Albany Student Press
Vol. LVIII, No. 45
State University of New York at Albany
The ASP
October 12, 1971
Carnegie Commission Report
What Does College Do to You?
by Don McLeod
Associated Press Writer
A college education isn’t worth
as much in dollars as it once was,
a new report claims, but it defi-
nitely leads to the good life.
College graduates do make more
money, and their jobs are more
comfortable, says a study for the
Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education.
What's more, they are more like-
ly to be Republicans, although
their political philosophies are de-
cidedly liberal. They read more,
know more, vote more and take a
greater part in community activi-
ties.
“The college experience appears
more likely than not to make
students more open-minded and
liberal, less concerned with mater-
ial possessions, more concerned
with aesthetic and cultured values,
more relativistic and less moral-
istic, but more integrated, rational
and consistent,” the report says.
“Students tend to lessen in their
adherence to traditional values
and traditional behaviors,” the re-
port adds, “they become less au-
thoritarian although this may be
related to the social climate at tie
time of their education, They
By Year 2000
become more aware of themselves
and of interpersonal relationships
and show a greater readiness to
express their emotions.”
Dr. Clark Kerr, chairman of the
commission, said at a news confer-
ence Tuesday the study was
undertaken to answer questions
about whether college training is
generally worth the time, effort
and money required.
The study was conducted by the
Institute for Social Research at
the University of Michigan. The
report, “A Degree and What Else?
‘the Correlates and Consequences
of a College Education,” will be
published by McGraw-Hill later general rule “every year of higher
this month.
In a foreword to the published
report, Kerr said people who go to
college tend to be:
—More satisfied with their jobs -
—More highly paid and less sub-
ject to unemployment.
—More likely to vote and to
participate generally in communi-
ty activities.
—More “liberal” and tolerant in
their attitudes toward, and rela-
tions with, other individuals.
—More informed about commu-
nity, national, and world affairs.
The report concludes that as a
aq
:
added im-
pact and benefit.”
1t says also the impact is cumu-
lative over generationswith sons
and daughters of parents who
have gone to college taking on
more of the college influence than
their classmates whose parents did
not make it to college.
One of the more surprising find-
ings is that higher education as an
investment - in terms of how
much it will increase a person’s
earning power - is generally over-
rated. “A parent could do as well
with a stock investment,” Kerr
said.
College Enrollment Will Double
by Lee Linder
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Enroll-
ment in American colleges will
double by the year 2000, the
Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education has predicted.
This climb will need about 300
new institutions, two thirds of
them two-year community col-
leges, mostly. in metropolitan
areas,
“The United States is creating a
society in which more people will
have had more education than
ever before in history in any
nation,” the commission reported.
“Tt is making higher education
available to all who want it for
whatever reason.”
In its report, “New Students and
New Places,” the commission esti-
mated that by 2000 half of all
young people between 18 and 21
will be in college, compared with
35% now.
But because of uncertainties the
commission issued two growth
studies:
1, Based on past growth rates, it
predicts enrollment will hit 13.5
million by 1980 and climb to 17.4
million by the year 2000.
2. Noting changes in the labor
market for college degree holders
and a reduced birth rate, it says
enrollment may reach only 16
million by the turn of the century
with 12.5 million by 1980.
Dr. Clark Kerr, commission
chairman, explained to a news
conference the current enrollment
of 8.1 million would rise sharply
in the 1970s, shrink a little in the
1980s, and then increase heavily
again in the final decade of the
20th century.
The commission described this
as a go-stop-go cycle, and ex-
pressed concern for the expected
slowdown or decline in the 1980s.
“That decade may present spe-
cial problems for educational
planners because during such per-
iods it is hard to obtain funds or
to arouse interest in change and
innovation,” the report said. “If
this difficulty cannot be over-
come, institutions may be unpre
pared for the big enrollment in-
creases that will characterize the
final decade of this century.”
PAGE 2
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
Visiting Lecturer Fasting
As Act of ‘Recommitment’
Every Wednesday at three in the afternoon forty-
six members of the SUNY community gather to
discuss social change, plan direct action in the
community and weigh the value of non-violence as a
revolutionary tool. They are participants in an A&S
300 course called “NONVIOLENCE WORKSHOP”.
The course is taught by Steve Stalonas, a thirty-
year-old Quaker from New York City, who has a
long list of “Movement” credentials. Stalonas is one
of the directors of the, Quaker Project, a training
and organizing center sponsored by the Religious
Society of Friends. He is a national organizer for the
People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice, has been
affiliated with the Institute for the Study of
Nonviolence in Palo Alto, California and works
closely with the Harrisburg Defense Committee and
War Resisters League.
‘A graduate school drop-out, Stalonas is now a
Visiting Lecturer in the Philosophy Department. He
takes no money from the University. His stay here
in Albany is supported entirely by private contri-
butions. Since he lives in “voluntary poverty,”
Stalonas’s budget while he is here is $500. The $500
not only supports Stalonas, it also pays the trans-
portation costs for the wide assortment of guest
speakers that he brings.to campus for his classes.
More money is being sought by a student-faculty
committee.
Since arriving on the campus, Stalonas has tried to
make a living witness of his personal credo “the
world is the way it is because we’re the way we
are.” He played an important role in setting up the
Attica rally at the capital and organized and
participated in two guerilla theatre actions on
campus and in downtown Albany.
Last Wednesday Stalonas began a seven day fast
which will end Moratorium night. The last three
days of the fast will be conducted as a round the
clock vigil at the Campus Center fountain. The fast,
according to Stalonas, is a personal act of re-
commitment ...a way of reminding himself that
change only comes about when people act and that
action is limited only by $elf-discipline. It is his
hope that students and faculty will join him for
conversation and sharing of ideas while he is
maintaining his vigil.
exhibition
and sale
original
SUNY at Albany, Campus Center
Thursday, Oct. 14- 12 noon to 9pm
Friday, Oct. 15- 10 am to 5 pm
=
gra phics purchases may be charged
CHAGALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIER AND MANY OTHERS
Proskin’s Office
Damaged by Shots
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Three
plate glass windows valued at
more than $700 were shattered at
the election campaign headquar-
ters of Albany County District
Atty. Arnold Proskin here early
Sunday.
No one was injured. Police said
the windows were targets of three
shotgun blasts.
Several weeks ago, one of the
windows at the Central Avenue
office was broken when someone
ARRANGED BY FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
tossed a brick through it.
Proskin said there have been no
arrests in connection with either
incident.
GOT ALL YOUR TEXTBOOKS?
October 22 is the Last Day of Text Sales!
(except for quarter courses and re-orders)
Steve Stalonas, a visiting lecturer here, is fasting and is maintaining a
vigil in front of the Campus Center Fountain until Moratorium night.
Graduate Students
simmons
To Decide Tax Issue
Graduate Students will ballot on
the future of a student activities
fee during the month of Novem-
ber. According to officials of the
Graduate Students Association,
the tax will be set somewhere
between $5.00 and $20.00 yearly.
eh
EIS)
Joy of Cooking
Leo Kottke
Joyous Noise
in concert
Fri., October 22, 1971
SUNYA Gym 9:00 pm
$.99 with student tax
$2.00 without student tax
funded by student tax
The final amount will depend
upon the outcome of negotiations
with the undergraduate Student
Association.
The present situation allows gra-
duate students to voluntarily pay
a reduced fee of $30.00 a year to
the undergraduate S.A., thus al-
lowing graduate students to parti-
cipate in S.A. organizations and
teams, and to obtain discounts on
concerts, films and other special
events. In the past, graduate stu-
dent tax monies totaled about
$6,500,
In order to “carry out the many
important functions necessary to
ensure graduate participation in
all matters concerning the univer-
sity community and graduate stu-
dents,” Jim Monk, GSA President
and other GSA officers felt the
need for a separate fee,
An extensive program is planned
under the proposed mandatory
activities fee project including
concerts, dances, duplicating ser-
vices and less tangible services as
full representation in University
governance.
GREEN HORNET &
« we're worth listening-to J
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
News Round Up
International
SAIGON- President Thieu pledged last night to “bring about
peace and social reforms for the people” of South Vietnam while
making his second appearance on nationwide television since his
re-election Oct. 3.
SAIGON- The leader of an antigovernment faction of war
veterans, Nguyen Ngoc Tan, was shot and killed in downtown Dan
Nang by a gunman police said was working for a progovernment
veterans group. The incident was the latest in a wave of violence
related to the country’s political problems.
WASHINGTON- V.P. Spiro T. Agnew left for Abkara Turkey,
beginning a 18 day journey that will take him to Iran, Persia, and
Greece. A cool reception has been predicted for Agnew in Ankara,
because of Turkish suspicion that the visit is on his itinerary only
because he wants to go to Greece, and couldn’t stir a diplomatic
embarassment. Agnew made comments supporting Greece’s mili-
tary dictatorship with arms aid.
National
Los Angeles- A dispute over 11 workers may keep the West
Coast’s largest port, L.A., closed down until Friday despite a
federal court order halting a strike by 15,000 longshoremen from
San Diego to Seattle.
New York- The American Jewish Congress contended Monday
that the 1970-71 U.S. Supreme Court set a record for issuing a
majority of unfavorable decisions in civil rights and civil liberties
cases, “For the most part,”’ the study reported, “the court neither
undid earlier libertarian decisions nor advanced to new ground.
Thus the immediate impact of the first two Nixon appointments
seems to have been to halt a trend of the previous decade toward
enlarging individual rights.” by Howard Mahler
Parents from the University
Parents for Day Care, Incorpor-
ated,met October 7 in the Fireside
Lounge to discuss plans for a
possible Child Registration on
State
New York- Sen. James Buckley, R-Conservative. - NY, said
Sunday he will probably support whomever President Nixon
nominates to the Supreme Court. Buckley told a T.V. audience he
agreed with Nixon’s. preference for a “strict constructionist.” ““We
need judges who judge, not legislate.”
More Administration Changes
MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT- ATGSB
NAT’L. BDS.
* Preparation tor tests required for
admission to Graduate and profes-
sional schools
Six and twelve session courses
Small groups
Voluminous material for home study]
prepared by experts in each field
* Lesson schedule can be tailored to
meet individual needs.
Opportunity for review of past
lessons via tape at the center
cary
Summer Sessions
Special Compact Courses
Weekends — Intersessions
STANLEY H. KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER wo.
TWSEm Toms Bean
(212) 336-5300 2
(516) 538-4555
DAYS. EVENINGS, WEEKENDS
Boston * Phil," Washington * Detroit * Los Angeles * Miami
SINCE 1938,
Major administrative changes in
the Office of Management and
Planning at State University of
New York at Albany were an-
nounced recently by Vice Presi-
dent John W. Hartley.
Key to the reorganization is a
new position of assistant vice pre-
sident and controller which will
be filled by John W. Hart-
ley, presently budget officer. He
has a B.A. from Siena College and
an M.A. from the Maxwell School
of Public Administration. He for-
merly served with the Attorney
General’s office and with the New
York State Budget Division.
Hartigan will be responsible for
accounting, budgeting, internal
auditing, and management analy-
Robert A. Stierer, assistant
vice president for business affairs,
sis.
follow.
The Tutoring School with the Nationwide Reputetion
Rennie Davis To Speak
Rennie Davis, May Day Organizer, will speak at noon, Wednesday,
behind the Campus Center. (Rain-Assembly Hall). Workshops will
(second in the series)
Tues. Oct. 12 at 8 pm in Hu 129
Robert Danzig
(publisher- Times Union and Knickerbocker News)
will speak on:
‘Should the Media Crusade
or Certain Issues?’
Journalism Workshop}
will be held
sponsored by Waterbury Hall. She‘is shown at Saturday’s parade.
Day Care Center Prepares
For Tentative Opening
October 20th and 21st. November
first is the tentative opening date
of the Day Center in the basement
of Pierce Hall on Alumni Quad-
rangle.
Presently a Student Association
Hartigan Fills New Position
will be responsible for person-
nel administration, equal oppor-
tunity employment, and manage-
ment information systems,
The changes are intended to
provide a compact, cohesive or-
ganization which can focus sharp-
ly on the university’s fiscal prob-
lems and use more efficiently
existing staff resources. With ano-
ther tight fiscal year in prospect,
Hartley said, “We need to firm up
our administrative operations all
over in a time we are feeling fiscal
pressures and this is a step in that
direction,”
Harold Brink, formerly associate
for university financial analysis,
has been promoted to budget offi-
cer in charge of the department.
Lloyd Hebert, who has been direc-
tor of business affairs, will direct
the new department of internal
audit.
KO RITORIRECORDSAeRESER Ty
Seow Wacom
Daphne Bell was crowned Homecoming Queen at Friday night’s concert. She is a sophomore and was
chow
group, ™ nds of the Day Care
Cente .s forming. They plan to
approach Central Council next
Thursday for funds. They need
only a majority vote for an ap-
propriation. Money is needed to
seek financial assistance from off
campus sources and to pay for
paperwork for Registration.
Central Council rejected an ap-
propriation of funds to the Day
Care co-op in early September.
The Day Care Center group, repre-
sented by Peter Pollack, was no at
that time a Student Association
group. They therefore required a
two thirds majority vote to obtain
funds.
Pollack remarked at the October
7 meeting, “We have no formal
structure.” Nevertheless com-
mittees, Finance, Food, By-Laws,
and Registration, exist.
‘The Parents co-op plans to meet
with parents interested in using
the Day Care Service on October
27. The purpose of the meeting is
to determine the structure of the
Day Care Center and to introduce
the Day Care staff to the parents.
By-laws regarding the purpose of
the Board of Directors and the
Committees still must be dis-
cussed and ratified.
The Registration application in-
cludes Parent volunteer hours. A
ratio of the number of hours a
child stays at the Day Care Center
to the parent volunteer hours is
not fixed.
It was reported at the October 7
meeting, licensing from Social Ser-
vices of New York State is per-
the
poration of the Day Care Cencer.
missible without incor-
The center operates as a co-op.
This facilitates an early opening of
the Day Care Service.
Tin Horse
Mon.—Fri.—-—11 am—8& pm
1] am—6 pm
\ Sat.-
ique Boutique
264 Lark Street, Albany
unusual and decorative antiques
We sell Incense, bamboo, and marfil paper
PAGE 4
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
editorial comment
Collective Pressure
Ever been to a big concert at our gym? It’s an
especially interesting experience if you’ve stood at the
beginning of the line, near the doors. When those
doors are opened, say your prayers, because. your
chances of survival are slim. Why? Do the other
people really want to flatten you against the wall?
Hardly. It’s simply the collective will of many
individuals desiring to get inside that gym as soon as
possible. And it’s an excellent example of a terrible
phenomenon.
Remember Attica?
Another great example. Take an entire state of
people, average citizens who individually would never
have the courage or the hatred to commit murder,
and create a situation such as the Attica revolt. These
same individuals, collectively, not only condoned the
counterattack/massacre, but had much to do with the
presumed “necessity” of such a move. Collective
pressure can be looked at as a cause for the deaths.
What's sickening is that the chief correctional officer,
along with the Governor of this state, would yield to
such pressure in such an explicit manner. However,
we must not divide the blame for those deaths among
all of us, We must act as individuals, accepting
individual and personal responsibility for the acts of
violence comitted in our name.
There is one last thing we can do. As I have stated
before, we must not allow those responsible to go
free. We must show elected (and other) officials
everywhere that acting in response to public moods
does not absolve them of the consequences of their
actions. There must be no whitewash; we must insist
upon the truth.
Remember, Attica.
Albany Student Press
4IN FUTURE WE WOULD LIKE THIS REFERRED TO AS A HEARTENING UPSWING.. .’
communications
Phys Ed Requirement
To the Editor:
I would like to take the opportunity to protest a
situation which has existed far too long: force fed
fizz-ed. The fact is that here at SUNYA, a forward
looking University, I am told, one year of “Physical
Education” courses is still required of everyone. I
write this letter today in the hope that this issue
may be aired publicly, and that my unpleasant
experiences may not be visited upon others.
I registered for the introductory “Foundations of
Physical Education” course in August. On October
4th, I decided not to attend my fizz. ed. class
because the prospect of running a mile nauseated
me, as had the previous classes. It was at that point
that I decided not to attend another Phiz, Ed. class
ever again knowing full well that the possibility
existed that I might not graduate in 1973, as a
consequence. I have always had an aversion to fizz.
ed. I am generally turned off by militaristic tenden-
cies, conformity and tegimentation, and I have seen
those characteristics represented and encouraged, in
every Phiz, Ed. course I have taken including: the
one offered here at SUNYA. I managed to endure
the course for one month and I resented being told
to run at the sound of a whistle, jump on cue, and
perform figure eights. I was somewhat surprised at
the attitude of one coach in particular who did not
hide his distaste for the long hair worn by my friend
and I,
When the “Cure” proposal was passed last year,
one festering, fizzling sore remained untreated. Just
as I do not believe that the Marine Corps builds
men, I do not believe that one year of fizz. ed. will
make me a healthier, better’ person. I am quite
pleased with my decadence, thank you, if the folks
down at the gym would choose to call it that. I
would never suggest that Phys. Ed. is totally
worthless and should be abolished entirely. I do
suggest that it is time to remove the one remaining
required course from the undergraduate SUNYA
curriculum, The Phys, Ed. requirement should be
abolished. It should be made voluntary for all. Now.
Sincerely,
Frank M. Borzilleri °73
(Editor's note: the Phys Ed requirement is
mandated by the Board of Trustees, one of thier
-few incursions into our requirements, This is prob-
ably a direct result of the building of all those Phys
Ed buildings, which would be rather. embarrassingly
empty if it weren’t for the required courses. People
with complaints similar to Mr. Borzilleri’s should
write to the Board of Trustees. Miss Martha
Downey, secretary to the Board, has her offices at 8
Thurlow Terrace, Albany, New York 12201.)
Italian “EEP”’
To the Editor:
In the Oct. 8, 1971 issue of the ASP there
appeared an article written by Roberto DiScipio,
president of the Italian-American Student Alliance.
It was an article that expressed the ideas, sentiments
and emotions of an Italian who thinks that his
ethnic group should finally rise above the wave of
discrimination being imposed on it today. It was
written sincerely and in attempt to bring to light
the facts of Italian-American discriminauion often
swept under the rug.
The whole gist of the article, however, was made
almost comic as a result of the “Eepie the Eep”
cartoon imposed above it. Although many of us
agree in part with the sentiments expressed in the
cartoon, it was in essence ridiculing the article by
preceding it. It seemed to us to be saying that all
this ethnic sentiment was bullshit and that the
article was just another example of it.
Why wasn’t the cartoon placed in another part of
the paper? Maybe it was because it was just taken
for granted the the Italian-Americanswould take this
“joke” as they have taken many of the others. We
seriously doubt if the same kind of joke would be
tried on other minority groups.
Well, we Italian-Americans don’t regard the prob-
lems of our ethnic group as a joke nor are we willing
to stand any longer and just take it. We don’t feel it
necessary to resort to violent means because in
éssence we agree with the cartoon that all men are
our brothers. And to our brothers at the ASP —
practice what you preach. Let all ethnic groups have
an equal chance to be heard without being ridiculed
first.
Signed,
The Members of
The Italian-American
Student Alliance
TUESDAY: Two films (“Once
Upon a War” and “The Magi-
cian”), plus a speech by Jerry
Coffin of the War Resisters
Gremlin Billage Gene Mater
F
League. Both at 7:30 p.m. in
Lecture Center 2.
WEDNESDAY: Rally at noon
behind the CC (if it rains, CC
Assembly Hall). National Stu- /
dent Association (Marge Tban-
kin), People’s Coalition for
Peace and Justice (Rennie
ABOUT THE HEALTH SERVICE...
D-DOCTOR, 1-\'VE
JUST BEEN RUN OVER
BY A TrRucKk!
OH DEAR!
MAY | OFFER
YOu AN ASPIRIN?
tom clingan
editor-in-chief
news editor advertising manager
a cue seas y=) o VICK COLON MaRS . jeff rodgers
associate news editor technical editors
+ «+e. . maida oringher . .sue seligson
features editors - + + « . » Warren wishart
. john fairhall business manager
: . + debbie natansohn =. - .. «phil mark
arts editors advertising production
. . steve aminoff isin ie coos atommthodes
+. eee + + Gary sussman
sports editor classified
oe . bob zaremba + + +. . debbie kaemen
ap copy circulation managers
Seon .fobert mayer been a -mark litcofski
Photo editor iene . . ron wood
+ + + . andy hochberg graffiti
AS S's . Sue pallas
The Albany Student Press is incarcerated in Campus Center 326 courtesy
of the State University of New York at Albany. The crime was originally
committed in 1916 by the Class of 1918. The phones, when not in tie-line
‘use, by our numerous (and verbose) staff, are 457-2190 and 2194. Bills are
courtesy of Mandatory Student Imposition and Ad Money. We admit
membership in the College Press Service and one accessories after the fact in
the Associated Press.
Communications are limited to 300 syllable, and are subject to slicing by
the Chief Word Butcher. Editorial policy originated with the same. Peace.
Davis), Vietnam Vets Against
the War, National Peace Action
Coalition, will all either speak
or be represented. At 2 p.m.
there will be a series of work-
shops: the Women’s Movement
in the Fireside Lounge; the Gay
Movement in CC 370; Prisons
and Repression in CC 373; the
Fall Offensive in CC 315; the
G.I. Movement in the Patroon
Lounge; and the Third World
movement in CC 375. At 8 p.m.
there will be a Vigil on the
podium.
©1971 G.Neter
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 5
AMIA
AMIA STANDINGS
(does not include weekend
games)
LEAGUEI
WLT PTS
EEP 510 10
GDx 4219
APA 421 9
STB 420 8
KB 151 3
ALC 0611
LEAGUE II
WLTPTS
INDIANS 600 12
TXO 600 12
HICKS 4119
HUNS 330 6
9TH FLOOR 330 6
SQNK 231 5
BPS 240 4
VCZOO 141 3
UFS* 042 2
FULTON FLYERS 0511
(out of league)
LEAGUE III - Fraternity
WLTPTS
EEP 601 13
STB 502 12
GDX 520 10
DSP 250 4
TXO 160 2
APA O61 1
LEAGUE III - Independent
WLTPTS
ALCHEMISTS 510 10
CIRCUS 401 9
ACES 4119
MOP 430 8
DILDOCKS 820 6
JUNGLE ROT 230 4
JOHNSON HALL 140 2
(WSUA and COLONIALS
ate out of league)
IBM Selectric Typewriter
Specializing in
Doctoral Dissertations
Fast, Dependable Service
Reasonable Rates
462-6283
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE
462-1509}
THE ASP SPORTS
STB vs EEP
tomorrow at 4 p.m.
Dane Gridders, 2—1; #2 ae
Niagara Falls, 35— 20
WHAT Die
Reseae
MEAN To (Hie RC ae econ y ay
er (QUEEN AND
by Alan D. Abbey and Phil Prince
Though the odds were not so
insurmountable, such as a team
with only thirty players, the Great
Danes plunged to a 35-20 victory
over Niagara University, Saturday
Homecoming Weekend.
Both teams showed -good of-
fenses and poor defenses in a
frantic five touchdown first quar-
ter. The first time Albany had the
ball they drove 32-yards in six
plays and scored on a 56 yard
touchdown drive. It was capped
with a one-yard plunge by Ron
Tuholsky.
Throughout the game Niagara’s
running was inept, forcing them
to pass frequently. This enabled
the Dane secondary to lay back
and pick off four interceptions,
two of which were easily con-
verted into touchdowns. The first
interception was returned to the
Niagara 13-yard line by Jeff
O'Donnell and on the very next
ee
fullback Lonnie Davis
SEEING LIVINGSTON TAYLOR
ANd CARLY SiON
(Geaimer arto ys
cated off tackle for the second
Albany score.
Once again the Purple Eagles
came up with a fast answering
touchdown, This time their
passing attack clicked as they
drove 80 yards in four plays. The
key play of the drive came when
halfback Ed Renica hauled in a
43-yard pass from quarterback
John Scotto. Renica was Niagara’s
lone standout as he played superb-
ly on both offense and defense.
Albany’s third and final score
of the first quarter came on a
terrific 50-yard reverse by split-
end Ed Williams. Williams broke a
tackle ten yards behind the line
of scrimmage and broke numerous
others on his way to the end zone.
Neither team scored again until
the fourth quarter, leaving the
score at 21-12 State.
At the half, viagara had racked
up 212 yards to Albany’s 173.
Even though Niagara outpassed
State 142 yards to 9, the Danes
lead was due to the Eagle’s poor
Antonio:
At murder v
Ffexe Magazine. Newsweek, Sourdoy
Review, lile Magazine, EY, The
‘New Yorker, Commonweal, The
‘New Republic, he Village Voice,
The New leader
‘A Premmies Productions Co’, ing. Relware
out §
Vanessa Redgrave
Dayid Hemmings
Sarch Miles
Tower East Cinema
October 15 and 16
7:30 and 10:00
$.75 and $.25 with State Quad Card
The Albany State Soccer Team will try to get back in the winning
column next Saturday at home versus Stony Brook.
.alverson
| Recommended for
Limelure audiences
COLOR
457—8583
LC—7
ground defense. From the be-
ginning of the second half to the
end of the third quarter the only
thing either team could do was
punt.
With a minute left in the third
quarter Boggs fumbled on his own
12 yard line and Niagara grabbed
the loose ball and scored several
plays later, tightening up the score
to 21-20. The Albany defense
then stiffened up and denied Nia-
gata entrance to the Purple and
gold crossbars, The Danes con-
cluded with two more scores to
wrap up the game in their favor.
he first came on a bizarre play
when an alert Ed Reinfurt picked
up a fumbled overhead lateral and
dashed in for the score. On the
Ddnes last drive they closed out
the day’s scoring on a beautiful
broken field 60-yard run by
Boggs. The offensive line blew out
the Niagara defenders and Boggs
finished his greatest day ever by
converting his third PAT of the
day. He ended up with a total of
147 yards in 19 carried for a 7.7
yard average.
When the Danes defense jelled,
they almost looked like a team
that could have a winning season.
Soccerman Swamped;
Lose Fourth Straight
by Bruce Maggin
A much improved Albany soccer
team lost to Plattsburgh 1-0 last
Saturday. Tle defense has im-
Proved greatly since the 8-1 drub-
bing at the hands of Oneonta.
However, the offense has lagged,
scoring a mere four goals in their
five games,
The first quarter was fairly even.
Both teams had good opportuni-
ties but failed to capitalize. Carlos
Alvarez of the Danes fed Dave
Beyer but Dave’s hard show went
wide. A few minutes later Art Mac
of Plattsburgh had a hard shot on
the net but State goaltender John
Thayer made the save. Near the
end of the quarter Plattsburgh
missed a golden opportunity when
Thayer was caught out of his net
but a shot went just wide.
In the second stanza Plattsburgh
began to dominate. This was due
primarily to mistakes by the Great
Danes. State’s Karl Haeusing back
pass to the goaltender almost
went into the net. A few minutes
later a corner kick by Plattsburgh
put the ball up into the air where
an Albany player headed the ball
CENTRAL BEER
- keg beer
Bud - Bal
Attention Fraternities
1330 Central Ave.
around the corner from campus
All Popular Brands Of Beer & Soda
At Discount Prices
In Bottles & Cans ,
- Piels - Schaefer - Carling
tap equipment available
at his own goal but the ball hit the
post. At 12:30 Plattsburgh scored
what proved to be the only tally
of the game. Abdella Mohammed,
on a direct free kick, rifled a shot
on Thayer which dribbled off the
goaltender’s hands into the net.
In the second half, Albany’s
offense began to come alive as the
Danes began to press forthe tying
goal. Eight men attacked for Al-
bany but they could not get the
knotter, In the closing seconds a
small rhubarb started when Al-
bany’s Larry Herzog began fight-
ing with a couple of Plattsburgh
players. Both benches were emp-
tied but order was soon restored
and Herzog was ejected from the
game.
‘The Danes have now lost four in
a row since winning their opening
game against Potsdam. Albany is
missing foward Emad Zikry, who
is out for a few games with torn
cartilage in his leg.
The booters are home next Sat-
urday against Stony Brook. Game
time is 1:00. The Danes simply
must put the ball in the net to
have a chance,
& SODA CORP.
459 - 3483
(below Fuller Road)
in stock -
Attention Sororities
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
rr
ee
a
ae
TUESDAY, OCTC
Albany vs
Game Ste
Score by Quarters; 1 2
Albany 21 0
Niagara 12000
Albany Niagara
First Downs 10 13 oe R
Rushing 9 6 Bt
Passing 0 5 Bit
Penalty i 2 a iter
Total Plays 58 at
Rushing 53 51 Tie
Passing 5 a3 ae
Total Offense 207 504 a
Rushing 288 141 P ‘re
Passing 9 253 *nalt
Rushii
Name Pos, Carries Ne Ya
Boggs, Bernie TB 19 al
Williams, Ed © SE 2 e
Davis, Lonnie FB 15 pe
Flanagan, Bill QB 13 x
Payne, Carvin TB 3 iN
Thomas, Ernie SB 1 2
Team Totals 53 ie
Opp. Totals 51 41
Pass
Name ‘Attempts Compl. Net &
Flanagan, Bill = 4 1 .
Petty, Rick i 0
Team Totals 5 1 2
Opp. Totals 33 13 53
Recej
Name Pos, Receptions yee
Crea, John SE 1
Team Totals 1 .
Opp. Totals
, OCTOBER 12, 1971 ‘ ALBANY STUDENT PRESS \PAGE 7
WS Niagara
me Statistics
ee Final
a 0 lol 85
ees 0 20
Net Return Yardage 120 129
unt Returns 7 3
Rickoff Returns 3 52 «126
terception Returns 56 0
Fumble Returns 5 0
Punting 9/275 4/188
Average 30.6 47
Funbles/Fumbles Lost 5/3 2/2
Interceptions Yielded 0 5
nalties/Yards Penalized 9/101 3/25
Rushing
Net Ydge, Average Long ‘Dis
1a7 ip 60 2
ee 37.5 50 1
51 3.4 =) it
fe 21 13 0
¥ 0 3 0
ae “12 -12 0
288 5A 60 4
M41 2.8 18 2
Passing
NetYdge, Percent Long Inter. T.D. Passes
0 25 9 0 0
0 0 Oo 0
9
20 9 0 0
ps 39.4 52 5 1
Receiving
AP ore) Aves Rueep, Long TDs
2 9 9 0
9 9 9 0
258 19.5 52 1
..photos by chow and lee
PAGE 8
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
Once Again, Duty Calls
by Robert Mayer
An ASP Column
We have arrived at a point where
discussion and thought among
young people concerning student
protest evokes feelings of nostal-
gia, apathy, and in some instances,
resentment. The reasons for this
are often heard, “well it doesn’t
do anything,” or “for years we
demonstrated and the war still
goes on.” These sentiments are
real and I do not mean to ques-
tion their validity. However the
consequence of this thinking has
resulted in a very costly mistake.
‘Apathy is a luxury that only the
ignorant and heartless can afford.
If we as young people accept it
like our predecessors did, we can
by no means expect to build a
better world. The innocence that
one assumes becomes sinful. and
instead of seeking an answer we
only serve to further injustice. We
marched, sang petitioned, can-
vassed, talked, screamed, fought,
and some gave their lives for an
ideal that we were drawn to be-
cause something inside said we
must. For our humanistic and
unselfish sacrifices America gave
us King and Kennedy’s funeral,
Chicago, Kent and Jackson State,
Washington stadium, San Quentin,
and Attica.
The answer is not silence, it is
not acceptance, it is action. Ac-
tion that goes far beyond inner
sentiment or revolutionary rhetor-
ic. To be silent would only mean
that those who perpetuate injus-
tice, and hold suffering dear, have
squashed all resistance and have
succeeded in furthering their
ways. That is precisely their goal,
to shut us up, to keep us’ preoc-
cupied and that is what we must
refuse to comply with. If we are
going to the universities to be
manufactured into some product,
if we live only for next week’s
exams, grad school, or week-end
parties, we have adopted the very
sickness that is destroying this
country, If this is what we are at
school for then we can not lie to
ourselves, we must admit that
being here is bullshit. On the
other hand, if we are here to learn
real truths, distinguish between
right and wrong, and then act
with the knowledge we hold, then
our preserve here is justified.
Tomorrow is not another mora-
sorium against the war, it is, “the
noratorium.” I do not mean to
“1S THIS THE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY WE'RE DYING. FoR?”
MORATORIUM
DIERION
~ DATELINE: DEc. 31 1
320
~ OCTOBER 13 { NATIONWIDE
STRATION - novemaer 6 Lwastineron pc.
Sy
Xion
971
(IF You CAN’T MAKE IT, YoU CAN AT LEAST WRITE YOUR CONGRESSMAN)
ignore the failures of past mora-
toriums but we can not believe
that they produced no positive
results. At least, they forced a
moral awakening on the American
people. We must look forward
with hope and ideals: If this
sounds too idealistic for you, then
you are already an old person. To
erase the consequences of war,
racism, sexism, and any other
“ism,” we must erase our feelings
of futility. If you know your
history, you know that change
There is no such thing as
Monterey County Calif. S.P.C.A.
A TENDER TRAP
Consider the raccoon — one of the earth's friendliest,
most lovable creatures. He is part of the woodland lore
and wonder of nature. Favorite children's stories endow
him with almost human qualities along with the otter,
the fox, the beaver, the muskrat and other forest
dwellers.
Trapping animals like the raccoon is neither a friendly
nor lovable occupation. Forty million leg-hold traps are
set out continuously in the United States and Canada
alone. The cruel, jagged-toothed traps can crunch an
animal's leg, leaving him to bleed, suffer and starve for
days before the trapper comes to deal the final death
blow. The animals are so agonizéd that they often chew
off their own feet.
It tgkes forty raccoons to make one coat for a human.
Yet hundreds of defenseless animals may die before
those forty pelts are collected. The traps snap at any-
thing — turtles, eagles, groundhogs, porcupines, dogs
and cats. A trap doesn't have any feeling about that. . .
and neither does a trapper.
You, too, can help in the crusade to stop the vicious
killing of animals that keep our environment alive and
give joy to our children. You can refuse to wear the skins
of animals for prestige or pleasure. You can speak out
against these ungodly trapping practices in the name of
the animals that still survive. And you can make a TAX
DEDUCTIBLE CONTRIBUTION to Friends of Animals
which is doing something constructive about this wan-
ton destruction. DO IT NOW and feel better immediately
— in the knowledge that you are helping to preserve our
natural wildlife heritage — for your children and their
children
Miss Alice Herrington, President, Friends of Animals, Inc.
11 West 60th Street, New York, N.Y. 10023
| am glad to enclose $_______ (payable to FoA and
fully tax deductible) to help stop the murder of wildlife.
Please add my name to your mailing list.
Name
Number and Street
4
! i
4 |
|
|
I Please Print !
' 1
1
: |
1
! I
| |
came one way. It came from
commitment, from putting your
body where your heart is. If you
stay in your classes tomorrow, or
in the cafeteria, or in your suite,
then at least do us the favor of
ripping down your posters that
say Peace, The war is not over just
because fewer American G.I.’s are
dying. We now can point to South
Vietnam and say there exists no
such thing as a democratic govern-
ment and anyoné who disagrees
must know he is a liar, The
napalm and bombs still fall on the
people of Asia, and unless we do
something to let the world know
we care, our peace symbols, long
hair, dungarees, and other signs of
our so-called, youth culture mean
“SHIT.” The movement doesn’t
request your presence tomorrow,
it must demand it. Be there!
Traffic Ed
Teachers
Needed
by Richard D. Ellis
Director, Traffic Education Program
School of Education
One of the greatest social prob-
lems facing us today is the loss of
human and economic resources
through traffic accidents, and it is
to this fact which I address this
brief article. Unless a major break-
through in the number of second-
ary school pupils who graduate
from formal traffic education pro-
grams doubles in the next five
years, the tragedy will continue to
increase in severity.
Federal and State governments
and local school districts are mak-
ing an all out effort to meet the
challenge, but they need our co-
operation and to meet the needs
of the secondary school pupils,
schools are increasing the number
of teachers in their programs and
the few schools without programs
are employing new teachers as fast
as they are available. The crux of
the problem is that the present
supply of qualified teachers does
not meet the demand and needs
of the local school districts. There
were at least fifteen secondary
school traffic education positions
in New York State which were
not filled at the beginning of the
1971-72 school year.
The three sequential courses,
nine semester hour elective Traffic
Education Program to prepare sec-
ondary school teachers is open to
sophomores, juniors and seniors
who have drivers licenses. The
initial prerequisite general course
is TSP 350 Principles of Accident
Prevention which meets twice per
week and is a non-laboratory of-
fering. This is followed by TSP
450 Traffic Education I (methods
and materials) and TSP 451 Traf-
fie Education IT (on campus stu-
dent teaching).
A prospective candidate for a
secondary school district position
who has dual certification ( a
major field plus approval in traffic
education) has a definite advan-
tage and therefore it behooves
students to prepare themselves ac-
cordingly.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 9
Third Article In a A Series F S A
e e
Housing Operation Funded By Student Money
by Mike Ellis and J. Stephen Flavin
4 Date
Neatly tucked away in the for- Cost*
cats fie cll pecmnmier aliiehitd Aquired _ Losses**
the Chapel House is Waverly 211 Ontario Street $30,000 6/61 $1,397/$2,729
Place. Acquired in 1965 by FSA 19 & 21South Lake 58,000 8/60 738/3,833
as a platform house from which Waverly Place 34,000 6/65 539/1,495
new faculty could search for per-
manent housing, Waverly Place
was soon occupied by its present
inhabitants, Lois Gregg, Assist-
ant Vice Presdient of Student
Affairs, and Janet Havens of the
University Counceling Center.
Platform housing acquired by
the University through FSA was a
means to lure new faculty to this
campus at a time of rapid Univer-
sity growth and a well noted lack
of housing in and around Albany.
Mrs. Gregg was invited to join the
SUNYA administration but could
not find a suitable house.
In a letter of that year from
George Brewer, then director of
FSA, Mrs. Gregg was guaranteed
accomodations upon her arrival
from California. The letter states
she may reside at Waverly Place
until the University has need of
the house.
Dr. Clifton Thorne, former Vice
President of Student Affairs and a
member of the Board of Directors
of FSA saw in Mrs. Gregg’s job
the need to entertain students and
faculty in her residence. A house
close to the campus would facili-
tate more readily the entertaining.
Platform hoysing was supposed to
he run at cost and verbal leases
not to extend for more than two
years. The monthly rent at Waver-
ly Place was $125, FSA assuming
taxes and all ptilities. A year ago
the rent was raised to $150 per
month. Dr. Thorne justifies the
low rent as compensation for en-
tertaining in her residence. With
two people splitting the rent, each
pays $75 per month plus heat.
Mrs. Gregg furnished the house
herself.
Some members of the University
Community criticize the long stay
and low rent charged to Lois
Gregg and Jap Havens as a “mis-
use of the concept of platform
housing.” Robert Cooley, Execu-
tive Director of FSA says he needs
another year to determine the fate
of Waverly Place. He expressed
“embarassment” over the entire
housing operation. “There is no
lease at Waverly Place. We are in
control.” But in control of what?
“T am ready to move at any
time,” Gregg asserts, “There has
never been any security living
here, not knowing if I can live
here the following year.”
Waverly Place is an “arty house”
and Gregg and Havens are “arty
people.” Lois. dabbles in oils and
adequately well; Jan is an accom-
plished pianist. SUNYA Security
was slated to move into Waverly
Place this fall but found or were
given options on a larger building
on campus. The firm that Security
displaces will move into another
FSA structure, regardless of the
law!
“T have made known to Student
Association the availability of
Waverly Place,” Lois: claimed,
“and faculty and staff are also
aware we are here. I am open to
suggestions on what can be done
to make more use of the house.”
‘Lois and Jan admit most of thier
intertaining is of informal admini-
strative groups, but do entertain
RA’s, summer planning confer-
ence groups, frats and sororities,
and other students on an informal
basis.
“The house could be turned
over to the Internation Students
to use as a center,” Lois suggest
ed, “but the design of the house
and lack of insulation limits its
uses.
Perhaps the easiest solution
would be to raise the rents on all
houses so FSA could break even if
its tenants are fitted to the houses
and desire to “hang on.”
Foreign Students Favored By FSA
by Mike Ellis and J. Stephen Flavin
SUNY A’s Faculty Student Asso-
ciation does, contrary to popular
belief, maintain three buildings
for student rentals. These proper-
ties are not listed in the off-
campus housing office. At one
time, FSA maintained several a-
Partment puildings for student
use.
Since 1964, the FSA has been
disposing of student housing and
replacing such housing with
houses to be rented to faculty and
administrators. Profits derived
from board contracts, vending,
and the bookstore (the bookstore
used to make a buck!) have been
and are being used to amortize
Mortgages and absorb operating
losses incurred in the faculty
housing program,
Three._ properties are currently
tented to students. The addresses
are 211 Ontario Street and 19 and
21 South Lake Avenue, Albany.
ese properties are owned and
maintained by FSA and rented
Only to married international stu-
dents.
J, Paul Ward, international stu-
dent advisor since 1966, has been
given charge of renting out the
houses at 19 and 21 South Lake
Avenue, 211 Ontario Street is still
controlled by FSA but is rented
to the married international stu-
dents. Prior to 1966, housing for
all married students was handled
on a catch as catch can basis. In
1966, Ward was assigned 2 apart-
ments to rent out to married
international students by George
Brewer — then director of FSA.
‘As other apartments were vacated
at 19 and 21 South Lake, Ward
was able to fill the vacancies from
waiting lists of international stu-
dents desiring apartments. By
1970, 19 and 21 South Lake
properties were assigned to Ward’s
office to eliminate confusion in
both his office and FSA’s housing
office in renting the same apart-
ments to different families.
Why were married international
students so favored with three
houses while all other student
housing was being liquidated?
A partial answer was given by a
member of the Board of Direc-
tor’s of FSA. “Could the State of
New York interest the public in
buying bonds to finance construc-
tion costs at favorable interest
rates if the State could not guar-
entee rental incomes from filled
dorms? The university’s competi-
ition, with the State in the housing
business had to be eliminated. The
students would have to live in the
dorms or else.”
A high university administrator
said, ‘It would be veasy to prove
culpability between the State and
the University, ‘a financially de-
pendent arm of the State. Anoth-
er source in the administration
revealed that, “the university
wanted the dorms built. If student
housing, which wasn’t always
profitable, had to be discontinued
as a condition to state financing
of student dorms, then the apart-
ments had to be sold.” This topic
will be expanded in detail with
listings of losses sustained on all
FSA properties next Friday.
“Married international students
were given preferences in hous-
ing,” Ward’ explains, “because
their problems are not only conr
pounded by marriage and family
requirement, virtually ruling out
dorm life, but also because they
have come thousands of miles
and have different racial and cul-
tural backgrounds,
*with improvements; estamated
**1970,higher cost is total which includes pro-
vision for renewals and replacements- a higher tax
write-off, (paper expence) questionable for a not-
-for-profit organization.
“Students from the same coun-
try living together could share the
same dietary needs and require-
ments, speak the same language
together and share mutual cus-
toms,” Ward explained. The uni-
versity should provide housing to
allow the international students
‘there means to more readily a-
dapt to American life.
“Last year,” Ward continues,
“there were 41 married interna
tional students attending SUNY A.
I could only house 8 families in
FSA houses, If I had more houses,
I could fill them.”
Though the losses on these pro-
perties are sustained by FSA
--photos by hochberg
through profits largely derived
from services rendered to stu-
dents. One international student
sublet his apartment to other stu-
dents. He is, to my knowledge, the
only one to make a profit on an
FSA house in recent history. FSA
is now scheduled to remodel the
apartments at 211 Ontario to ac-
commodate four families instead
of the present two families. Since
there was no lease, this enter-
prising international’s capitalistic
exploit was legal. There are no
leases required of international
students other thana verbal agree-
ment. “The international student
office does not subsidize any
rents,” Ward said.
PAGE10
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
A rane F
PSYCH. ASSOC, MEETING
for sale
PSYCH. MAJORS
é& For Sale: 1970 Maverick Vinyl!
PROSPECTIVE MAJORS top, other features. 11,000 mi.
Phone 393-1923.
THURS, OCT. I4
7:30_PM
$5256 lifier-$85. Linde—457-8938.
LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!
Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet
During the non-snow off season the U.S. Women’s
Alpine Ski Team members go on the “Ski Team” diet
to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That’s tight—20
jounds in iv days! The basis of the diet is chemical
‘ood action and was devised by a famous Colorado
physician especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal
energy is maintained (very important!) while reduc-
ing. Nou keep ‘“‘full”—no starvation—because the diet
is designed that way! It’s a diet that is easy to follow
whether you work, travel or stay at home. : 3
This is, honestly a fantastically successful diet. If it
weren’t, the U.S. Women’s Ski Team wouldn’t be per-
mitted to use it! Right? So, give yourself the same
break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scien-
tific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other
diets, you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women’s
Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose
20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out
as a reminder. :
Send only $1.00 ($1.25 for Rush Service)—cash is
O.K.—to: Ski Team Diet, P.O. Box 15493, San
Diego, Calif. 92115. Don’t order unless you expect
to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that’s
what the Ski Team Diet will do!
For Sale: Fender-Princeton Amp-
For Sale: 1968 Barracuda Conv.,
economical 6 cyl. Standard with
many new parts asking $950.
785-4468.
For Sale: 1960 Falcon Wagon,
mechanically good, $125. 439-2496
Friday, Sunday Evening, Monday.
For Sale: 1962 Rambler, 4-door,
6 cyl., standard. $150. Call
861-6915.
For sale: 1966 Ford Galaxie, 2
door yellow hardtop, bucket seats,
auto trans, black vinyl top, excel-
lent condition, phone 1-584-1722.
ALBANY ‘STUDENT PRESS
i SELL YOUR USED OR UNWANTED ITEMS
$1 ST $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1
HELLMAN THEATRES
Just present your student I.
D, and Theatre I, D. cards, and
you get in for $1. Offer good
Monday Thru Thursday only,
except holidays,
CENTER TOWN
THEATRE THEATRE
Colonie 1 mile no, of
Shopping Latham
Center - rear Cirele
of Macy’s
459-2170
HELLMAN
THEATRE
Washington
Avenue
Across from
459-5300
For Sale: 64 Econoline Display
Van, good for camping, $450. Call
434-3895. crrred
For Sale: 1964 Ford Galaxie
Auto, good condition, clean. $275
Call 472-7506.
help wanted
Fix stereo? Will pay! Rich-
-7-5232.
Ride needed to and from Siena
college Oct. 13. Leave 7 p.m.,
return about 10 p.m. Call Steve
457-7806 or 457-6443.
housing
Roommate (girl) wanted: State
and Lark, Nov. 1. Call 434-2606.
GENUINE, HEAVY-DUTY
ARCTIC-COATS
All Men’s & Women’s Sizes
Available in
Green or Blue
Special Price: $32.95
AS LONG AS SUPPLY LASTS
CALL 457-3011
Yellow Submarine
is Coming
personals
Vicki cut her toenails today.
Happy Birthday D.H. Lawrence
(305) from T.S, Eliot and Elektra
(1802).
ACORN sends love to her mighty
Oak,
Gary from Harrisville, please call
Nancy, 7-7810.
SKI AUSTRIA—January
2January 18, Kzbuel, Innsbruck,
Badgastein. $289.50 includes 2
meals, all transportation, first class
hotels. Limited space so call soon
—Peggy, 457-7826.
lost and found
Lost Hu 123 Sept.30 bomb scare:
athletic case, sneakers, sweater and
tennis raquet. Please return. Des-
perate—on Women’s Varsity’. No
questions asked. Call Linda at
7-3028.
Lost: 1 wallet with $25 inside.
Wallet has Egyptian characters on
outside. Old dye. Sentimental
value—you can keep the money if
you want. Contact Colin Pohl.
Lost: Prescription sunglasses,
vicinity of Performing Arts Cen-
ter—*Reward*— Call Peter at
457-4996,
Found: Silver Ring outside Stu-
dent Center. Call: 434-3513,
Thinking about a School Ring
Look into the New Thing
Ask about the Talisman
When you talk to the
In brewing Bude, our choice
is to go all the way.
We hope beer matters
enough to you that you too
will go all the way...
with Budweiser.
Ring Man.
WHEN YOU SAY
Budweiser.
YOU'VE SAID IT ALL!
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. + ST. LOUIS.
Noe
will be available
Bookstore on
Oct. 13 and 14
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 11
Graffiti
ESKER
EKISNIEIS
Phoenix-Campus literary magazine-
needs your poetry, stories, essays,
ravings! Submit material to the box
‘on the CC information desk.
Nigeria 11th Independance Anniver-
sary Celebration presents an Authen-
tic dance pand from Nigeria plus the
Burundi Dance Group, at the St.
John’s Community Center, 37 So.
Ferry (off So. Pearl), on Oct. 16, 9
P.M. to Dawn. Tickets at the Campus
Center or at the gate. Students with
1.D. $2, others $3,
Peace Project offered Free Films for
the week Oct, 6th thru Oct. 13th.
Donations are gladly accepted. To-
night's showing is Once Upon a War,
and The Magician. Questions: call
Gerry 457-7927.
XLII NIHON ING,
Russian Club will present “Storm
Over Asia” an international award
-winning film tonight at 7:30 in LC-5,
All are welcome, No admission
Russian Club will present “Storm
Over Asia” an international award-
winning film tonight at 7:30 in LC-5.
All are welcome, No admission,
Experimental Theatre presents
Harold Pinter's Five Revue Sketches
Fri. Oct. 15, in the Arena Theatre at
4:00 P.M.
Parsec-Albany State’s Science Fic-
tion Magazine will have an interest
meeting Thurs., Oct. 14 in the Fire-
place Lounge. We need writers, edi-
tors, typists, layout people, etc, Come
if interested.
Photographer! Have a photograph
you think is terrific? Submit it to the
yearbook and you may be paid and
published. CC 305, 7-2116, or 7-8884,
Magician and/or Ghost Story Teller
wanted for Halloween party. If
interested contact Dutch Quad Board.
Call 7-745,
Speakers
Robert Danzig, Publisher, Times
Union and The Knickerbocker News
will speak on “Should the Media
Crusade for Certain Issues?”, tonight,
Oct. 12, at 8:00 P.M. in HU-129,
Albany State Science Fiction Soci-
ety meets Thursday nights, 7:30
the Fireside lounge, Guest Speaker:
Captain Gerdge of the Everything
Patrol.
Cathexis-Mrs. Edith Tashman will
speak about the Emotionally Dis-
turbed Child, Tues. Oct. 12, at 8:00
P.M. in LC-14, Admission is Free.
Assemblyman Neil Kelleher of Troy
will speak on the topic “Youth and
Politics” on Tues. Oct 12, HU 128,
8:00 P.M. Assemblyman Kelleher is a
noted critic of wastefulness in the SU
system and was recently nemed as the
outstanding conservationist in the As-
sembly.
TICKET HOURS WILL BE:
(Sold across from check cashing)
Busses leave from the circle at 4pm on Fridays
BUSSES WILL BE RUNNING BETWEEN SUNYA AND NEW YORK CITY
Monday 11-1
Wednesday 11-1
= and leave the driving to us’
Busses leave NYC at 4pm on Sundays
GO GREYHOUND
Tuesday 10-12:30
Thursday 10-2
Rennie Davis will speak noon, to-
morrow, behind the Campus Center.
In case of rain, in the CC Assembly
Hall. Workshop will follow.
Meetings
on
First SNO (Students of Nursing Or-
ganization) meeting wed. Oct. 13,
8:00 P.M. in BA 129 for all nursing
students. Refreshments served.
Meeting for students of Dept. of
Romance Languages Monday Oct. 18
at 3 P.M. in HU-290. We need student
es from every unit. Please
Students interested in student repre-
sentation in the English Dept! Meeting
Wed. Oct. 13 4:00 P.M, Humanities
Lounge HU-354,
Geology Club meeting Oct. 12, 7
P.M. in ES-245. All interested please
come. Important matters to be dis-
cussed.
There will be a meeting of Campus
Center Governing Board Wed. Oct. 13
at 7 P.M. in CC-367. All members
please attend.
Sailing Club meets every Tuesday 7
P.M. in CC-315, The club offers free
lessons and use of boats to all under-
graduates (and others in the university
community) if there is enough equip-
ment.
A Caucus on Women’s Rights at
SUNY will take place on Sat. Oct. 16,
1971, on the Albany campus in the
Campus Center Assembly Hall from
10 A.M. to 4 P.M. The major part of
the day will consist of workshops in
the following areas: 1-Day Care Cen-
ters, 2-Women’s Studies, 3-Relation-
ship between SUNY Caucus and Wo-
men’s Liberation, 4-Affirmative Ac-
tion Plan, 5-Job Bank, and 6-Accomp-
lishments of SUNY Caucus.
Panel:
Dick Brown—
ZPG ad PYE present a
- Panel Discussion:
Is Population Stabilization
Necessary?
Paul Meadows—
chairman of the Sociology dept.
Natain Wright Jr.—
chairman of Afro—American Studies
Edward Larow—
Biology; Siena College
Oct. 14 8:00pm LC—19
(there will be a short business meeting of .ZPG following the discussion)
moderator
MABou
Boutique,
Twpotted.
Chadha Seve
233
WASHINGTON Ave.
bony 434-3290
Society of Physics Students will
hold an open house meeting on | Wed.
Oct, 13, at 7:00 P.M, Tours of the
linear accelerator building and the
neutron generator will be held.
Marketing Club meetings will be
held each Wed. at 3:00 P.M. in the
Business Buitding, Rm. 365. All mem-
bers are urged to attend. New mem-
bers are welcome.
etc., etc...
All are welcome to join a candlelight
vigil 8P.M. Wed. out of concern for
the unmet needs of people every-
where,
Be a friend to someone who needs
you. LaSalle School for Boys needs
male students to spend only a few
hours a week with boys from ages 12
to 18 years. LaSalle is locate only one
block from the downtown campus.
Please call 489-4731- to be a friend,
Urban Vehicle Design Competition
Predecessor to the MIT “Clean Air Car
Race”. A steam engined low emission
vehicle is being jointly entered by
SUNYA and HVCC. We need students
to work on this project; especially
with skills in physics, control systems,
and computer operation. Leave infor-
mation in FA-218, Urban Vehicle mail
box.
Inter-Fraternity Rush (Registration
has been extended till Oct. 15. Rush-
ees may register between 11 and 1
next week in the CC Lobby.
WSUA News training has begun in
CC-316. Come to the studios any tyme
from 2-5 P.M. Monday to Friday Jar,
for another training time, call WSUA
at 457-6443 or Dave at 457-7990 or
Steve: at 457-7806. Feel free to come
in to CC-316 and watch a newsman on
the air at any time,.and ask ‘him
questions about operating our equip-
ment.
weeee
What has 30 wheels, 30 legs and runs
from north to south? To check your
answer, call Maddy (7-5238), or Jim
(7-5009) or Dianne (7-5237).
Job Interview Films will be shown in
the Placement Office on Oct. 18.
These films will give the student who
has not yet had a formal job interview
the opportunity to see exactly what it
is all about. Please sign up in the
Placement Office beforehand, to view
these films.
Woodstock
is Coming
FINAL SENIOR PORTRAITS
& RETAKES!!
INFORMAL DRESS...
Sign up now at the Campus Center
Information Desk (evening
appointments available on
Wednesday and Thursday)
PAGE 12
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
Mr. and Mrs. John Lennon in Syracuse
by Steve Aminoff
The following is the transcript
of one of the best press con-
ferences I've ever heard or read
about. My preconceived notions
about what such a gathering
would be like were very strong as
I entered the gorgeous Everson
Museum in Syracuse. I wastaken
aback by not only the opulence
with which food and cocktails
were served, but the scene of the
reception before the actual con-
ference, It struck me to be some-
thing out of one of those radical
chie parties, complete with the
straight people throwing expres-
sions like “Right on” and “Out-
a-sight” around, as well as your
few token longhairs (yours truly
and my photographer, Marty
Amerikaner, very much included).
John and Yoko were in good
spirits as they entered the theatre
section of the museum, where the
meeting was to be held. I managed
to ask how they felt, and John
said, “Nervous, as usual.” They
sat down, talked to each other for
a while and John sang a little “‘Is
everybody happy? You betcha life
we are?” instead of the customary
“Testing 1...2...3...4..." Some
courtesy poses tor the cameras,
and we're ready to begin:
YOKO: Hello. Thank you very
much for coming today. Most
people probably had to come
down from New York all the way
to here and I’m very grateful for
that. Many people would
probably question why we're do-
ing an art show anyway in a
museum, you know, because the
art world is supposed to be dead
and especially the museum scene
is a dead scene. And, now, when
the whole world is in such crisis,
why should we be doing an art
show in a museum? People are
starving in the East and all that
and it seems like a silly thing to
do.
JCHN; Nonetheless, my dear.
YOKO: I thought of that, too. I
was wondering why I’m still an
artist, why I still consider myself
an artist when my friends are
taking guns and ready to fight the
establishment and trying to
change the world as violent revo-
lutionaries.... And then I really
found myself thinking that I real-
ly don’t go for destruction. I'd
like to change the world too, but I
don’t want to take a gun todo it.
And many of us, especially our
generation, people are very im-
patient. Peace is not gonna come
unless all the violent feeling in the
world are completely gone and
that sounds like an idealistic, op-
timistic idea, but it can be done.
Peace is not a formal substance.
You can’t just have peace on a
surface. You have to dispense
with all violent feelings. The first
time a child learns about a feeling
is when he starts saying, “Mom-
my, mommy,” and mommy
doesn’t answer him, Then he
starts to hit mommy. That’s the
first violence that he learns and
that’s because he can’t communi-
cate with his mommy and the
same thing with everybody. All of
us has a desperate need for
communication. And I think this
world now has two classes. One is
the class that can communicate.
The other is the class that can’t
communicate for one reason or
another. They think the people
who can communicate are people
who are privileged. They’re
talented and they’re different, In
this show here, I’d like to prove
the fact that you don’t need
talent to be an artist. Artist is just
a frame of mind. Anybody can be
an, artist and anybody can
communicate if they’re desperate
enough, There’s no such thing as
imagination of artists. Imagination
would come out of necessity.
Even the best artsit, if they don’t
have the desperation, they would
be dried up and they won’t have
any imagination. So, there is no
talent, no professionalism, there’s
no nothing. All you have to do is
to be yourself.
This museum show is a show
that you will see of a very un-
talented artist who is just desper-
ate for communication, I hope
you will, after seeing this show,
realize your own bag and start
communicating because total
communication equals peace and
that is what I think artists can still
do to change the world.
(Applause).
JOHN: My statement
agree. ’ Thank you.
rYRESS: Yoko, Is it possible to
have a world without anxiety,
without fear, without hatred
through communication?
YOKO: Yes, definitely. But you
see, the communication media is
getting more and more developed,
but not yet. People are thinking,
“Well, they don’t have the con-
trol,” so they'll give it up, but we
have to find many ways of
communications, Just, don’t rely
on TV and radio only. There are
many other ways, we can do it.
PRESS: Would you say that
anyone can be an artist.
YOKO: Yes, definitely. Every-
body is an artist, you know.
PRESS: If I threw an apple or
an egg to the wall, can anybody
call that art?
YOKO: Yes. If that q would
communicate with somebody, if
that would move somebody, as
that would encourage somebody
else to do something else. Any-
thing is art if you can influence
people by it, you know, and if
you can communicate yourself
with it. Yes.
PRESS: I just want to say to
John that I love you very much.
JOHN: Well, thank you.
PRESS: How do you compare
film making with other forms of
media?
YOKO: I mean, it’s the same
thing, you know. I think that the
message is the medium, not the
is, ‘I
other way around.
PRESS: Where would you place
the audience in all this?
YOKO: We’re all audience and
we're all artists you know. I don’t
believe in just showing a lump of
some stone or something and that
this is art work, applauding some
sort of narcissism of the artist. I
believe in communicating in a
sense of allowing other people to
have experience.
PRESS: Why have you chosen
the Everson museum as your place
of communicating?
YOKO: I’m just very over-
whelmed by the museum itself
and I think Jim Harris was very
courageous in taking a chance on
me.
JOHN: They're in a week’s time,
is that right? The film show is in a
week’s time and the woman who
was surprised by the titles of
them, she has nothing to worry
about. “Erection” means the erec-
tion of a hotel.
YOKO: And rape is a con-
ceptual race. I mean, if the wo-
man thought that she had to hide
her catalogue from her children,
then I don’t know what she’s
doing with newspapers every day,
you know, because there’s lots of
things in papers that you can’t,
that you have to hide them.
PRESS: How do you feel about
someone like Charlie Manson be-
ing encouraged by this and calling
it his way of communicating?
YOKO: What you're saying is,
“Well, there are some people who
got hurt with the knife, you
know. They cut their fingers with
knives so let’s stop making knives,
let’s stop producing knives.
PRESS: What is your response
to those byproducts?
JOHN: Keep making knives.
PRESS: Who has influenced you
the most?
YOKO: Oh everthing—the sun,
the stars, the moon. Everything
has influenced me.
PRESS: One of the artists
you’ve worked with, Frank
Zappa, almost ridicules the idea of
world love. What was it like work-
ing with Zappa?
JOHN: Frank Zappa is a very
sensitive artist and whatever sort
of image he puts out is sort of
black, inverted political reasons
but it’s also for a laugh too, you
know, I mean but he’s a serious
artist, too, I mean, he was beauti-
ful, you know, but we performed
with him and we enjoyed it very
much,
PRESS: How does Yoko over-
turn the image of Japanese wo-
men being so subservient, you
know, washing your teeth and all
the rest of it.
YOKO: I never thought of
Japanese women as such so I
wouldn’t know, you know, It’s a
kind of Japanesque image that the
Westerns . would have, probably,
but I never thought of it from
that angle. I think that American
women are pretty subservient...
JOHN: The Japanese in the past
photos by
amerikaner
had a completely female domi-
nated society. I don’t know what
happened to it, but it was pretty
good when they had it.
YOKO: It’s still dominated by
women in a way...if I could ex-
press something I’ve seen in you,
John,
PRESS: Yoko, John, may I ex-
press something? Do you believe
that bi-sexuality
state, and that people just repress
their feelings? (Laughter).
JOHN: You've been seeing
things. Everyone’s got their own
bag, right?
PRESS: Were you angry or were
you sad when you wrote ‘How Do
You Sleep?’
JOHN: Both. “How Do You
Sleep” started off in a more ab-
stract form a year and a half ago
and then it just sort of formed
itself through anger and sadness.
It’s sort of like an outburst...and
my outburst in song,not any other
media at the moment, unless
you're into throwing eggs around.
PRESS: Why is this your first.
show?
MANAGER: I really think there
is a woman’s problem. In my own
past development, I got my own
education and in terms of the
museum scene in the country,
they are totally unfair.
YOKO: I have felt the pain of
being a woman in this society.
PRESS: Is there any religious
influence that has affected your
art, such as yoga?
YOKO: Not yoga so much, I’d
say Zen Buddhism has influenced
me greatly.
PRESS: Has the feelings which
inspired you to write, “Isolation”
changed?
JOHN: Well, Yoko and I still
feel the same. Yoko helped me
with that song, “Isolation” but
the credit was somehow misoft
due to chauvinism, probably on
my part. Occasionally, of course, I
feel difficulty on my _ part.
Occasionally I feel isolated, some-
times I don’t. But I’m like every-
body, else: Happy—sad—
isolated—everybody loves me—
everybody hated me—I love every-
body—I hate everybody. Same as
anybody else.
PRESS: Some people have men-
tioned you as the British Dylan...
JOHN: I’m not the British any-
thing.
PRESS: John, could you relate
your feelings on Attica?
JOHN: Attica was just a dis-
gusting piece of fascism.
(Applause).
PRESS: What’s the best way to
communicate?
YOKO: It’s all good. We try to
communicate on every level.
JOHN: In 66 positions.
PRESS: What was your relation-
ship with Dr. Janoff and how long
did you stay with him?
JOHN: It was a couple of
months. Therapy for me had
something. It was a bit musical for
me. The theory was a bit hokum-
pokum. It’s becoming a religion
is the natural ”
and he’s becoming like a god or
something.
PRESS: Too commercial?
JOHN: Commercial isn’t neces-
sarily a dirty word for me. He had
his theory and his therapy and it
worked well enough to have me
here and not at home.
PRESS: Which album has given
you the most satisfaction?
JOHN: I get the most satisfac-
tion out of any album I’m doing
Now.
PRESS: Ud like to wish John a
happy birthday.
PRESS: How would you teach a
child to communicate?
YOKO: You don’t have to teach
children—they know.
JOHN: Children don’t learn
communication; they unlearn it
gradually through the system. My
own child looked at some of the
art in our home and understood it
on his own child-like level.
PRESS: John, what was the thing
that caused you to become radica-
lized?
JOHN: It’s when did I not be-
come radical and find myself
again. I was always a radical be-
cause I was always getting into
trouble—that was radical enough,
whether it was school or society—
whatever it was. During the Beatle
hayday, it was hard to keep any
sense of reality about you. It was
my own sort of maze of madness.
Good and bad and that’s when I
lost contact with people. And
then through Yoko and things
that were happening to me any-
way I discovered myself again and
discovered I was a natural radical.
I'm not a Political Science major,
[I'm not an honor degree radical
philsopher, I don’t know anything
about Marx or any of them, All I
know is I was there. I considered
myself working class and I still
consider myself working class. I
know what it’s like down there.
PRESS: How did you feel about
those editorials printed about you
in the Syracuse newspapers?
JOHN: Sometimes I get angry
about nasty articles, sometimes I
get sad, and sometimes I have a
laugh. Of course I get com-
passionate once I get over the
initial surprise. 1 wonder about
like the woman who wrote that
she couldn’t show the film cata-
logue with the names Erection
Rape. All the others, names like
Give Peace a Chance, The’ Poppy
Orchards, very ordinary names,
but she couldn’t allow her child
to see the names Rape and Erec-
tion because our names were con-
nected to them, Pick up any
newspaper and there’s always
somebody erecting something and
always somebody raping some-
body. I hope you'll enjoy the
show. If you go to it calmly,
you'll understand what it means.
PRESS: John, what is your ulti-
mate goal in life?
JOHN: Our goal is for Yoko and
I to be happy and to make other
people happy through our
happiness.