, Van Dyke's protest started
him on the path of social activism on
behalf of black people, an activism
that persists today. For nine yearshe
has picked at Alba
with the persistence of a mos-
Now
corolled in a Masters Program at
SUNY at Albany in Education for
the Disadvantaged Adult, Van Dyke
still searches for new ways to elevate
the economic and social status of
blacks
He does not look the part of
livist. Short, stocky
with an impish fuer. 3
laugh, Van Dyke has a boyish
charm, belying his 39 years. Inter
\iewed helore a journalism class at
SUNYA on Tuesday Feb, 26, by
water William Kennedy, Van Dyke
‘was thoughttul in all hisanswers, yet
quick to point out the humor and
tony of situations he has been in
volved in sinee coming to Albany
Activist Organization
Jn 19664 group of twenty to nwen-
ty five black activists in Atbany
banded together ina loosely knit
organization known ay the
Brothers. Among the
Brothers was Leon Van Dyke. From
onginal
Film to Show IF. Stone’s Career
The him. “LE Stone's Weekly.
feporter whe has become a phenomenon in American jo
7M PM Tuesday, Mareh 12 in Leet
mand other members of the unnsersity
shown att PM and
students nthe yournahym pro
ninaumity showing ID e's.
The @2-ammute dh
recently anNew York and Philadelphia, tells Stan
pettary, made by Jerry Bruck Jr
fon the work and thoughts of a loner
fe Center 2, tor
S story from fis work ont
learned over the past
's social con-
= 5 ‘
Leon Van Dyke addressing SUNYA journalism class,
1966 10 1970 the Brothers were in
volved in frequent protests over purpose of
Albany, involving both public and
private discrimination, Housing and
jobs lor blacks were the bisie goals tout year hi
wf the Brothers
The Brothers vociterauy protests, the
uncompromising positions, and oe
casionally violent
them the reputatio
the local med
Irightening connotation
Americans in these years of black assassination ol
they considered racism,
rhetoric
inner-city rioting, so the me
helped push the Brothers
center of Athany's attention, Hated
or loved, the Brothers were at least
hoown,
Toon Van Dyke believes that the
lavish media coverage of the “mite
tant Albany Brothers’
movement. at the same time i helped sm
ta destroy a, Ce
versed to establish the Brothers
within the Blick community as a
group that
power establishment
Albany police also began ty bike
notice of the Brothers, sand the eve
they watehed the Brothers with was
aided the
sinly the media
stand up to the white
Bur
no Blick Panther
wea, Van Dyke was sure that the
the Albany
in became “Stamping the group 0
Hilteen of the Brothers were
arrested Lor various ollenses in the
oy Of the group. 1
cluding Fean Van Dyke Sevenil ob
membety served prison
sentences. though Van Dyke did not
Police concern about the group
reached ity height in April 1967.
pees had broken out
Rochester, alter the
Marin Luther
Van Dyke believes Albany,
when disturt
lose by
Kang
Police were convinced that the
Brothers spreading
revalutianary ideas through Atbany
Fomenting facial roubles in the city
Hen without the Brothers the
Police, he sand, had reason enough t
ul The Albany ghetto wiv
ne the Suite
ahly worse than the Rachester
ne fe
wort in the
siiation which had erupted an
Bur an tact the Brothers
were acting to cual the heated ghetto:
the Streets ub thse tense days, according
Ws Van Dyke. Lhe Brothers could see
hy purpose mn the aimless Violence ut
A riot In this supercharged at
nosphere, Van Lyke claims, the
Huathers roamed the streets, speak
No riot took place in Albany in
‘April 1967, Three years later the
Brothers disbanded, and moved
their separate ways,
University Remains Rascist
‘Only one black student was
enrolled in the graduating class at
Albany State University in 1965.
Vhroughthe aid of the Equal Oppor-
tunity Program (E.0.P.), ad-
missionsand enrollment procedures
‘nave beer markedly liberalized, but
Leon Van Dyke argues that racism is:
alive and well at the University
Van Dyke knows that this racism
will not end without a fight, “When
the E,0.P. program first developed,
it only came out of a power struggle
with the school, It way not a matter
o1 officials looking around
e, wouldn't it be ni
andhave a program: tor und
puivileged Mids? The programs came
nut hecatise we Lought Lor it
Now Van Dyke is a graduate stue
dent at this school, Vine Dyke has
undertaken an independent study of
Ue methods ot Paulo Prvere, at
of sch
tod saying
Heavithan educator who way able to
reach illiterate peasants to read in 45,
diss Van Dyke hopes Pnere’s
Wwelimgues will be usetul an adult
education progiams in Albany
Ih as a measure of th we in
Flack activisan that former "Militant
Mrother” Vann Dyke. snow a student
at Albany Stite, ty this (ranstorima
ton at form of selling out?
Van Dyke reacts strongly against
ainy impheatinn that he has become
part al ihe white establishment, ot
that the black power movement ne
Hanger funetions ay at disseutiny
force, Lor San Dyke tas more a
atic ob black wetivists ted
then energy mnt ather ane
“Lauwation equals suvull
Van Dyke sad.
Se his: studies ay
protest
change Wisa tool
Wwe must use
Albany State aig as much a part ot
Fount Vath Divhe'y sacral tetas ey, ats
us lone protest against the Error
was, neatly at decade belute
Notice To Students
Ny studdennis (ancluding grad i
York Past. Ue Natu, theanugh the weekl
newsletter he built upto Ss Atbany
handles complunt the Ve
Ralph Nader
Street, in Jorystedd in serving oat the Un etsity
sistently charged between ten and fil-
thanys het,
: he w), the Brothers were the fy te gangs of truytrtted — bkiek
1 7U.ANM) crrculation, to lis semicretirement eal columnist al the
isi Dirk, Re ea Bt
The ASP will not publish on Tues. ee cai Ge aR car
3/12 due to mid-semesters.
COLONIAL QUAD BOARD | rena‘
Start living your dreams!
Easter ove weexens
Puerto Rico $189 plus 10%
Jamaica 219 plus $25
Acapulco 259 plus $35
Miami 239. Airfare only, $143.27
Bahamas 189 plus 10%
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spall Conmuitige to select out campus
Closest thingtwcgudicals the Mbany sonths, ageing them te be calm, Dor
While he felt other Washington reporters got i
Pohee had ever seen. Gueecthe then vstlany: the Brathers wee urstanding: Leachets:plears tow eat
with the sosernment, Stone worked alone to dig message’ hor Steve Get berm CO MG
Hiothery were well known an the bassted und harraysed by the pelice
ve S00
eel a bit puulty because he eny rea
pA
IO) A AT ST aaa |
“ FRIENDS”
presents
Our First Big Event!
March 14 C.C. Ballroom 8-1
Dance to Live and Taped Music.
Free Beer and Food
Bring Your Friends
Have a Ball.
$.50 w/t and $.75 w/o to enter but everything
is free once you're in.
1) ST STE)
PAGE FIVE
ter nou
much
PRESENTS
Alabaster
IN THE
CAMPUS CENTER
BALLROOM
ae fe MARCH 8
= Om - dan
Plus! These outstanding short subjects! ‘Planet” daily at
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Car Rental and Purchasin:
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e2eccccceee:
P ALBANY STU: FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1974
PAGE FOUR DENT PRESS FRIDAY, MARCI!
Featuring My Sweet Lacy
Sunshine-on My Shoulders
JOHN DENVER
Poems, Prayers & Promises
ACA LSP-4499
6.98 STEREO.
TAPES
Z, nen
take me to tomorrow
john deaver
fae
JOHN DENVER
Rhymes & Reasons
RCA L8?-4207
JOHN DENVER
Take Me To Tomorrow
RCA LS?-4278
Inciudes: Take Me Home Country A
‘Leaving.on a Jet Piane - Follow Me
JOHN DENVER
His Greatest Hits
JOHN DENVER
to watch the
JOHN
DENVER
TV SHOW
Monday night
March 11
Time 9 PM
T Ch 13
rs
‘ACowboy
Rocky Mountain Sut
Farewell Andromeda
RCA APL 1.0101
JOHN DENVER
Aacie
RCA LSP-4607
JOHN DENVER
Rocky Mountain High
RCA LSP-4731
Upstate Transit Need Cited
State Transportation Com-
missioner Raymond T. Schuler this
week admonished a U.S. Senate
Subcommittee on Transportation
not to overtook transit subsidy needs
of New York's Upstate cities.
Emphasizing that he fully en-
dorsed the position that the
Metropolitan New York Region
receive adequate transit operating
support, he said, “it is important that
J stress the need for similar help for
our Upstate cities, which have an
equal concern in this area.
“1 would ask that as you
deliberate. you remember that inad-
dition to a New York City, we also
have a Buffalo, a Rochester, a
acuse, a Binghamton, an Albany
and a Utiewand many smaller com-
all with great unmet transit
he said
lestifying before the Subcom-
mittee at a hi
City, Commissioner Schuler was
critical of separate federal funding
ring in New York
categories which make or an inflexi-
ble program,
severely limits.
State may receive for t
nd the formula which
federal aid one
nsit capital
improvements,
Although it has 40 per cent of the
nation’s passengers, New York State
would he limited to 119 per cent af
avattable
urban transportation
funds under an Administration-
Proposed Unified ‘Transportation
Assistance Act, he said, The current
Limit is 12.5 per cent, plus whatevera
State may obtain from a dis-
cretionary fund.
“The availabe amount falls far
short of meeting even our basic
needs: the Staten Island ferries, the
Buffalo and Rochester transit
systems go unfunded,” he said
Because of funding constraints,
there is something over $3.5 billion
in New York project Submissions
which the federal Urban Mass
Fransportation Administration has
not ueted upon, he added.
The Commissioner restated the
need Jor a “single, unified, Nexible
transportation fund to
tinuity of programs which afford the
mnaximum opportunities for innova-
tion and Nexibility.”
Pointing out that no metropolitan
ge. isa
thing apart Irom the rest of the
State.” he sual the “State must cun-
tinue is cole in eoordinat
sure con-
area, “or the most modest vi
Uibuting bunds among its re
tayure that programs and priorities
te halanced across the State
The Commissioner also urged the
Subcommittee to clarily legislation
Tack ol elanty
sited ligation, Olten wedon"t know
id precision has in
Lavine Sets New Welfare
Rental Payment Policy
Social
Abe Lavine announced this week a
new Statewide policy on rental
payments for welfare recipients
which fixes ceilings for these
payments in each of the State's 57
local distriets and in New York City
Services Commissioner
Etlective April 1, the new policy
bring maximum rental
allowances up to 1972 cost levels for
recipients of Aid to Families with
Dependent Children and Home
Rehel
The ceilings, based on a year-long
study of actual local district rental
payments, have been pegged at the
95th percentile, Commussios
Havin saw. his, he exphaned,
means that 98 percent of the present
wellare reerpictils were paying rents
At ue below these cetlings an 1972
‘Commissioner Lavine ported out
that the new policy will not affect the
aged. blind and disabled
benelieniies of Supplemental
Security Income (4Sh. which ws a
Federal proge
the Social Security Admumstiation
adimmistered by
Under SSE, beneticuries recieve it
single grant covering all needs
For the first time, unitary stan
duds tor the development of the
shefter allowances and the bavey on
stich local departments make rental
payments will he im elteet
throughout the Sate, Canmmiystotier
Lavine said.
However, local social services
commissioners will continue to ad-
minister shelter policywithin the
newly-established = maximum
allowancesio insure suitable housing
al competitive rents for welfare
recipients, Depending on local com-
munity housing conditions, most
rents will be less than the scheduled
maximums,
Ihis will bring New York State
‘ino compliance” with Federal
regulations, For the past two years,
HIEW has cited New York's shelter
poliey ay being in “noncompliance
because, HEWheld, it failed to meet
the requirements of uniformity.
Also, by Social Security law and
WEW
Tn almost hall of the local districts,
tis had not been dane
For a family of tour, the max:
num allowance lor rent Gin housing
unity where heat is not included) will
range trom $79 a month in Jellerson
and Hamilton Counties to $258
Sulluth County. In New York City,
4 Lanuly ol lour would receive a max
mum rental allowance of $164,
Where heat 1 not included; $190,
whete heat 1s included,
Hhewhere in the State
allowance comings tor ak
rental
nily of
toqt (without heat cluded) will be:
Mbany County, $153, Clinton
County. S88: Montag County, $156,
sau County, $245, Onondaga
what a law really means until after
we are taken to court.”
Commissioner Schuler also
transportation in the energy crisis.
From October’ to January, when
n flights dropped
28 per cent, load factors increased
Trom the 40-50 percent range to 60-
85 per cent
“Other intercity travelers have
rediscovered the train,” he said.
AMTRAK Empire Service had been
serving about 425,000 passengers a
smber 1973 patrona
up 63: per cent over the prior
December; the year’s ridership had
increased by 38 per cent over 1972,
During January, ridership on one
of the major intercity bus carri in
New York State was up 15 per cent;
other carriers reported five per cent
public transportation is available,
both within urbanized arcas and
between them, the public is moving.
to them. We should, therefore, be
making every effort to bolster the
Public transportation systems we
have,” the Commissioner suid.
acc R
aD RL
RR ORY
taansecc CoO ebes SURG RaMeRBsceceorecosenseetonstettt
County, $127; and Westchester
County, $232
The rental ceilings do not apply to
public housing.
The new shelter policy replaces
widely divergent local rental
procedures currently in effect. At
Present local departments set stan~
dards of maximum rental payments
and file these schedules with the
State, but did make exceptions up-
ward from these standards, In addi-
tion, the local formulas used lor lix=
ing maximum rental paymenty vary
from district to district, with some
based on family size and others on
mber ol rooms, availability of
and utilities
iter policy all
allowances are
determined on the basis of family
Exceptions above the ceilings
are also prohibited
Commissioner Lavine said the
nt system gatve the State no real
ol and fostered inequities
Under the new policy, all new
applicants tor public assistance Ad
Families with
o Dependent
Children and Home Rehefwould be
WOMEN IN CINEMA:
subject 10 the rental ceilings as ol the
April | date
Those persons presently receiving
assistance will be given up to a year
Iwo recertification eycles to acquire
rental accommodations within these
ceilings. The initial notive that the
ceiling ty in elfect will be given at the
time of the first recertification,
usually within atyix month period. A
inal notice will be issued at the se
cond recertification sis months later
At the end ol this period, the eething
New Nursing
Degrees Offered
Three new external degree ex-
aminations in nursing will be offered
for the first time May 9 and 10,
cording to an aimouncement from
the State Education Department.
The application filing deadline is
April |. Tests will be given at various
locations across New York State
The three nursing tests-
Dillerences in Nursing Care, Areas
1. HH and Ilcomplete the series of
seven written examinations which
eet the requirements of the nursing,
education component for the
associate in applied science in nur-
sing external degree, Development
0} the clinical performance examin:
tian will be complete by November,
according to Carrie B, Lenbur
coordingtor of the nursing program,
The external degree and ex-
aminations in nursing were
developed by committees of outstan-
ding ture educators, drawn from
Institutions ob higher tearning in
New York Suite. [here are ny prere
qiisites lor taking these e:
emalling an the
apsoenite in applied serene in nur=
sing program, Study guides and
hibhagraphiey tor all seven nursing
esaminations are available upon re=
aminations or
The extemal degree an nursing
satted mn 1971 Mare than twelve
Iundied candidates are presently
cenvotled in the progeam and the first
degrees will he awarded late thiy
will he imposed and rental
illowanees will he limited to these
levels, Local socu services distiiets
will provide smaynnum relocation
services und whatever help is
evessity to those Who will have te
seck housing — accommodations
within permitted exilings
Shelter payments (rent plus tuel
lun heating) wm 1972 represented
shout 40 pereent of all public
dissistatice payments, totaling some
S70K) million
Hus meludes rental
ansigttnee to the
wil, blind and disabled reerpients
progean) implemented on January 1
OF the $700 mallion, $500 muthon
way pan ay New York City
Position Available at}|Mohawk Campus
asa
Summer Sailing Instructor
Sailing progr
m is sponsored by Albany
Sailing Club and Student Association and
runs June through Augus'
Interested and qualified persons pick up
applications in the S.A. office.
Deadline April 1.
Part |, Week |
Junded by student association
TEL 489-8346
the international film group
I Lies and Secrets and Two Lives Destroyed...
4 Shirley Maclaine and Audrey Hepburn in
The Children’s hour
from the play by Lillian Hellman
Friday, March 8
7:15 and 9:45 LCI
Tororo
© Largest Selection
© Convenient Shoppin
9 Hours
© Probably the Best Price in Town
: Every Lp & Tape Guaranteed New
Expert Salespersons to Assist You
© Bank Americard & Master Charge Credit
Next Week:
STUYV :
ESANT PLAZA ny : Ingmar Bergman's PERSONA (friday)
BAN. FRIIGAM - $644 SAT 10-6 = SUNSET BLVD and
THE PROJECTIONIST (saturday)
ion
108 coaster
state university of new yorkat albany
as
FRIDAY. MARCH 8. 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRE! PAGE SEVEN
ead
=
‘No Shortage
of
Stanford Med School Says |
(Certain courses of study have built
in disadvantages that take getting
Take, for instance. the
“You can tell a first yeas med stu-
jent by his smell,” admitted a Stan-
ford med student in a recent inter-
view in the Stanford ails. The
student said he must shower twice a
day and lather himself with hand lo-
Brion to keep from recking of for-
HPmaldehyde. used 10 preserve the
fhuman cadavers on which be works
in his anatomy classes.
Medical students must perform
Wdisection on the supply of cadavers
Akept on hand at Stanford University
“They te far removed from life”
said one student, * they're dull. cold.
Ares.” Usually. one limb ata
unwrapped for dissection. bui
head 1s not unwrapped until late in
the course, i ever “The nead makes
human again,” said another stu-
dent
After the initial shock, students
adapt well to working with cadavers
Those who donned rubber gloves
and moved gingerly'duringaheir first
few weeks. now “just dive on in.” xs
@ one student put it
itt
ih
LE
yy
The Class
“When 1 used to throw pots. Pd
have little bits of clay underneath my
fingernails,” explained one women.
“Now that I'm dissecting “1 have =
bits of bodies under my nails. But it
doesn't othe me. It did the first
week.”
Another med student recalled. “hi
bothered me the first week when I
orange with
All the cadavers were persons who:
had donated therr bodies to the un
versity in the interests
According to anatomical techmcian
John Dolph. the number of persons
walling to give their bodies to science
since 1960 has gone up so fast that
now gits of this nature ure only
mile radius
The reason for this i
science
accepted withm a 30
of Stantord.
that Stanford has storage facilives
for only $0 bodies Stanford has
donors on file and
upand delivery f
4.000 potent
cadavers
cial burden of a funeral is avoided
, =
Coffee
House
TONIGHT!
VOM
Tanya
iti
Proudly Presents
ALBANY, (AP) - The isolated’
Village of Cattaraugus will lose its
‘entire economic base. Growth in the
Hudson Valley may stop. The state's
huge agricultural industry might be
undercut.
Scores of public officials. business
leaders and private citizens have
been streaming in to Albany this
week to protest the federal
government's plan to eliminate one-
third of the railroad trackage in New
York State as it consolidates the
freight bankrupt
railroads in 17 Northeastern and
Midwestern states
systems of
Almost of the witnesses
appearing at Interstate Commerce
Commission ICC hearings on the
plan have made such forecasts of
doom for their com-
munitis of business or for the state
economic
aya whole
Lawyer Torrance Brooks of Cat
village of 1,080 in
southwestern New York. testified
Wednesday that the abandonment
the Penn Central branch line
through Cattaraugus, as proposed in
the federal blueprint
paper-products firm of Cham-
pion International Corp. to move its
would force
plant elsewhere.
“If the village was to Jose this ser-
vices it will mean the loss of yobs for
‘ahout NS per cent of the people in the
entire ates.” Brooks said. The plant
E employs 229 workers
Dovens of industnal executives
testified that their companies would
or drastically reduce
Felix
production if their rail services were
eliminated.
‘A large number of the firms are
concentrated on the so-called “Ho-
jack" line running along the shore of
Lake Ontario from Oswego to
Niagara Falls. This route has been
designated “potentially excess” by
the federal Transportation Depart-
ment.
The new, federally financed Con-
solidated Railway Corp. authorized
by Congress in January, will com-
bine the operations of the Penn Cen-
tral and six other bankrupt carriers.
The Transportation Department
has identified about one quarter of
rack mileage as “poten-
tally excess” and has recommended
its abandonment as unprofitable,
In New York State, the trackage
amounts to 1,875 of the state’s total
5,595 miles ol rails. Most of the rou-
tes recommended for elimination are
hranch lines linking rural com
munities with main freight lines
Various witnesses, including. the
state transportation commissioner,
have accused the federal agency of
poor planning and of using invalid
criteria in determining the economic
‘advantages of most of the routes.
Several witnesses Wednesday ae-
cused the state's financially ailing
railroads of indirectly encouraging
I takeover and proposed
ahandonments. The “unprofi
lines were identified through the
of 1972 traffic volume statistics
Harlem Valley
line, tor example. running parallel to
the Connecticut and Massachusetts
the tede
Penn Central's
Poughke
that low 1972 traffic figures for the
line resulted “deliberate
attempt, in my judgement, to aban:
don the line by providing service so
below ordinary levels of human
decency that potential customers
turn from it in revulsion.”
Rolison insisted that the Hudson
Valle, area has an
critical” need for the line, particular
ly for passenger service.
Commissioner Robert D. Water
man of the Rochester-Genevee
Regional Transportation Authonts
said declining traffic rates on
lines stemmed from a program «i
planned
railroads
from a
“absolutely
obsolescence
The chemical tertilizer
throughout the state depends heay
on rail service to deliver ty ptentu
from plant to farm.
pointed out, and most produy
plants and retail outlets are lucated
on branch ral lines. The federal p
witness
poses a similar threat to some
Fetngeration and storage tach
the ICC hearing officer, Judge lacs
Leventhal, was told.
“It you cut off the flow «
and creeks, 1 is my content
the rivers will soon dry up.
Howard Hanee, an official ot Corer
co Corp, which he said
probably shut down tw
plants in central New York. at I
nibal and Manon
8 PM
Friday,
March 8
Ginger
aud The Loroux Cusenhle
Free Coffee and Donuts
Campus Center Assembly Hall
PAGE EIGHT
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1974
Exciting Lili Kraus
Mme. Lili Kraus will be soloist
with the Albany Symphony
Orchestra, Juluis Hegyi, conductor,
in two performances, Friday, March
15 at the Troy Music Halland Satur-
day, March [6th at the Palace
Theatre at 8:30 P.M
Born in Budapest, Lili Kraus
began the study of the piano at the
age of 6, and at 8 was enrolled at the
Royal Academy of Music, where her
teachers included Zoltan Kodlay
tok. AU I7 she received
jemy’s highest degree and
went on to study under Edward
Steurmann and Artur Schnabel at
the Vienna Conservatory of Music
At 20 she became a full-fledged
professor at the Vienna Academy
During the 1930's the Hungarian
pianist was one of the most popu
Fecitalists and symphony orchestra
waloists of England and continental
and toured annually to
japan, Australia, New
Furope
China
Zealand and South Africa as well, In
1940, beginning u world t
Dutch Fast Indies, Mme, Kraus was
taken prisoner by the Japanese in
Java and lor 3 harrowit
interned ina prison camp. On libera~
tion, she toured Australia and New
Zealand and, “lor her unrelenting ef
ur in the
forts in the aid of countries in mi
Zealand
catizenship. She returned 10 the in=
was granted New
ternational concert circuit in 1948,
Since then she has traveled almost
‘continuously, apperaing with all the
great orchestras and at all the great
music festivals of Europe, visiting
North and South America and retur-
ning each year to Japan, India, and
the Antipodes, She has appeared fre~
quently on television, and has lec-
tured und given master classes at
leading universities.
‘Among her most interesting ex-
periences have been a royal com-
mand performance at the wedding
banquet of the Shah of tran; a con-
cert in England's Canterbury
Cathedral; the first concert ever
given in the new city of Brasilia; and
a wit with Albert Schwe
Lambarene, where she played for
him shortly before he died
Also on the program will be the
Bach Brandenburg Concerto No, 2
sn F major in the original version for
Violin, ete, The
copy of the score and parts by
Pesnell shows very lew diff
Hlute, oboe, horn
ences
between the more common version
with trumpet, Che trumpet part
hears the title * Lromba o sere corne
that is
ther hunting-horn.”
da cavers “Trumpet on
Lickets tor these two superb con
certy are available by writing te the
Albany Symphony Orchestia. 19
Clinton Avenue, Albany, N.Y
12207 or by calline 465-4755
arts & leisure
‘Friday, March 8, 1974
Stray Dogs & Jamaicans
by Bob Riedinger
For the rock and roll crazies and
the generally hypertense there's
Stray Dog au Manticore records
(MC 66671), The catharticaction of
this group’s music should drain the
energy of anybody who's got it to get
‘id of
AL Roberts, Snuffy Walden and
LT. Sampson hit us with all the con-
stituents of “heavy” rock
hammerhead bass, synthesizer, wail-
ing runaway guitars and madman
drums. The lead vocals have that
‘rely noticeable echo which, par-
ticularly at higher pitches, runs rings
Around the auditory canal, while the
back-up socials approach the shrills
‘1 a Phosphorescent Leech and Ed
die,
Yet ther
songs.
ed by Stray Dog and Greg Lake of
Fimerson, Lake, and Palmer, stands
out if just for the insanity. of the
organ and choral opening, the in-
are a couple of notable
Tramp (How It Iy)." produc
strumental sections, and the eerie
lorebodin The song blasts
of when Snully Walden or Al
Roberts (the liner credits are not too
ts. in Big
ul on your seat belt
chorus
specilie) suddenly
Hopper style, "Pt
hay by!
A te
Greg Latke. came
also produced with
a surprise. with,
ity sot acoustic guitar, gentle electric
and wisttul mellotron. Ap.
parently the token “auiet™ sone of
guitar
Gower East Cinema presents an
Educational Experience:
ifs ave tg0 10 Hell.)
— PLUS SHORT FEATURE
the album, “A Letter” creates a
strange and distant mood, like that
of Mountain's “The Laird,” and also
reveals the influence of Lake's music,
But the five remaining songs are
disappointing, “Rocky Mountain
Suite (Bad Road) “pays lip service to
melodic chord progression and
doesn't yo. heyond that, “Crazy,”
“Chevrolet.” “Speak of the Devil”
(also produced with Greg Lake) and
“Slave” are on the less appealing side
of heavy tradition: overbearing and
over-boring. The lyrics. a common
obsticle and_ of annoyance for hard
rack bands, provide no relief. Expect
the likes of "Watkin’ down the road
vwith my guitar in my hand,” Sera
Dug may have dilficulty finding a
while, there’s a Hresh breeze
¢ West Indies nm the
form of a four man group ealled Tid
coming trom
bits. On their album Greenies Fron
Jamaica (tamnly Productions
EPC 2714, Hidbity
pretense at fy eal eomplexitya move
mades no
which ty especially appropriate and
we keeping with its simple, caretree
and easy, ROU. MUyiC
Ie seems that Tidbits mased the
boat trom Jamaica little overa year
go when reggae was causing a mild
stir in the United States (remember
“Stir It Up” and “I Can See Clearly
Now” from Johnny Nash, J. Geils”
“Give W To Me.” as well as a couple
of albums from The Wailers?) Thisis
just as well; the group has had ad~
ditional time to work with reggae
and the Jamaican beat, and as a
result, their music is. more in-
teresting, if not superior, to previous
groups’ ellorts at reggae-rock.
The emphasis that the other
groups placed on rhythm often
restricted development of melody
and harmony, Tidbits hay turned its
‘antention to these elements without
igglecting rhythm, The success of
{hew approsach ts particularly evic
dent on “Be My Good Day” and
Good Love ts Hard To Find
whose tucthe-point song lines ride
the jets of reggae beat with a great
degree of Muidity
Vhe lick ol publicity surrounding
the album and the bir from spec-
tacular packaging give the impres-
yoo that Hidbits isa group of Inends
who thought st night be tun to make
J rnusicab album together, Fhe songs
inGrectinys From damaica eapuuare
that spirit
Folk For The Folks
Hinday and Saturday nights,
March 8 & 9 the Fighth Step Catlee
14 Wallet St Mbany, will
Present two newcomers ter the Lath
J Dick Berman and Geott
Miiomeh they have been
singe ast sunt since Mi
wily detieemient tram
caching, that thes tase been lay my
¥ audience
Hien recent pet toabanuanices ab Had
sat the Lawn ¢
The Gave tn in Sew
hoki Pantani Now
uid Reyebud ant 7
eattechonse mt New York City
Most atthe material sas sitter
by Dick Berman wea stsle atten
rooted an traditional bed cant evan
TN rust tanga teary tye
asf Baths, em
Mant
Inuariensans sity
STM sur bole
Fri. & Sat.,
March 8 & 9
$.75 with State Quad Card
$1.25 without
Wednesday, March 20, The
Hash Step Cotlge Hause will be the
cene af ene naghtoonls unin a
Dh Sinp any growaps
Wshis aica = The
neat the tinest
eNeE foe abu ne tap
Patterns, (he
His udtias teeattvnl the mat tange ol
not the Hie ti, Bob
Halle. Diane beast, and Dan White,
. he many
Distrat audiomges belute
iuyltt avth thea anisaduntl
Hac seamisty they made many
pyearanves an thus sino aneludang
Hie Harner Betblchen Calleehiause
ind sclils, the Hole
Huns an Mnuanids sind hatke
6 Goshiehit Natlae, Hie Gaile
Hoe he the
Hoe House, Ute Kemwond Hoth
Hostal the ened New
\
nea volley
Lazhilh Step
Hh Cy and the Satataga Berton
nage Mts Center
Troe otis suogheappearance sill
he OPM,
18 YEARS AND
OVER PLEASE
All students and
faculty must
have SUNYA ID
8, 9:30, 11 Pm
LC 7
After each showing there will be a
brief discussion of film with experts.
ew/leisure/preview/leisure/preview)
Friday, March 8
Coffee House: The Class of '77 is spon-
soring Tanya, Felix, Ginger and the
Laroux Ensemble at 8:00 p.m. in the Cam-
pus Center Assembly Hall. Free coffee
and donuts’ will be served, Admission is
free for '77 class members and 25¢ for all
others.
Henways: features the music of "Sweat
Band.” The doors open at 8:00 p.m, Beer,
snacks, and soda will be sold. Admission
is only 75¢ so get in on the action and fun
tonight!
The Second'Annual Student Corps for
Rehabilitation Banquet: will begin at 4:55
p.m, in the Alden Dining Hall. All past.
present, and future rehibitionists are in-
vited.
Saturday, March 9
Fasching-Mardi Gras: The German Club
is sponsoring a Fasching celebration in
Brubacher Dining Hall at 8:00 p.m.
Tickets are on sale from the German
Department for $3.50 with tax and $5.00
without. Costumes are welcome so come
and enjoy a touch of Germany!
Free Music Store: The Performing Arts
Center presents “wm novak presents
music for machines” It is held in the
Laboratory Theatre and starts at 8:30 p.m.
The entertainment is free and no tickets
are necessary.
Sunday, March 10
Rafters Coffeehouse: presents traditional
singer and songwriter Bill Steele, of “Gar-
bage” fame. Coffee and donuts are served
starting at 8:00, and it's all free at the
Chapel House.
On Campus
TOWER EAST CINEMA
‘The Devil and Miss Jones IEG
Fri, and Sat.:8:00, 9:30, 11:00
L.C.7
ALBANY STATE CINEMA
Pete'n’ Tillie
Fri.: 7:30, 9:30 L.C. 18
TOWNE
The Sting
The Heartbreak Kid
Sat.: 7:30, 9:30 L.C.18
MADISON
RISING SMILE
Sat.. /:30, 10:00 L.C. 24 Sat.
7:35, 9:40
Adain’s Rib
Fri. 7:30, 10:00 L.C. 24
HELLMAN
Sabotage
Sun. 7:30, 10:00 L.C.24
Solo
Me: Apne
Let a Kumari
Er lish
doc mentary
Sa 7:00 L.C2
subtitles- gy
‘The Children's Hour
Fri: 7:15, 9:45
Off Campus
Yellow Submarine Fri: 7:15, 9:50
Fri: midnight Alden Sat.: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00
Sat.: midnight L.C.18 Sun.: 2:00, 4:15, 6:30, 8:50
Blazing Saddles
The .9 Steps Fri: 7:15, 9:20
and Sun.
Fri.: 7:25, 9:20
INL 4 ASSOC Sat, and Sun:
5:50, 7:45, 9:45
Fantastic Planet
Fri.: 6:10, 7:55, 9:50
Movie Timetable
DUTCH QUAD CINEMA
Raisin in the Sun
Sun.: 7:00, 9:15 L. C. 18 Fi
CENTER COLONIE
Serpico
and Sat.: 5:00, 7:30, 10:00}
Sun.: 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
CINE 1234
L.C.1
A Touch of Class
Fri. 7:10, 9:10
Sat.: 2:00, 7:10, 9:10
Sun.: 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10,
9:10
Walking Tall
Fri: 7:10, 9:35
Sat.: 1:30, 7:10, 9:35
Sun.: 2:15, 4:45, 7:10, 9:35
Paper Chase
Fri: 7:20, 9:30
Sat.: 1:30 7:20, 9:30
Sun.: 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:20,
9:30
that the puzzle appears.
must appear on your solution,
solutions have been chosen.
to win.
Contest Rules
Puzzle solutions must be submitted to the Albany Student
IPress office (CC334) by Monday, 3pm following the Friday
IName, address, phone number and social security number
[puzzle solutions will be drawn at random until three correct
Each of the three winners will be entitled to a $10 gift cer
tificate to the campus bookstore.
claimes within two weeks of notification.
Merchandise must be
INo one working on or for the Albany Student Press is eligible
Only one solution per person accepted.
|
Taward Julius,
ACROSS
1 Ties
7 Beetle
13 Lawmen: Sp
Concise
Popeye's del teacy
City tn Penn-
sylvanta var.
Alder tree: Scot. Renovate
Hoboes 62 Squatters
evident
ses High on drugs
Tire impress tons
Veronics —
Native minerals
Town in Iceland
Untt of menory aki
201
Type of Jazz
Orderly progression _ singing
Mezzanine Small: prefix
— Desert
Hockey play
Heat units (abbr.)
Section of a
Flowers: Fr
Fenale horse
Stouan Indian play
‘The Day of the Dolphin
Fri.: 7:05, 9:10
Sat.: 2:00, 7:05, 9:10
Sun.: 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:05,
9:10
2:15, 4:30,
2:00, 3:55, FOX COLONIE
The Exorcist
Fri, and Sat. 1:00, 3:15, 5:30,
7:45, 9:55, 12:00
and Sun.: 2:15, 4:10, Sun.: 1:00, 3 30, 7:
6:05, 8:05, 9:55 oe
9:55
WASHINGTON PARK
‘Truffout's The Wild Child!
Sat.: 8:30 $1.25
Parish Hall, Lancasterand
Lark St.
Toll road (abbr. )
1
Written tn verse
Football cheer
One who makes
Blood defictency:
Lily Pons, e.9.
Took potshots at
rargun CW7S-|
Chess piece
Consecrates
Loose-leaf
notebooks
Hymns
Laxative
Hal luctnogen
Refugee
French river
Star in Pegasus
Latin epic
Aggregate
Isolated peat
Tampered with
Ham actor
Indigenous ones
Interpreter
Without weapons
Fixes
Russ{an nane(poss.
One who chooses
Ex-Pirate
To the inside of
Father: Fr:
— History
58 Swindle
Greek letter
Solution to
Previous Puzzle
CINEMA 7
Cinema 7
alec da
‘The Way We Were
Fri. 7:30, 9:40
Sat.: 2:00, 7:30, 9:40
Sun.: 2:00, 7:30, 9:40
iG
cE
a
IM.
nN
N
a
a
A
T
rc
E
ik
Beweeele)
Bridge
NORTH
S xx
H 98x
D AQt0x
Cc AQi0x
EAST
S AKxxxx
H Ax
D Kxxx
c3
SOUTH
S xx
H KQs10xx
D x
C Kxxx
Contract: 4H dbl. by S
Op. 1d.: SQ
After East opens the bidding
with 1 spade, South plays in 4
hearts doubled by East. The
opening lead of the spade
Queen is overtaken by East's
King, and the trey of clubs is
shot back, taken by North's
Ten. Ten tricks, anyone?
East wouldn't be leading
into North's club holding
without some very good
reason. The reason is good,
and obvious. East's idea is that
he's going to club you to death
and then take four tricks
before you can even get your
guns loaded If you decide to
pull trumps, Bast will play his
Ace, and return a low spade to
his partner's Juck. A club
return by West will now leave
you with splinters where it
hurts most — 50 points for
THEY.
by Henry Jacobson
The solution to your
problemis simple. Since East ¥
opened the bidding and also ¥
raised his stick in defiance ¥
when he doubled, it is ¥
reasonably safe to assume he
is the proud owner of the King
of clubs, as well as the Ace of
hearts, of course. According-
ly, after winning the club at
ick two, the Ace of diamonds
played followed by the §
Queen of diamonds, upon
which you discard your last
spade when East produces the J
club King. Now even if East
stands on his head he cannot
put partner into the lead for
that devastating club lead.
‘The result this time __ 290
points for WE
ONLY THE BEGINNING
This week's qume is a fine
ame with an
unclear opening. The
Sicilian Defense is one of the
most popular defenses in the
modern chess world, and
there are a countless number
of variations in this opening.
They range from very
positional games to highly
explosive tactical games,
and are usually the latter
This yume branches off from
the book lines at blacks 12th
move. although either white
or black could have deviated
before this into many other
variations of this opening.
example of
S. Ludenheim — Lee Battes
Previous Puzzle
Contest Winners
Mary Jean Mezzina
Robert Nerlinge
Laurie Rosenthal
Chess
by Jack Uppal
White moves
10. PXNGH) Q-Kach
11, B-Ka(b) QxB
12. Q-Q3
Black moves
B-N2(c)
N-B3(d) QxHP(e)
N-KAUT) Q-15,
N/a4-No B-K2
N-HS Q-N5ch
p-BS QxNP
0-0 Q-R6
N/B3-N5?? BxN
NxB Q-Bach
Kit QxN
BBS N-B3
Q-Q6 R-QB1
24. BxN BxB
25. resigns
Notes- a) Other possibilities
are 10. N-B3 or better 10. Q-
K2. For example: 10. Q-K2
KN-Q2; 11, 0-0-0 B-N2 (or B
NB: 12. N-K4 QxP; 13.N-B3 Q.
12; 14.2-QR3B-BL: 15.P-KN4l
B-N2; 16.B-N2 Q-B5; 17.QxQ
PxQ; 18,N-i65! with slightad:
vantage for white) 12.Q-N4
Q-N3 (NxP: 13.NxKP_PXN:
14.QxPch B-K2; 15.BxPeh
PxB 16.NxP winning, Or 12.
QxP; 13.BxP! PxB: 14.KR-
KL, or 12. ....N-QB3; 13.NxKP
PxN: 14.QxPeh N-K2;15,.BxP!
Px13: 16.NxP Q-B3: 17.N-Q6ch
K-Q1; 18, NxBeh QxN; 19.Rx:
Neh! Qxit: 20.2-Q1 with ad
vantage to white) 13, BxP!?
(or B-KB4) PxB: 14.N/4xNP
NxP; 15.Q-K14 QN-B3_ with
advantage to balck. b) Also
possible are Q-K2 or N-K4
both leading either to either
drawn positions or positions
with slight advantage for
black. ¢) The bouk line is Q
HSch 13.P-N3_ QxBP; 14.2
KB1 Q-K4; 15.0-0-0 B-B4;
16.NxKp! Q-K6ch; 17.1-Q2!
QxQ: 18.N-B7ch K-Q1:19.Rx-
Qch KxN: 20.RxPeh with an
attack for white, d) This
probably is not best 13, B-B3
is probably better 6.4. BxB.
14.Qx1 R-R2: 15.N-B6. e)Not
QxNP?? VLR-KNI Q-R6
15.PxP winning. {) White is
wasting too much time try.
ing to maneuver his knights
to qet an attack on the KB
file. 14.0-0-O may be
Kemember that there is &
tournament at RPI this
weekend. Spectators are cer-
tainly welcome (no charge),
and players may still enter
the tournament up to 9:15
tomorrow morning at the
RPI Union, Next Saturday
(March 16) Kenneth Rogoff
will be giving a
simultaneous exhibition at
the Colonie Shopping
Center, Spectators are also
welcome to this event.
on
640
DRAMATIC READINGS
“The House of Cypress Gardens”
8-10 PM
ELECTRONIC MUSIC
10 - 12 PM
CLASSICAL MUSIC
12 PM --
THE NEW SUNDAY
NITE OF GOLD
Whatever type of music
you like you’ll find it on
WSUA 640
PA 2A ALBANY STUDENT PRESS RCH 8, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 3A
—====____
by Steve Klein
“The task of reviewing erotic
cinema can be an enjoyable ex-
perience and it also may prove to be
a waste of time, money and celluloid.
The filin The Devil In Miss Jones
provides little of the former and
quite a bit of the latter. Thenotorie~
ty of the movie intrigued me to say
the least, and 1 really was looking
forward to the experience. | must
say | was a little disappionted.
to find the time for bananas, apples
grapes, two. guys at the same time,
lesbian and even asnake. She wasa
very busiigirl, indeed. _
The Devil in Miss Jones is really
episodes in sexual absurdity. The
only scene resembling any form of
tasteful or sensual eroticism was the
love scene of the two lesbians. The
dialogue was too full of those four
letter representations of sexual inter-
course, in all its Kama Sutric
WAIT A MINETE! You
Tie Sart
IATY! DISGRACEFUL|
Nf Some fans of pornographic| film manifestations, and human genitals.
His will say it's not the plot but what In addition, the music drove me fl
they've got that is the standard by crazy. The monotony and thetempo --
i which one evaluatestthe necessity of | was not appropos for pogo sticking, ith another sinner, this one a male
who is only concemed with the ex-
istence of an imaginary fly, and the
only thing she wants to do is get off
on his dangling conversational piece.
He just isn’t interested, so all she is
left with are her desires and an
ability 10 get what she wants, Life
‘must mean more than that and since
we all know there ain't no sex after
death Miss Jones should have been
properly advised when she wasalive.
My advice to you, whatever i
worth, is that if you are interested in
seeing the Devil In Miss
Jones it will be shown on the
much less.a film score. The film was
produced by Pierre Productions ona
low budget and the result is not sur-
prising: Pornographic film is rare in
that it lacks necessary innovations to
make it worthwhile and interesting.
these films. I really can't agree. The
Devil In Miss Jones, starting
Georgina\ Spelvin, is about a virgin
who decides to take her own life, But
the trick is that she is given the
chance to partake in all the ‘little dir-
ty’. things she missed out onin life.
Since she has been condemned
anyway, for committing suicide, she
decides to indulge in sex and wants
her time to be spent consumed and
possessed by lust before she makes
i her trip to the inferno. Breaking her
in (no pun intended) to her evil ways
The Devil In Miss Jones is certainly
no exception. It was a little far out
but the viewing of the film soon
became tedious. It is safe to say that
many prospective moviegocrs may
be repulsed by the means of Ms.
Spelvin's sexual expressionism, yet
the most repulsive thing about the
He
Ih: is arable Harry Reems,
yi As eons i Tf vue i film was the way the suicide scene campus this weekend, ‘The film is
‘ roe-Throat dial'e was handled. She died much too provocative! and people that have
\ Deep Throat and countless number
th Gothen, porno gems you may —Wwickly after she slit her wrists and shown the film in Albany previously
Pp we worst of all the director didn't even have been arrested. | hope that the
recognize Harry, depending on how
much you've seen. ‘Through his in-
struction, Miss Jones becomes quite
the artist Masters and Johnson
never dreamedtheir research might
tcad to some of the things she gets
into, Besides the sexual experiences
she has with Harry she also manages
bother to have the bathtub cleaned
tor later scenes. Very Messy, munity in « moral attempt to main
Parting does not become sweet (in students’ innocence when it
sorrow. Hell isn’t the blazing infer- comes to what we as individuals
rho, seemed sucha pity, What wasa Wank (0 It should be
hice girl like Miss Jones doing in a shown in any event. The Devil ln
place like that anyway? She is Mis iJones is being brought to you
relegated to an existence in a cell by thedirty old chapsat Lower East
campus is exempt from the com-
~
‘A new slant on Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors—next week.
SATURDAY, MARCH 9 ONLY
2 RECORD SET SALE
tad
CHOOSE
It's Too Late to Stop Now
| Van Morrison
}List $11.98 SALE $6.79
Todd
Todd Rundgren
List $9.98 SALE $5.79
qa) Reunion in Central Park
$1.99
‘List $9.98 SALE $5.79
Living in the Past (Import)
Jethro Tull
List $9.98 SALE $3.99
Fe Made in Japan (import)
! Deep Purple
List $9.98 SALE $3.99
Last minute arrival:
War (Live Album) List $9.98 SALE $5.79
Jomes |
EVERYDAY!
THIS SATURDAY ONLY —
Our $2.99 Round Robin Sale will be
increased from 24 to 32 LP’s to celebrate
our FIRST BIRTHDAY!
84 Central Ave 434-0085
Twenty Mall Guilderland 456-8187
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Nuclear Plants Raising New Questions
This is a three part series on the
issue of the safety of nuclear power
plants and citizen and government
efforts to regulate their use. Part 1
deals with the controversial
questions surrounding power plant
safety and the possibility ofa nuclear
plant accident. Part Il covers the ac~
tions of citizens, environmentalists
and scientists toward a nuclear
power plant moratorium. Part Il
covers the attitude of government
and business toward the plants and
the operational problems some
plants have encountered to date
Part 1
bby Kay Jostin
(CPS) From a few little — heeded
warnings by scientists over the past
two decades, the case for a
moratorium on construction of
nuclear power plants has become it
major concern to man Americans
who are secking state and national
legislative action through grassroots
organizations, petition campaign,
initiatives, referendums and the
courts
Why the concern especially when
the US is experiencing a shortage of
fossil fuels? There are 36 nuclear
power plants in operation in the US
today, producing about four percent
the Atomic
which
fol the nation’s power.
Energy Commission (AEC)
has the unique position of both
promoting and regulating nuclear
plants, has proposedthe construction
of at least 1000 plants by the end of
the century. to produce 30 per cent of
the aution’s power
ts. environ
¢ brought to
jous safely problems with
citizens
Tight
nuclear power plants that they say
have been covered up by the AEC
‘One area of concern has been the
ever-present possibility of a major
huclear phant accident resulting
errors m desgn ve maintenance ot at
plant. fam a natural disasteracts of
sosabotage, or Lom war
The 1987 Br
sponsored by the ALC
tenth of the long. tived
Irom a 200
shaven report
teported that
AL one
inactive
poisons
megawatt phint were released it
Would result in deaths of from 3000
to 45,000. people dy
wre would die at slow death front
induced Jeukemnt or
radiatian
cancer, nol ty mention the genet
damage that would be passed on to
generttions. A nuclear agendent
Would also cause rade active
comtanmnation of agniculture and
Wutet resources, neceysilate even
ton af land areas Lor sears and
create massive unemployment and
business clostites, the report sad. In
May of 197¥ the acting secretary of
the VEC continmed the conclusions,
i the Brookhaven study
the ALC
chances of such a catastrophic event
but
reported that the
were one in one bilhen
some nuclear engineers have ey
WELCOME THE NEW _
SEASON-LET NATURE
FILL YOUR HOME
Plonters
eArrangers
Bonsai PEARL GRANT RICHMAN’S
fs “STUYVESANT PLAZA
timated the chances to be one in one
thousand a yea ach (000
megawatt power plant provides
enough radioactivity every year to
equal 10,000 Hiroshima atomic
bombs, according to the Committee
for Nuclear Responsibility, This in-
cludes such poisons as strontium
90, iodine 131 and plutonium 239.
In normal operation of a nuclear
plant, the reactor core contains rods
of uranium which undergo a f
process that creates heat
Nows throughout the reactor core
both to cool the core and transfer
the heat from the core to an electric
generator, The nuclear core must be
keptcovered by water or it will rapid-
ly overheat and melt into a large
radigactive mass that would be im-
possible to cool or contain, accor
ding to opponents of the power
plant,
failure in the functioning of the
water cooling system theoretically
could be controlled by a plant's
emergency core cooling system
(ECCS), a back hat
would supply cooling water to the
up device
reactor core, However, opponents
all systems could fail at
ausing the reactor to melt very
quichly and radioactive gases to es:
cape. Noone, including the AEG, is
sure ECCS's are ailproof because
they hive only been tested with
In 1970 they
Luiled to work in six OUL Of SiN tests,
fear th
once
theoretical models.
Ol equal concern to opponents of
nuclear power plants has been the
dang storage and
transportation of tadivaetive
ust be keptout of
the environment for ay long its 100.-
000 years.
power plants and. storage sites have
ady occurred
ssive leaky are not
inherent un
materials, whic
Radiowctive leaks trom
and. opponents
have said n
possible, Radioactive material in
the plants, storage sites, aren rou
nail grounds
few une highly
Vulnerable to sahotage, attack of
thelt by enemies or terrorists, ay well
as highway aecilents, according to,
ppanents
Continued epenttion of nuclear
Got Spring
Fever?
We've got the
cure
The
Outside
Lun
234 WASHINGTON AVE.
Power plants has posed another stations along the Thruway will be
the construction of opening on Sundays again, and the
Because of a
dilemma
breeder reactors.
icted shortage of usanium
235, power plants would haveto rely
on plutonium as a substitute fuel,
which the breeder reactor could
because it makes more fuel
the reactor
prei
produc
than it uses.
would produce even more deadly
However,
Thruway Gas j
Always on Sunday
ALBANY, (AP) - Ga several lawmakets immediately
denouhced it publicly. All of the
denouncers were from the Albany
area or able to ride regular airline
flights to their jobs.
The Thruway decision to open on
Sundays apparently came as part of
‘an expanding state policy to end the
unday closings, rather than as a
‘way to let the legislators off the hook
on the Sunday supplies program,
legislature has seized upon that fact
to cancel its own special program of
‘Sunday gas supplies to its members.
The state Thruway Authority an-
nounced Wednesday that beginning
this weekend its gas stations will
open at noon on Sundays, ending
three months of compliance with the
radioactive wastes than regular ational voluntary policy of Sunday “Thruway Chairman R. Burdell
nuclear power plants, including Giosings Bixby said the Sunday closings
plutonium — 239, which has a half Ay the same time, Gov. Malcolm policy “has caused hardship and in-
life of 24,000 y
rs und is the most
cinogenic substance known, ie~
cording to Friends of the Earth
convenience to thousands of
travelers with legitimate reasons to
travel on Sunday.” He said it also
had hurt the state's recreation in-
Wilson issued an executive order
reducing from 100 miles to 47 miles
the distance motorists must travelon
researcher Jeffrey Knight the Thruway before buying gas on
Environmentalists have als0 jhe “wrong” day under the odd-even dustry
claimed nuclear power plantsare the vigning program, He said the Thruway “might” have
source of thermal or heat pollution, 4 jew hours later, Assembly to close gasoline stations at other
when plants discharge water INEY Sneaker Perry Duryea and Senate — hours. such ay carly in the morning,
used back into the rivers and Myiority Leader Warren Anderson 10 alte any drain on supplies
streams, Although the waters re j..ued a joint statement declaring the triggered by the Sunday sales.
not radioactive they can raise HE ney fhruway policies had “ob- The stations will continue to close
plant issue has been stated asa mont]
one. As
soring a moratorium petition in He
Jinow put it: “Does
of human
produce radivactive en
irtesersibly compromised the future
‘of all generations to come?”
But overall, the nucle
yerature of the streams, nd have
a drastic ellect on aquatic lite.
ne prolessor who is spon
ny generations
have the moral
49 p.m, Saturday, but will reopen at
Sunday supplies program, noun each Sunday. They had been
The legislature's program, which — staying closed until midnight Sun-
to light on Tuesday, — day
allowed lawmakers who needed Currently, 28. 01 the 3] concession
more than one tank of gis'to return stations along. the $$9-mile
tw Albany to obtain filbups at State superhighway are open. The stations
Department of Fransportation at Guilderlind, Ramapo and
highway garages en route Ardsley are closed lar kick of
This program received wide» supplies. Some of the stations are
spread news media coverage, and —hhowting sales to. maximum ot $2
viated” the need lor the legislature's
power
ht to
which
Rjo
WESTERN BULLSHIT
COMEDY CLASSIC
SADDLES
brought to you by Warner bros-the pegple
that gave you The Vazz Singer”
RIDIN’ ROPIN’
WRANGLIN’
and all that
pulled together by
MEL BROOKS
jn his new
y VAN
HSTARTS FRIDAY, MARCH 8TH
CINEMA
Balltown Rd.
Schenectady
MOHAWK MALL
MADISON STAR TWIN
THEATRE CINEMA
1030 Madison Ave. Mid-City Shop Contor
Free Parking-Albeny Menands
FRIDAY, MARC
1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NINE
Quote of the Day
“believe he's better off ... to ket it all hang out. He (President Nixon] may
not think so.”
Senator Jacob Javits (R.-W.Y.) when asked about the surrender
of documents and tapes to the House Judiciary Committee
They've all been indicted. Mitchell, Haldeman, Erlichmann, Stans, Colson, the core
of the former White House power elite. They've been hit with charges of conspiracy, ly-
ing before a grand jury, perjury] obstruction of justice—all the unsavory white collar
crimes |that used to go unnoticed, But not now. The courts have got each of those once,
highlyrespectedmen on criminal charges. All except one. Richard Nixon has evaded the
lawful persuit of justice for too long. His aides are almost inevitably going to go tojail,
while, in all probability the top crook is still occupying the office of the President of the
United States.
Who's kidding whom? Nixon has got “cover-up” written all over his political face, if
not downright complicity. The judicial system which |has been working pretty ad-
irably of late, must not now lose the persistance necessary to the just conslusion of
this sordid aff
Parliamentary Blues: |
Governments of the world, beware! The lessons that have been thrust before us dur-
ing the past week are a sobering reminder that the brutal facts of economics are far
stronger than the tenuous ones of politics. Britain has seen its Conservative govern-
ment led by Mr. Heath thrown out by beleaguered voters. Crippled for weeks by a
paralyzing nation-wide coal miners strike, that small nation has had to de with a three-
day work week, little if any electricity and gasoline, and an economy strained to its
limits.
The voters have shown their disgust with the present situation in theircountry. They
have shown that they are simply dissatisfied with the way the Heath government has
been running things. The bitter antagonism between Heath and the miners has elevated
Harold Wilson, who was deposed in 1970, to the ranks of nostalgic legend.
Wilson will be working witha minority government, a situation that is difficult in the
best of times, but almost hopeless in the critical times such as England laces now. The
record will show that Wilson is a far more able leader in times of political
brinksmanship, when the balance of a policy hangs on the majority of one vote, than he
is when given almost absolute authority over the House of Commons, Britain could
not have picked a better time to return Wilson to power; perhaps he will be able to
salvage the damage done before him.
Parliamentary Blues: II
Prime Minister Golda Meir has finally succeededinachievingthe gou! that has eluded
her since the December elections the formation of a new government. Faced with much
the same problem as Great Britain, namely the inability to coordinate disparate fac-
tions and parties into a workable coalition, Mrs. Meir was, at one point, moved to
threaten the country withno less than her resignation and at another, to resign herself to
the thought of a Cabinet without Defense Minister Moshe Dayan. Dayan had come
under severe criticism for the punishment the Israeli forces took during the October
Yom Kippur War.
With the announcement that the traditional allies of the Labor Alignment: the In-
dependent Liberals and the National Religious Parties will join in Mrs, Meir's coalition
government, Israelis now assured of operation under a majority government, which,
until the hour belore the legal deadline was an uncertainty and virtual impossibility. In
the coming intense negotiations with the Egyptians and the Syrians, a unified govern-
ment ist vital pre-requisite il Israc! isto at least be able to talk with a unified bargaining
hand with her Arab adversaries. The kind of political dealing and haggling that went
on around-the-clock until the coalition was finally announced, showed the world that
the effects of the Yom Kippur War on Israel’s political arena was catastrophic.
With the Genevaytalks (if they ever surface) set 10 lalk realpolitik over Israel's future
and the future of the Middle East in general, the new government would be will-advised
to work together until the aftermath of the war is settled.
SEE
Epirow in Cone Ann E Bonne
_ASISTANT TO. 1H EDITOR anny Bis
We 1
News onion Davin Lawnt
‘Assuciart News Eorrons NaNey ALWACOIL Dave Hl giaatncnay
Gy koni0x GUN som Nestite
Eptomiat Pact koran Nascy Muted
Anty Boiron Lasut Davia}
Kivis Dantes
Hic Daystont
Hise Macau]
Kis Ant ine
Linus Mont
Tinua Desmenso]
Las Zecnsiaasd
on Danten Cian
Asworane Tecunic at Eniions Mari Mitek, MICHAEL RUSENIKAL
Business MANAGK
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A Young View of Washington
What The U S Needs:
_esssncnescovesestansecccccccetsammscecsssccceiis By Ron Hendrem;
A Good 6* Letter
these difficulties, were not
UPS. in spite o
doing hetter job than the Post Ottice. and
a lower cost, they would not be growing
ig money
There are other examples
panies which have |
er their own bills cheaper and more ellee
tively than the Post Olfice bums which have
switched to private third-clasy mail delivering
Washington - On the eve of a new increase
in postal rates to 10 cents per ounce for first
class, the prestigious American Enterprise In-
stitute hay published a study supporting a
breakup of the government's mail delivery
mnonopoly, The message: Let's give private
enterprise a crack at the job
Utility com.
ned they
companies are saving stamp money while en-
w idea, but sone Jy INE better sence
I iy not, of course,
which hay reverved renewed attention in the
past decade as postal rates have soared (0 all:
time highs and the quality of service, least 0
the minds of some has steadily deteriorated.
Part ol the problem, to be sure, is bad public
ations «an the part of the Post Office. The for first-class
prohibited by law Ol course, the Post Officers
opposed te such a move, partly because they
like
ROVCHHMENE- AU aperstions, 1 ne shape to
The success of UPS and ity sister firms
ty a strong case fur giving private enter
pst Ollice
chance to compete with the
I delivery business, now
most recent example making the rounds 1
ned to a post
solves a lady who compl
employee about the rough tre
fragile box of cookies wus receiving The wate
cleth prmpily had the lady arrested and
bomb
everybody's later chagrin
know thet most
compete with private businesses The Bast OF
Hoe argues that private Lum would “skin the
that they would debser
wil (he Post Othee’s real money
id Lauethe
valled an the squad, inuch
eam th the top
turstchas
taker) aud yture second:, thud:
class math, whieh ate 4
Hut poor public relations does not en 6 lysing propositions
for the yovernment and require taxpayer sub
y that at as costing more
J wdiey
away the hard
yell an ad
nail
gunn
and more to maul letters that take long.
Tonger to ative the tact es that the gant fusion tothe charge nat when you
postal corporabon and organvation which — 4 HEME clAyy better
doesn't hase te pay tines, an whose loses BUSY 1 pay Lor the dehsery al newspapers
junk” 4
mnagasinics, and bulk: rate
are subsidized by Congress, one which
iy beck and call is
signs ol being unable to dee
stop
platation of taxpayers a ever there wi
management minds
showing: increas
the job which it was commissioned to pertor
AL thesame)iann
Parcel Sersice-which has 1 pay taxes like the
ed But even watt all thes evidence. wall the
bly Hot, When
nent give up
he privately owned Un
monopoly be broken up! Prot
wats the Last 6
teat a us, which must sustain tty owe losses, Jou saw gover
wich must compete torfity busi
wath other fies but abo against the vistual
xovernment monopoly over mail delivery
continues to grow and prosper{(600 million
packages dilivered this year). Obviwusly, chi
ess not only controls? My guess 1s, 11 wasn't recently And
the Post Office will be no exception, not at
feast until we Wake up one murmng and lind
Out that the cost of a stamp is 90 lugh, a's
pet to use the phone
letters:
eco-LOGIC-ally
speaking
To the Editor:
It is ludicrous to blame the environmen-
talists for the present energy crisis. As an en-
vironmentalist 1 would like to refute what 1
consider misconceptions on the part of
Douglas LeCompte in his column, “The En-
vironmentalists and the Energy Crisis.” The
present crisis (speeded, however it might be,
by certain oil companies) has been predicted
since the 1960's by environmentalists and
research groups like the Club of Rome. The
energy crisis is a product of decades of
wasteful abuse of the world’s resources by a
greedy materialistic Western Civilization,
(Our military complex alone, consumes 30
million gallons of fuel every day ZNS.) The
environmentalists have long been advocates of
measures like mass transportation, that would
conserve aur resources,
glomerates and auto n
to blame for keeping the gavoline-gurzling in-
ge. And
ing wind
It is the gil ¢
nulacturers who are
combustion engine in every gat
it is the oil companies who are te:
tall profits inthe
vironmentalists aren't in it tor the money
vent crisis. The
They're on the Wrong side of the power struc
ture
Hicel the Doug's byte mystake os ar assum:
ing the environinentalists to he a buneh of
fanatics or ay he puts at
Prmises, cnamoured by the lea ot
western man umitating the noble savages tnd
Man,
18 4 part ol hy
nv of our age
senounerng the materia
likes toa
rer th
ial environment, 0
apart froma Man
hay too long built metal, plastic. and glass
barrier agama the natural world, the ques
abusing his
jon is whether alter
esourees and muddying is a
Man can continue to live mhisdurty playpen
1 think if you take a long, hard look at the
environment 1, you will find that
the "Doomsday crowd” and"
hut a useless [ringe of the movement. Most
environmentaisty are clear-headed. and. set
long-range plans. 1 think that in any city or
state yau will find them ta be the first to wd
ning. Wt happened right
fats the Albany State
and watet, if
vocate regional pl
ad other concerned groups
fought to save the Pine Bush
haphavard destruction
govern
order
ning y
ugly urban suburban eyewres,
have chaos. Without regional plan
pment, and
have haphazard deve
The cunser
Ye approwch ay to tesist government con
Well, then pay S0¢ or
trol at baz business
more tot a gallon of yrs Peed the neh oil eons
pany stockholder and pull your belty an
anther detect
Doug's complaint ayant anto-salety
regulate 4 silly Fad lake torsask tn
nase forehead a neta
Nise, the 50 sme
he would prety
ottin if he pot ante a ctash
both hives and As regards ctmisstont
control, the Japanese took fall the tine 4
pa syst
American auto manulacturers put only a hall
hearted cHlort into the thing. with predict
results, There ss actually a problem with the
large cary which Doug onuts. Large cats use
more gasoline but they are alo saler than the
blame the environmen.
¢ the antes w
small ones. But di
talists tor this The
ing you ty ride the bu
ft ay tue that
Hut that as
temembet?
are chawtc
Huvironmental Policy
have enough teeth tot Phe atl companies
steel companies, paper tally ane then lob
bytsts and Inends in Congress are consistently
undermining at The 1972 bederal Ws
Pollution Control Act (sponsored by Senator
Muskie) was a It exempted the
1.F-A. from control ol permits Section 102
(2c) of the Act which requires Eavironmental
pustake
Impact Statements.)
What this country desperately needs is
environmental planning. En-
ntal laws ought to be coordinated in a
national
vont
coherent framework. ‘Environmentalists carciesaly fail to realize itsdemandto thecom-
the incoming freshman class of that year, an 4
excerpt’ under the. Welfare
should. not be’ blamed for holding up\the
ravishing of the earth by thirsty oil companies.
Our fossil fuel supply is limited and ought to
be consetved. Exploration ought to go on in.
wind, solar, and auclear energy, but under
rigid governmental control so that thereare no
disastrous accidents. Drilling should have
taught us that. In his article, Douglas
LeCompte made it sound ridiculous that we
should be concerned with the fate of Alaskan
Caribou. There was a time when you would
have been ridiculed for criticizing the shooting
of passenger pigeons. And there was a time
when there were deer in Manhattan.
Dan Frinta
Off And Running
To the Editor:
It should be fairly obvious to all (even to,
those of you who have no idea as to what kind
of games are being played by the people in-
volved in your Student Association) that peo-
ple are starting to indirectly tell you that they
may be running for S.A. offices next year. For
those of you who cannot sce all of the subtle
hints, PI try and spell a few of them out for
I there is the newly formed
mipus. This is being started
I rue, his intentions are ad-
First ot
political party on
by David Coyne.
inmrable He (and 1 say he because the party
anid Mi Coyne are one and the same) wants us
ware of what is happen
1 our Student Associa:
k David Coyne lor
students to be more
ing on campus and
fon We should even th
hy open invitation to all of us Wo attend the
nizatwonal meetings.
Two points aust be ntised concerning this
party” Furst ot all, why we lized in
\itatiots sent out 10 specific members already
mvolsed in our government? Iwill become
apparent, H4eel,
hunel ol crap. AIL Waldo os highlight the fact
Iready Avavily involved in
vote in
era
pers
A hiy political party 1 a
that the people
S.A. have ng minds of their own
blocks. and yave little thought and con
tion to the people they represent (lor example
A they cared about our wishes, why the hell
wasn't Lie Lonschein kicked out of office for
Ins auctions on the day the Miami tickets went
cn sale?) S.A as itis now. in run by a few elite
people whom 1 shall refer to from now on asx
the “S.A, Clique”.
Also, why is Mr. Coyne forming this (which
he says is to help educate the “people” as to the
workings of S.A.) 0 late in the year. I he was
truly mterested in educating us, he would have
Jormed this party a long time ago, Think
about it
Another td-bit coincidentally
authored by Mi Coyne, isthe ineltsion 1m last
seck’s ASP acenunty ay to what happened ata
J Council meeting, The atrticke
vars wastten with such eare and detatl | thought
Mr Coyne would tell uy who blew bis nose
»
recent Cent
Hist at the meeting His getting rather hs
the sear to shaw people that he carey enough
Co anton Chem ot Ceutral Council activities
There must be ulterior motives
Fyall- not deny that fam writing this fetter
tue reayony other than having my. name
pried sn the ASP ot to tell my friends have 1
fool shout mducetness, Lam wating, alse, to
whulacy lor Student Associa
Hom Mresident next year 1 wan't play any
yates with you ane Lyall tell you exsetly, at
My phat
n which 1 shall
all tames whit my antenvons are
lorm and the concepts hy
uperate are sunple. Honesty and na more Bull
Shit! It only Central Counc would stop
playang their
eit mectings woulda’ kast us
Wi For 2am the mormng, maybe Student
Assaciation would de something lor the
students, and maybe a hellatatot more people
would be satisted am not at all
gt now, Hl the majority of yuu are
whidate that this
political party” puts up Meas 1
ae not satistied, then lets get the
Satished, then vote tor
ist nie
spect
© and honest work
Wayne Robert Malpe
Whose
Social Welfare?
to the Editor
Tus year, the Undergraduate Social
Wellare Department has demonstrated its in-
(val palling by
abilities and bureaucratic priorities in dealing wi
with its students. Not only did the department
id would yet down wo &
munity the juinior student body
who declared themselves majors in the field
dast fall, but at a later date desperately
altempted to encourage these same: willing
“students to change their major. The accom-
modation of majors to the senior year prac-
ticum (equivalent (o the student-teaching area
of the Education Department) has created the
tremendous upheaval. As the department
failed in discouraging their juniors, they have
been deciding on specific admission standards
to be implemented this year for the upcoming
junior class. What these standards will be are
yet to be revealed.
The six times 1 wished to approach Dr.
Rooney, Director of the Undergraduate
Program, he was never in his office at his
specified office hours nor was his secretary.
Those sophomores who were lucky enough to
finally contact him were given vague answers
as to possible testing procedures, index re~
quirements, interviews and the like, When is
the department going to talk in concrete terms
instead of these hazy generalities while so
many sophomores who have been preparing
for the 66 credit requirements since freshman
year await these impending decisions?
Furthermore, does the Social Welfare
department realistically think that they can get
away with such pursuits? According to the
1972-73 catalog s i
are yeasty uations
rom The Frog's Mouth
S23
reads, “Requirements forad a
other programs in the University.”“Agthe re-
quirements for‘other departments, are, juiier..
credit standing only, then this in tam, is the
only basis for admission for the future social
welfare major. In addition, the 1973-74
catalog also stipulated that the School of
Social Welfare along with the Schools of
Business, Public Affairs and College of Arts
It specifically states
that only those registered in the Teacher
Education Program must be accepted on
other applicableterms to the School of Educa~
tion, Evidently, the School of Social Welfare
is going to have to take careful consideration
in their upcoming final decision or they might
be faced with an inrefutable law suit for breach
of contract to the class of "76.
However. the department continues to
“take its sweet time” while so many
sophomores anxiously await these important
results which will so dramatically affect their
futures. In conclusion, it appears grossly
onic that so many upper eschelon ad-
ministrators Who are so untiir, unfeeling and
UNCOMparsionate to their student body can
have the audacity to call themselves Social
Workers!
Environmentalists:
hy Tom Moyer
We are all environmentalists. We may fall
to different categories, but we are all en-
help it, Phere isn't a
live in this earthly en-
1 not lo bealfected
ironment ty atll-
E
FE vironmentalists. We can
one of as who ds
At at who can ela
suomment. Our e
ehevmpaysinye
1 Uhingy up a en
ries.
Perhaps it would ek
siommentalists were divided into eatey
Hasweally, there ‘Anmehiar Ene
smonmentalist” 4 superficial and
who has
muted Knowledge of environmental mat
Olten, hes mnayputally concerned with eer
if they happen to be altecting himat the
momen
Brome kind of pmiy-wierdo ecology nat” o4
Zan “elite, blase. over reactive soctalintic
He is often described by athers ay
nanicr ob the American way and other assorted
hings that made they county:
Armchairs Environment un.
wirhusble solutions to the enen’y crisis ke a
plan 1 proceed om January HM nght to
March canceling February becuuse i ay the
uldest month of the year, Alter continued
# Environmentalist
ffarrassment, the Armel
Bolten veverts w an “Underarm knviron
alist” who thinks very hittle, speaksabout tess,
Zand docs nothing, His redeeming qualities? He
ean be vended aveless 0 lille O00 ex
Bocuse
AL the other end of the spectrum is the
“Overarmed Environmentalist” whew over
Zantormed. over-qualiued. oversketled, over
Brerbose, never overworked, and usuitlly
jovcrwhichns his audience t9 the point where
at thei vit
ment 1s daoied They then proceed to wreck
they feaselstctually belies ang
41 Zhavow on thei snternal and external envitons
iment ina last ditch attempt to live tke no
omortow while grabbing bor all the gusto they
OL course, this results only in a speeding
iBup the very late ust described to them, Thus
[Hake Overurmed Lnyuonmentaist, a true
HHewotist at heart, can once again proclaim that
en was right about his doomsday predictions
oosing to ignore the fact that he hus
FRIDAY MARCH 8, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Klutzes, Deities, or Pagans?
nly “cried woll” once again, His redeeming
quality? (1 properly guided by innovating,
ded administrators (il any ean be
out the degredation) he
level-t
found lutkinj
put fis sewentitic skills to work ina tunnel vie
tw be over
sian fashion, pausing aiily
optimistic and stopping &
discovers that “all syster
At this potit the Overarmed Enyironmen-
alist reverts to it category specilically ereuted
tor hin the
(OF (d), HONE Ol the ghove) Environmens
calist
ech. hay lust his marbles. and ty permanently
Font to tunel
There ate probably an infinite number of
categories and subdivisions, inefuding the
Altruistic, Crusader, Quasi, and Latent Ene
swonmentaisty ay well ay the Phony. Gavern~ BB
ment, and Industrial L ns ironmentattists and
the Silser-t aning-tn-fvery-Cloud, the Ones
trick and the Aesthetic Lay tonmentilist, The
list ty seetungly endless
Perhaps the most sought alter and the mest
vavironmentalist ts the
likely non-evtstent
‘pial Lnvivonmentalist He iy ne
tn harmony with himgell and nature, knows
ctiougl about science, economies, politics, ele.
to make intelligent, rational decisions, while
still in contact with reality and the needs of a
society deeply entrenched 1n_its (sometimes) fz
nted Hor
ely ways. He would not easily bed
Always, Sosneimer, Or Never f
une wher ty no longer playing with a lull
sarily Ee
= =e
Soa
caisily deterred. He would bean Ombudsman,
1 detender of the people and the natural ine fe
\ionmient, adeity in bisownday, full of spit BE
candor, and wadom
He thus ay too much to expect, we could shu
the advances ot and technology)
(remembering of course that science and
(eehnology are not, in themselves, evil, even
thoush the aves to wlict man someticnes puts
them is) und tevert {being primitive
members of the last class ol en-]
nmentalists, the “Ancient Environmen+
who worshipped the soil, the rocks,
nd the sun instead of carelessly and}
columns
‘Sea ELITETOTRONNONNISESSESESRSOSEETEEEE SS EERE TERE SEES ETT
Back To The Drawing Board
‘As was mentioned in Tuesday's ASP, there |
has been an enormous erosion of the faculty's
power at SUNYA. Their original Faculty
Senate, which they obviously had control
over, has evolved into the present-day Univer-
sity Senate, which has student, administration
and non-teaching professional representation
competing with theirs. The new governance
proposal, which received a virtually un-
animous rejection by the faculty in the Senate
‘on Monday, would have made the presence of
students permanent (to this day the Senate
retains the option of allowing students to par-
ticipate in mectings,’ typically renewed each
yeur)and institute a7 service staff representa
tion,
Both of these points were repeatedly focus
ed upon in the debate concerning the gover-
ce proposal, with repeated references to
forementioned loss in faculty power and
to the shift of emphasis in the Senate away
il toward those con-
cerning the University Community
In fact, however, the new proposal will
slightly increase the faculty's representation to
just under 50%, Concerning the quality of the
issues brought before the Senate, one must
lize that itis vital to have an advisory body
that represents the groups affected by the wide
spectrum of decisions made by the Ad-
‘by Mitchel Zoler
ministration.) Perhaps not all of ‘these
decisions will involve each group represented,
but to construct multiple Senates, each con-
cerned with only one aspect of University af-
s. would incur extraordinary amounts of
redundancy, waste the time of those in-
dividuals occupied with more than one of
these bodies and force premature conclusions
to be made concerning who would be affected
by each particular issue. Many faculty
members seem to feel that the alternative-the
heterogeneous Senate we presently have -
prevents important accademic matters from
being served. Yet, as of now, there is no huge
backlog on the Agenda, with all iss
academic and otherwise, being routinely di
with as soon as they arise, Perhaps the Senate
is dealing with matters other than those that
are purely academic, but it is decidedly not at
the expense of this so highly regarded
category
While quibbling over petty arguments such
ay these, the Senate convinced itsell that the
posal way worthless,
rejection. When the
Luculty vote on it later this semester, the Fe
yntire govern:
leading to its tou
cannon be expected to come out diltere
Instead of offering the constructive changes
that might have left the laculty with a
workable doc
diymissed, leaving th
present deplorable state
. Hour years of work were
ulty stranded in thetr
Gremlin Blage
“
SOIT ATCT
TM QUITE WILLING TO COOPERATE, TO THE
EXTENT | CONSIDER CONEISTENT WITH
MY RESPONSIBILITY
FOR KEEPING THE
PRESIDENT OUT OF JAIL!
Come to the
PIGEY 50° PREEVEW-GLL
sponsored by “Friends”
Thursday, March 14
CC Ballroom 8:00 pm
featuring
AL HH
New Victimless Crimes
conssamsccmsemmnscccssessby Douglas LeComtesssiiits
‘Our esteemed legislators have, for the last
couple of centuries, been kind enough to
bestow upon us poor, wayward citizens the
dubious benefits of a torrent of laws and
regulations which are designed to keep our
minds and bodies clean in the noblest Puritan
traditions. ‘Thus we have been guided in our
cating, drinking, reading and sleeping habits
by those morally superior beings who make
laws against what drugs we consume, which
movies we watch, on what games we may
wager and with whom we may sleep.
The rationale behind such laws is usually
that the State in all its beneficent wisdom must
protect John Q. Public from himself, orelse he
will surely drag his mind and body to the edge
of the abyss of Hell, the implication, of course,
being that the public is too ignorant or foolish
to make its own decisions and so they must be
made for him, The recent arguments in favor
of the State’s various prohibitions also stress
the notion that not only the individual but
“society” must be protected from various
{urms of entertainment and modes of behavior
which the prevailing mood happens to con-
demn, thus we had the prohibition of
whiskey filty years ago and the prohibition of
inarnjuanat to
Statistics on marijuana ean be used to argue
one way oF the other on whether it does oF
does not harm the body, mind and spitit; there
ty enough data to support both sides very well
The point is immaterial, he right of each in
dividual 10 do as he se pleases to his own per=
son iy the efux of the matter
the term
applied to those actions which are against the
jctimless crimes” iy usually
law beewuse the individual (oF consenting in
dividuals) is committing an act which may
hari his or her own physical, moral ar mental
health
prostitution, adultery and other form al sex
Therelore gambling, marijuana
trom the basic (guy-0n-
top-ol-yirl) marital type of intercourse are Lor
bidden in most states M
absurd in light of today's morality-as well as
y of the laws are so.
tunentorceable-that they are virtually ignored
by the law entureers, though, since many
legislators are too timid to remove them from
the books, the laws are still good for purposes
Of extortion, bribery and just plain reveng
st someone you don’t like. One bw
the books it seems to sty there ne
matter how absurd subsequent enlightenment
makes appear. The laws in Colonie, tor im
stance, which lorbid this writer to purchase
fresh meat an Sunday are a cayein pout, Will
some supernatural being punish me tor not
ering chureh by having me eboke a ny
Tres ground hamburger meat i Lam so sintul
as to buy it this Sunday from my local Star
Supermarket?
With most of the victimless crimes it has
been at least conceivable that the effects could
spread to other people. An argument against
pornography. for instance, has been that
someone who has just seen a dirty flick may
leave the theater and commit a rape. Of
course, in actuality, some of the recent porno
flicks are so nauseating that there is greater
danger that the viewer may leave the theater
and join a convent. Nevertheless, there was
some thought that the danger would not be
limited to the perpetrator of the “crime.” An
acid head, as another example, might think he
was a train and go out in the street and run
‘over somebody
The legislators, however, have been out
there devising laws which extend the concept
of protecting a citizen from himself 10 new
ulits of absurdity. Rumorshave it that kuw-
nlawlul to
n wet already against
¢ considering making it
Of course only a nitwit would drive any dis
tance without it seatbelt given the available we
eadent injury statistics. Also, only a dingbat
would go. sloshing through snow. drifty
Without wearing boots or brave a blizzard
without wearing a hat, but, should it kaw be
assed? Haw does not wearing a sexthelt
cn others? Have there been documented
cases where a seuthelt-leys person hay hurled
through a car window, penetrated another
car's windshield and landed on some hapless
driver resulting in a fatal case of whiplash? |
think not!
his idea that the purpose af government 1s
to protect people trom their awn Lollies has
just gotten totally aut of hand. OL course itis
Stupid not to wear seat belts, but ry not tor
the slate traopers to aet ay agenty Lor a pater=
nalistic government and make us erin
endangering ourselves and no one else
whole sitlety and consumer lobby is trying t0
enlarge the scope of Big Brother's activities to
include protecting uy [rom the consequences
of ourowndecisions, Wethuyalready haveon
the howks a spate of “salety™ kaws which con:
stitute the newest additions te the fist af vie-
timbess ermes promulgated by the Pariin
crowd of earlier days. Such kaws ive
Washington new excuses te pry inte our hives
nnd also serve to merease the eymeNsMm most
peuple alwady have towards the government
and kw enlorcery, Surely alter Watergate, the
energy crisis, the hugh inflation and other ©
Juples of excess kovernment, Hf seemy more
true than evet that that goverment sy best
whick governs least
A New Dimension inCinema Luxury
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D
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$.50 with tax
$.75 without
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LATIN,
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WALKING
8th WEEK!
Daily at 7:10,9:35
HELD O
Nightly at
1 5th WEEK!
GEORGE C. SCOTT
MIKE NICHOLS
‘THE DAY DOLPHIN
Q
CINE 1-2:3-4
[T ROCKER-RECLINER CHAIRS o Tel. 459-8300 |
NONTHWAY MALL BE COLONIE
majors & minors
The Pre-Law Society is forming a com
mittee 10 view legislation with the Copitel
District Tricl Lawyers Association. Hf you aro
interested coll Steve {7-5200) or Rob (7
4301) for further informotion
The Pre-Law Society will be visitng
Albany law School Moo! (Practical) Court
some evening in mid-March. Wf you ore in
terested in coming with us coll Rand (2
8197)
clubs ‘a meetings
190600500000000000050000
Albony Evangelical Christions meet
fomght and every Friday wn CC 315 at 7.00
[pm Come and joun wath usm the tellowstup
of the Lerd Jews Clust For h
motion, coll 7 7929
Phoenix on
8 pm in the CC
ny 1 Spring Pre-Cana senes
socoooccocoseccocooceses:
official notice
University College Students |
date tor
1974 teem, ¥
15 Adenemert wall
Attention Community Service
Students, 290 «h 4 Mondiy
AMasels th 7 OOpors ros «
Becky ot 472 42.
funds Reto
washing machin
‘ore made at check coshing ond in dining
hols.
Community Service Students: Evolve
thon sessions are going on now. Make sure
you attend one between now and April 4th
11 you want to poss the course
Applications for April 20 DAT ond May 4
MCAT ore available wn University College
Deadlines for Applicahon, DAT - March 25
MCAT Apel 12
101 gupe? Bring # to Grievance Com:
mittee Office Hovis w CC 30B are Mon 3
4 Toes 1011, 3:90-430, Wed. 10:11.2 4
330-4 90, Frr 13. Come in or fll
the gnpe box inthe lobby
Problems with the University tibrory
Ive sobtatted baw an lobby oF brought
Hota, on Week 24 Campus
interested folk
Student Evaluation of Teachers ond,
sn JULIUS HEGY! CONDUCTOR
Friday, March 15
Troy Music Hall at 8:30
Saturdoy, March 16
Palace Theatre at 8:30
LILI KRAUS, Pianist
BACH Brandenburg Concerto 2
MOZART Pione Concerto K-49
KOECHLN les Bonde
RAVE Ropsodie fspognele
Students $2
‘Causes Complete data. All you need iso
sponsor. Contact Dave 457-5238 or
4034.
We are in the process of ing
volunteers for the Cerebral Palsy Treat-
ment and Educational Facility. | am
ovoilable to tolk with those concerned
Tuesdoys thry Thursdays 8:30 a.m. - 10:00
‘am, | con be reached of 489-8326.
Rolph W. Tyler, Director Emeritus of the
Center for Advanced Study in th Behovieral
Sciences in Stanford, California, will dis
cussTeaching English to Disadvantage
Secondary Schoo! Students in tecture
Center 18, State University of New York ot
Albany, on Monday, March 11, 1974 ot
7:45 PM, Dr, Tyler's oppearance is spon
sored by the University’s School of Educa
tion. The public cordially invited and there
is no admission Charge
Anyone who hos © question oF wants 0¢
‘ion from the University Senate please con
toet Mitch Kassoff Senator Irom Dutch
Quad ot Box 66. Thank you
We desperately need a fow Streetwise
Albonians 10 help
what they really ane Call Sty 457 5225
pose the slumlords for
ore all be an Israeli Info
in lobby hom 9
ryone atevested ov working te
Operations Committee during Telethon
tll Betl AH) AV17 'Newder volunteers for
Telethon 74
der tsCoalition's sabbath se
370.00 o.m, (with uncho follow) Allservices
held in the Chapel House behind the gym,
Would you like to go to church this Sun-
doy? A bus leaves Dutch Quad tor
jeview Community Church, on
Washington Avenue Extension, at 10:40.0m
every Sunday morning. We get back in
time for brunch, Fer more information, call
7.7928
The Students for Improvements of
Programs for the Handicapped (S.1.H.)
will meet on Sunday, Morch 10, at 6:00 in
the State Quad Flagroom, People with
vvally handicaps especially invited
Ateeting tonight for4 plus 2ond friends
01 6:45 in the bosement of Oneida to prac:
tice "Borathy in the Lond of Albony” ond 0
swipene for Telethon, Must attend
The long @waited Second Annual Stu:
dent Comps for Rehibition Banquet wil be
hold today The banque! will begin ot 4 $5
PAA in the Allen Orrvng Holl The public sn
d
Senior Week Committee meenng tor oll
Seimors ontevsted sn Welpmg plan ond
jamze achotey for yenor week
Waxduenday nite March 13 at 7:30PM CC
70 yay ae siterested. but unable to
amendcoll Downes at 7.4240
The ASP n accephng copy fol Kick
the-ASP to nar asue
120 4 pin Ploase by
Drang to
W mateyns 10 CC $26
doaner nih
deery Monday 6-90 jim CC 4/0at
Chustion Scuence Organization Meeting,
Freshman! bsg
—_ 7
SUNDAY
MARCH 10
j; 7:30 PM in CC315
een ieeniiantienioniianiamiemomn:
Weld bow
presents
— An Award Winning Radio Drama Series —
HOUSE ON CYPRESS CANYON”
Starring Robert Taylor
ON SUNDAY March 10 at 7PM
Keep Watch for oth
Radio, Drama, Prose and Poetry readings
heard every Sunday evening
ers in this continuing series of dramatic programs.
as well as classical music can be
Classical Dramatic Production Program.
between the hours of 6 and 8 PM on the
funded by student association
“Any type of blood is rare if needed
and not there.” Help the sisters of Psi
‘Gam in this worthy cause. Cor tothe
Blood Drive, Tuesday - March 12 from 9-4
Compus Center Ballroom.”
Peace Project wanls 10 mee! you. Come
visit us $$ 375 Office hrs. Mondoy 11-2,
Tuetday 12:2, Wed, 12-2, Thurs, 9:30-
11:30, We have o weekly mig. Thursdoys
3:90 88 375.
what to do
The Free music store, in ossociation with
the music for machines society, presents
Win. Novak, SUNYA electronic music com
poser, tonight ot 8:30 pim. in the PAC tab
theatre, Free.
The BYRDS with special quest star Roger
McGuinn Friday eight right alter the
Loskerball game on WSUA 640 AM(about
840 pm)
Everyone vied to Soiree Musicale
trench wines, food and song, Sot. March
Yih, 9.00 pm Dutch Quad Tower
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PAGE TWELVE
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FRIDAY. MARCH 8, 1974 FRIDAY, MARCIIB, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRES! PAGK THIRTEE
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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1974
by Kenneth Arduino twice all year. Once was against
Cortland right after intercession,
when the Danes were admittedly
out of shape. In fact, despite
numerous injuries during the
SUNYACS, Cortland could
only tie the Danes.
The other loss came to power-
ful C. W. Post in a home meet.
Post is one of the State's very
best and losing to them is no dis-
grace at all
Other than those two loses, the
es did a fine job, taking on
some very good teams and set-
ting them down quickly. This
year teams like Rochester, who
has beaten the Danes in the past,
could not hold their own on the
mat
Having to play second fiddle
to the basketball team, the
Albany wrestling team went out
and had the best record in its
history, despite a few nagging in-
juries. The~ injuries piled up
near theend, which affected their
performance at the end of the
season and in tournament com-
petition.
This is not a gloomy report but
an encouraging one, as Albany 1);
wrestling has finally come of age
No longer is it just something on
the sports page. but it isa very
sucessful team, that can hold its
own against anyone, Let's look
at the record. Albany lost only
AMIA
With the recent beautitul weather having graced our previously dis-
ma} shies, thoughts are turning to soltball and other spring sports.
Here are the big dates tor A.M.LA. softball:
League I-Windmill pitch, 9 man, Meeting: Tuesday, March 19, in
CC 315 at 3:15 pam
315. at 3:15 p.m
League HI-Bloop (Slow) pitch, 10 players (coed teams welcome),
Meet Mareh 21, CO M15, at 3:15 p.m
Rosters and S10 bond money due at meetings. No exceptions per-
mitted
ye Uhursday
Free Vhrow Contest
March 17
6 for detanls
2 man teamy-Sunday
See D. Fikin in CC
Watch for Details on lollowing
+ Wrestling tournament individual sand team
Spring soccer league
| Goll tournament
Tennis
Track and Field Meet
Swimming Meet
Judo
This Sunday, March 10, in the
the Albany State Judo.
Tourney
4 Woman's competition and a
main
ihe Trophies
Karate demonstration
seit te be i Ane ull he awarded lor first, second,
aval Jude Lournament. Com sag turd place in all divisions
Petition will begin at Hf o'clock
in the morning with Junior com yap yeary tournament Saw a
Jamly large turnout, and this
years looky lo be even better
The white belt division will students trom Albany
lead and then be State competing there will also
followed by the brown belts and be
the black belts Hhere willalso be eluby Some of these clubs come
The Pre-Med Pre-Dent
Society Presents a Trip to
New York City
The Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society will visit
N.Y.U. Medical & Dental Center on Pri-
day, March 15. We will tour the research
facilities and the Med. & Dental schools.
The bus leaves Albany at 7:00 am and will
Vickets
petition,
Beside
things of!
members of several local
return at approximately 7:00 pm
we $4.00 with tax card
$5.00 without
ae
For purchase of tickets and more information,
come to Bio 248 this Saturday (March 9) at 1:00
pm.
Junded by student association
League II-Regular pitch. 10 man, Meeting: Wednesday. March 20 CC
The men who did the job for
the Danes deserve much praise.
Senior co-captain Larry Mims
finished off a 39-5-1 career by
posting a 13-1 mark and getting
All-American honors for his fifth
place finish in the
NCAA‘s.Larry, who has been
consistently one of the best, also
finished second in both the
SUNYAC’ and the State Chami-
pionship. Too bad he is gone
after this year as he will be ex-
tremely, hard to replace.
Probably the most popular
wrestler, at least by crowd reac-
tion, was heavey weight Rudy
Vido. He was the last wrestler to
Jose a match, losing in the State
championships. He became a
two-time SUNYAC champion
and was sent to the Nationals.
Rudy’s one problem during the
year was finding opponents, as
many teams conceded the match
to Rudy. When he did find an
opponent though he was
devastating
The newcomer who added the
most to this team was transfer
Don Mion. Mion at 190 pounds,
along with Rudy gave Aibany a
devastating I-2 punch, Mion un-
fortunately was hampered with
injuries at the end of theseason.
In only his second season,
sophmore Walt Katz was looked
upon to provide that early lead
and more times than not, he
came through, Albany always
m to get the quick points as
Kats was undeteated until the
SUNYAC
Here
ay far ws Mass, and New York
City, Thus there will be quite a
bit of talent present
The public ty invited to attend
and tckets wil be available at
the gym, The cost is $1.00 with
taycard and $2.00 without. Also
AL anyone iy interested in par
Heipating they may contact Mr
Robert hount 272.9255.
before each performance.
Wrestlers Prospects Look Bright for Future
Tom Horn, a 158 pounder,
also was a big key as he helped
carry the Danes early. The home
fans will probably remember him
for his action packed matches
and his last second victories.
Co-captain Doug Bauer, was
bothered by injuries, throughout
the season, and because of them,
was inconsistent. Yet even
though he was having a hard
time, he was able to contribute to
the team by saving points for not
being pinned.|f he can stay clear
of injuries, he can help pick up
the slack next year.
Rick Lawrence and Frank
Herman 177 pounds had one of
those years as both were
hampered by injuries, yet at the
beginning of the season, one of
them was always healthy
enlough to go out there and con-
tribute
Newcomer Jeff Golden forced
into the limelight, due to injuries
started off slow but the rest of the
team was performing well
enough and it was not too
noticeable. Once he got his feet
wet though, he held his own
against anyone and picked up his
share of points.
Ethan Grossman was a
mainstay early picking up quitea
few victories and pins. Because
of a shoulder injury and a few
bad breaks Ethan lost some of
his effectiveness. He should
rebound next year to early
season form.
Vic Gagliardi and Brian
Jubrey (126 pounds) had the
same problems Golden had. in-
experience. Yet as the season
continued, they also contributed
points. They are the future of
this team,
Harness Racing
The SUNYA Harness Racing Club held its first meeting of the year
this past Wednesday night. 1om Johnson, Director of Publicity at
Saratoga R:
way was the guest speaker.
discussing among other
things the possibility of a Harness Racing course here at SUNY A and
a possible Albany State Harness Driving Championship
The club’s plans for this semester include films, speakers. trips to
Green Mountain, Yonkers, and Saratoga and a tour ol the stables
and barns at Sarttoga
The nest meeting will feature three films on the sport and is
scheduled lor [hursday, March 14 at 8:30 PM in one of the lecture
centers
through posters. the Lower Tribune.
For further inlormauon contact wither Ed Link
media
4713 of day Rosenberg at 355,
SUTT
ALL DRINKS HALF PRICE
Sundays:
GIANT STEERBURGER_$.50
ER’S
MILL & MINING CO
Restaurant and Bar
The location of the film showings will be communicated
J other forms of
mpus
at 457
8400,
1200 WESTERN AVZ
(Directly Across From
SuNYA)
announces its specials:
Thursdays: HAPPY HOURS
7:30 - 9:30
Fridays: GOURMET'S DELIGHT
A DOZEN CLAMS OR SHRIMP COCKTAIL $1.00 5 - 7
GOURMAND’S DELIGHT,
4-8PM
Funded through Vhewire Council by Student Asyucration
Tickets are now on sale for State University Theatre’s production af
William Shakespeare's
eeeQomedy of Errorgee
Performances are
Wed - Sat, March 13 - 16 at 8:30 pm
and Sun, March 17 at 2:30 pm
the Main Stage of the Performing Arts Center.
Tickets are $1/tax, $2/1D, $3/general.
The PAC Box Office is open Monday - Friday 11 - 4 and an hour
For further information call 457-8606.
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
ee
Bey
e& sports
Cagers to Face Tough Opposition in Tourney
by Harvey Kojan
Third-seeded Albany State
will take on Brockport State and
defending champion Union
College will face Geneseo State
at Union's Memorial Fieldhouse
this evening in the opening round
of the second annual Eastern
College Athletic Conference Up-
State New York Regional
Baskethall Tournament.
The Danes, 16-7, will play
Brockport, 16-9, in the
Preliminary contest beginning at
Tp.
Union, 19-3, against Geneseo,
16-7, at 9p.m. The winners of the
two games will meet Saturday in
a 9 p.m.. championship game
after a 7p.m, consolation match.
. followed by top seeded
The Danes lost to the Eagles of
Brockport in January, 77-73, ina
game which saw the Danes r
quish a nine point halftime lead.
In that important ballgame,
which was pl
during Albany State's interces-
ed in Brockport
‘The Danes in their final home game of the season against New Paltz. Albany Is at Un-
basketball throughout the first
half, but were eventually victims
of foul trouble, Harold Merrit,
Harry Johnson, and Byron
Miller, three of Albany's
strongest rebounders, were fore-
ed to view much of the second
half from the bench, an advan-
tage which the far taller Eagles
used to thwart an upset bid by
the Danes.
Brockport has on hand three
starters from last year’s club that
finished fourth in ?
division tournament in
Evansville, Ind., after winning
the regionals in New York State.
The Great Banes, victors over
the Eagles in regular season play
last season, would not be facing
Brockport were it not for a tip-in
in the final second by Buffalo
State to defeat Brockport, 71-70.
The Eagles were on top in the
ate University Conference
. which means an automatic
However,
ra
bid to the NCAA
because of the loss, Potsdam
State received the bid instead
Top perlormers for h
coach Mauro Pannaggio’s te
are S-1 senior Dan Gilliam, who
averages 16.5 3 med at
guard with the coach's son Dan
me,
Panaggio, who has a 9.7 a game
scoring mark. In the front court
is another member of the pan-
jo lamily, Mike. a 6-2 junior
with a 16.7 scoring average: alyo
6-4 senor Guy Vickers, a 12
point scorer and 6-k sophomore
Kevin Williams, a 5.0 scorer. at
B center
Vehman
ion College tonight to face Brockport State in the opening round of the Upstate ECAC
Tourney.
Union rates the tap seed on the
basis ol its 19-3 record ay first
year head coach Bill Scanton in
stituted a ght pressing man to
man delense that has allowed op-
ponents only 5k points a game
this winter
Guards Bill Carmody, a 5-11
junior, and John Denia, a 5-9
sophomore, key the defense and
control play at the other end as
the leaders of Union's patient
offense. The leading scorer for
the Dutchmen is 6-5 junior
center Charlie Gugliotta, who
averages 17.3 a game, followed
by 6-3 sophomore forward Steve
Kelly with an II point average,
followed by Denio at 9.0 and
forward Chuck Abba, a 6-2
senior at 8.6,
The Dutchmen won last year's
ECAC inaugural with a 69-64
triumph over the Danes, aveng
ing an overtime loss to Albany in
the finals of the Capital District
Tournament earlier that year
Geneseo. a 94-9) overtime
loser to Brockport, demolished
the Danes carher this semester
93-71) However. both Mike
Suprunowiey and Rich Kapnet
Were absent trom that contest
which hurt the Danes sme
ly
The Blue Knights have the
highest seorer in the ECAC field
in 6-2 qumior lorward Harry
Ward. who averages 20.4 per
kame Ed Robata, who
donunated the bi
Ward agiunst Al
At OS, searing 165
Hickets tor both
games and those
ards along with
js evenings
be held
tomorrow might will goon sitleat
6 pam, one hour bette the first
game. There will be na advance
OF Feserve seat sales. HH you can't
attend the games Yoursell , listen
to them on WSUA (640), sith
Albi
ning at 6:55 tonight
) against Brockport hegin
Aquamen Set for Swimming Championships
by Rob Geier
The Albany Swim team is
engaged in the SUNYAC Cham-
pionships at Potsdam on Thurs-
day, Friday, and Saturday of this
week, Coach Brian Kelly wa
optimistic about the teams pe
formance citing six swimmers
who rank in the top six in their
events,
The team has been tapering for
the last two weeks and planned
to Shave down’ on Wednesday
Practices
evening at Potsdam
Involved fess endurance: swim-
ming, and) concentrating on
short sprints hat developed the
ol pacing and
ing down process
swimmers’ serise
form. The sh
isa ritual that is perhaps one of
the most idiosyncratic aspects of
the sport of swimming, — the
swimmers shave all their leg,
arm, and body hair nan effort to
reduce fricuon and thereby
minimize drag as they pull
through the water. Inshaving, a
layer of dead skin tissue is
removed which increases the
Aidvs sensitivity to the water give
ing the #temmerp better feel for
the race, Perhaps the most im-
portant aspect of shaving down
iy psychological. The swimmer
senses he iy gomg taster and
therefore does,
The swimmers were prepared
and the State meet will provide
the opportunity for swimmers
who have consistently won to
test their ability against other
New York State atheletes.
Coach Brian Kelly is counting on
the talents of freshman Dan
Dudley in the two breastroke
events. Dudley will also be com:
peting on three relay teams, the
400 yard freestyle; 800 yard free
and 40 Medley Relay
Senior Len Van Ryn will be
competing in the 500 yard
freestyle, 1650 yard tree, 400
yard Individual medley and on
two Dane relay squads, Van Ryn
has not has as good a year as in
the past, but Kelly feels his ex-
perience in championship con-
petition will be an asset
Jumor Rick Masom, who
shattered four Albany swimming
records! during tegular season,
will swim the 50 and 100 yard
Ireestyle und Kelly believes he
could go to the finals
Ken Weber will compete in the
500 yard freestyle, and the 1650,
and should finish among the top
12. In championshop competi-
tion double points are seured for
the first] 12 places recorded
Freshman Mitch Rubin will
swim the 100 and 200 yard
butterfly events, Kelly pegs
Rubin as the key man in the
medley relays
Jack Seidenberg is entered in
the 100 d 200 yard
breaststroke events, and Kelly
sys he should finish in the top
12
Ben Siebecker hay been
entered in the 50-100-and 200
yard freestyle sprints and will
swimon three relay teams.
Albany hi
the X00. yard
twelve teams, and will compete
trom the eighth seed in the 400
yard Medley and the 400 yard
tr
the highest seed in
clay. fourth of
style
ehmae
by Naney Athaugh
March came an like a streak
Hive Godlather gangsters with
water hilled toy machine ons tushed
ite dhe State Quad cafeteria
went bystanders with:
ny tenne. packed the let
mv the silat bar ante an
athlete ap. and tan outsade The
and yin wer
and sbeautatye Uatesuyeh at dams tat
Lance last weekend,
Seven nude callepiates: Stemped
tound the suse of Dutch yu
uring the naubiyght full nett
4+ 2 had a ten-person coed tonp
fast week Ne panty sands br them,
they had none on
An Mumm Quad resadent wanted
to organize at least 250 people Lor a
huge blity an the butt
Ie’y tut
Goldiish and ph sthhs
passe Sticking as the latest bad. tnd
Mbany dropped ity diawets last
The New Yank Danesh
HW Newsweck and other
mnaysazines base reputed st
Fen Walter Cronk, the senetable
aout streaking
wm New York State legistature
ubscene snd lewd
© bur there have heen
ou the Albany vampus,
ple take w tolerant sew
appears. with rulelly
swised reactions “Sure, let “em
Hhe question an
my people's
minds (all monestreakers
Presumably) ss “Why do people
One streaker stud about tannins
Uhreuph State Quad cateterts, “Well
woinebods was going dea
tame We yust dadat inst teh
he done
Media 1 Marshall Mod tan
stl "Ht as Lan tte ooh assault
Some suctalogisty Gham at as.
Form at peetest agaist the social
luctatehy
Wut one gait joked te her muther
wath a simpler explanation, “Yeah
Mat ue SCARE Lontt
Thave ty get an shape
1h Janet Hood ol the Student
Health Service saud-about peuple
wh st { think they ‘re 1 need
Hhey'te mostly a
She weat
on to say. The ones who are getting
et attention
secure keds wha do lus
some sabstacton out of hie don't
>the University of New York at Albany
MAKCH {5
sluwoky
Hood calla a "pathete sitine
ent iid rellection an out fine
Ste suid “You kina, bids today gor
Hote ameies sand see il tat neste
mudity Phere ant much further
hey can yor ser thes streak She cnt
tua “Linas some al then ate
igh whew they stieah
One student, asked ih he wynuld
ich and responding altarmatively
wd “Fine dean at ter teheve mis anner
sual cunitlicty which have been
vested 110 me by ath appressinng you
1° Asked the real reas he
Fan anegeniatnae Hayems bods
Most students, when shed
characterized streaking as “harmless,
(hat as, atiless yuu treese yoursell
tnt mpateney
\ professor commented about the
Incamng of streaking “You know
We've Bane Honk stiuking to streake
tye IS a sun ob the times. The ad-
timstiahion has won [tay ceatly
depressing
(again