Albany Student Press, Volume 60, Number 3, 1973 January 26

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Swimmers Lose

FRIDAY

Pups Win

Page 11

by Bill Heller

“We had to have it. Everyone
knew it wasn’t going to be
easy." These were the words of
John Quattrocehi as he and the
rest of the Danes f
stiffest challenge of the s
rebound from a 70:73 SUNYAC
loss to Buffalo State the night
before and beat tough Fredonia
on Saturday night, IF the Danes
didn't, their league record would
fall to |-2. and their chances of
postseason phiy would be dim
indeed

Things did not look promising,
for Albany, Against Buffalo

State, they had played poor
defense, had worse ballhandling
(8 turnovers), and hadn't
regained the services of either
Reggie Smith or Werner Kolln
The only bright spots in the very
disappointing loss were Byron
Miller (26 points) and. Troch
(20), Bob Rossi, who had I4, got
Jeg cramps and had to leave the
game in the final minute, And in
Fredonia, the Danes would tice
the third best defensive team in
the nation (50. pointy a game),
and also, a loud, mean crowd,

It looked like a breaking point
for the Danes, but they've ber

through so many before, This is
what is meant by that over-used
word, poise, Then there's Byron
Miller, the “make it/break it”
man for Albany. Byron’s come a
long way, and with every game
he seems destined to become the
leader of this team, He poured in
26 the night before, yet against
Fredonia, he would pe

lake care of the opposi

Bob Rossi was hot (18), but
Miller would be the difference
When the game was on the line,
and the season virtually hung in
the air, Mr, Miller was called
upon, Eventually, he would
finish with 20, but now At meant

nothing

The scoreboard showed
Fredonia 54 - Albany 53, One
second way left on the elock and
Byron had one and one to shoot
from the foul line. The crowd
was sereaming and. throwing
debris on the court. Even the
relf way nervous, ‘The first
Swish ~ the game way tied, the
second: in and out = it went to
overtime, ‘The extrt period was
just as seesaw ay the entire
game, But in the
Byron again: hitting the last four
points of the game to give the
Danes a sweet 62-58 win, They

did what they had to.

Lacrosse

There will be a meeting for all
interested in playing J.V, or Var
sity lacrosse this Wednesday
afternoon, January 24 at 4:00.
No expe in necessary

ting place is A.V. room
(inside wrestling room) on the
thied floor of the gym.

Wrestlers Win Second; Freshmen Star

by Kenneth Arduino

The Albany wrestling (eam
won ity second match by handily
beating Amherst in an away
match layt Saturday, The seore

5 2K 16 and Albany 1s iow

Helove the match, things
looked bleak ay Larry Mins
fated to anake weight and the
142 Ib. class would have to be
lortented This ay one weight
clasy that Albany tsually expeets
to win ay Mims ty undeteated
losing tt put Albany i the hole

A second problem ay that this
was the first match for the team
since December 1th Some indi
viduals wrestled in tournaments
but the whole team had not
This rustiness way going to be a

problem

Sparked by two pins by Dick
Moody (126 Ibs.) und than
Groysinan (134 Ibs.) and helped
hy w forfeit at 118 Ibs., Albany
hioke into a big lewd. But
‘Albany has had leads before and

the neavier wrestlers have failed
to hold at, but that was not to
happen. Jett Albrecht (150 Ibs ),
Tom Horn (158 ths), and Doug
Bauer (167 Ibs.) all won de
cisions and Rudy Vido added a
draw in the unlimited class to

wrap up Albany's scoring,

Couch Garcia was quite happy
with the team’s performance. He

singled out for praise the two
freshinen, Walt Katz and Ethan
Grossman. Katz, who won an a
forfeit, beat his would-be oppo:
nent in an exhibition match via a

pin in the second period

Grossman pinned his man in a
little over four minutes. Both

were praised by Gareia for dot

a job far better than expected

Tom Horn was also praised for
his work with only a half season

Horn came back this year in
great shape and has really helped

into Wrestling while being am
R.A. and carrying a full load of
credits
During the recess, a contingent
of Albany wrestlers pattictpated
in the MALT, wrestling tourna
ment which was won by Albany
& year ago, ‘This time the mat
men finished fourth, but Coact
Garcia was not disappointed.
calling this tournament a lot
tougher than last yeat with mote
schools competing amd better
teams He remarked that they
started wrestling at 1100 a.m
and finished at 1-15 aan. Jett
Albiecht and ‘Tom Horn finished
ugh for Albany, both taking
fourth
Coach Gareta alo praised his
Ninder his belt, ‘sistant Ted Peterson for hrs
fine job as a coach. Gareta was ill
and Peterson was able to step in
and do a great job

Undefeated captam Jeff Al- This Wednesday wrestling
recht kept his winning streak
praises his leader
ship ability and the time he puts

ch against Plattsburgh has
been postponed because of prob:
lems at Plattsburgh

PAGE TWELVE

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY. JANUARY 23, 1973

od baad

Page 11 : NTP yori, No.3 State Uniery of New Yorks Albery January 26, 1973

>

WAR TO END TOMORROW

by Robert Mayer

We were children innocently
attempting to reckon with a
world that was full of thingy
children didn’t understand. Our
elders understood many
had witnessed the bitterness of
war, Yet our elders for the most
part were Silent It was their
country, and their president, and
their sans that were wom to,
fight for their umque kind of
democracy. for a country that
never understood what democrt

ey was about
Sure, it was going te hike st Lot

to realige that somewhe

Iween mam and apple jue and

the American Maye there w

palin We were always Uh

guys. always ght and: morabty
san absolute Gad fashioned

rom Amenean democracy and

Aenean free enterprise And
who were aught that at

eally aid wot matter whethe
was blick or white, yew om

gentile, the amparsunt diff

was whether

Mail se when
wilt Far tatigues,
we traded our
minocence and grew: mp aver
We tned desparately te make
them listen to our pleas. We
challenged ther hypocrisy and
their silence Hut how could we
who did not understand what
power meant, challenge the pow

lenge those whe perpetuated it
We tried very hurd, and the s

Juise they protested

MeCarthy and Ken
after Richard Daley

mvolvement and will be rene

I's written in the ashes of the village towns we burned.
i's written in the empty beds of fathers unreturned
and the chocolate in the babies eyes will never understand

when you're white boots marching ina yellow land.

Phil Ochs

fool the angursh of
he witessed her
1 phine with on

thisty days Yet Mi datmsen did
mare te daadecmime Antec
unity than any other leader sine
hw Civil War He wits thas one: who
divided this nation inte dave
and Hawks and he way the one
whe 1 Freciaisee snithions
y behind the mad
That he
alin
nly mikes at mone dit icult
h tor separate ina trom,
Ameriin’s veale int Veetnna
And then there ty Richard Mil
house Nason. sell otdanedd
apostle ot peace, whe will new
prochain humselt as the aie nan
who has made the world sale
1 yeneration of peace’ Can
those parents whee suns ded
between last Oetaler and naw
justify Nexon’ “peace with her
"tle, Like his prredecessr
wall also hive with the knnwledge
that those who make wir ea
How an the
man whe know:
Is orders destrayed hosp
whools, and bulies shee at
night? dust as Vietnam will never
end for those who have lost the
comes they cherished most, it will
ver end for Richard Nix
Uill the day he
albatross.
round his
Phere is 01
tant matte

settle far a pwaee that would

nation seek 4 seapegoat”?
definition, those who
their country's allies in
“traitors. Are we who showed
our love for this country. by
saving her from barbarous. rai:
Will Richard Nixon thank us
for maybe having saved thou
nds of lives by applying prew
sure to end his war? No, he will
continue to speak for that Ame
fea which never understood th
there ww no such thing as “peace
with honr’, peace is honor. I
our protest made us traitors,
then let it be Emuch rather bea
traitor in the eyes of Mr, Nixon
than a son-ofabiteh in the eyes.
of God.

Inside The ASP

The War Ends With A Whimper

On Page 9 ...
POW handbook: ‘‘Lay it on me, dude...”

POW wives mark time
Peace comes: a rpundup

On Page 10...

A mobile glimpse at Viet culture

WO BRIE

International

OTTAWA AP — The Canadian government has
received invitations from each of the four com-
batants to take part in a cease-fire obwerver force in
Vietnam, the external affairs department announced
Thursday,

The invitations from Washington, Hanoi, Saigon
and the Viet Cong satisfy one of two conditions
External Affairs Minister Mitchell Sharp has placed
on Canadian patticipation in the observer force Tor
an initial 60 days,

‘The other condition remaining is the signing by all
four combatants of the peace agreements. That is
expected to take place Saturday.

Meanwhile, the defense department said 153
Canadian forces personnel are assembling in Mon:
iteal, ready to be flown to Vietnam a hoon us the
eabinet approves Canadian participation, formally.
‘The total number of Canadians expected to be sent
in 200

‘They Wil Not bd kn kre force.

SAIGON AP — A surge of enemy action during
the countdown for a conse fire has Killed dotene of
South Vietnumens soldiers and one Amerienn and
damaged an American warship,

"Twenly-iwo Viel Cong rockets blasted the Bic
Hon Ait Bose hear Saigon, killing the Amorieun and
the US. Comn ch sintcl,

The dead American, who wns wot identified, may
decude af we, About 1.000 Marine thir and sales

A US. Army helicopter wad at Bien How had

National
STONRWALL, ‘Tox AP

Lyndon B.dobnson was laid to est ‘Thursday iy the
ranch cemetery where his family

Feo days eather
Former Pestle

wry Nave
heen buried for theewquarters of y

He was a dismal afternoon, with ran falling and the
threat of snow, but just before the ceremonies. the
hoes began to clear somewhat ‘The Footing was
churned to mad by hometown folk and the nition
kFeat coming to pay Johnson heaniage

Here amidst these famitiar hilly and under these
expansive skies his earthly life has eon full eirele
said evangelist Billy Grau, une of dohnasen's
favorite ministers, uulogy

No one could ever understand Lyndon dolnsen
unless they understand the lind and the peuple
From which he came His counts were: deep ane this full
country, ‘They were alo deep un the relations
heritage Of this country,” the Rey De Gealan sate
WASHINGTON AP ‘The judqe sin the Watergate
political espronage trial said from the heal Wedies
day that Republicans have ao right to bug Dens
erie telephones ar hurglariae thew apponeats
allies

The Repubhewn —N. Commitive ts just
auother political onganaation.” US Distact Judge
John do Steiea said alter the yiry had left the

They don’) have all the rights of the werk What
do you think they would be saying 10 the Deaoeeat
did i to them? Siren asked: ddefenye attannes
Gerald Aleh

Any decent American, whether you hippen ta be
4 Democrat or Republican, deplores thi king 4
Sinea said“ know stand you know it
Sines, who sind he wy a Republican, made the

conduct
remarks argue for the eight ty

W. MeCord de was
king into the Democrats Party
headquarters last year and bugging telephone lies.

POUGHKE!
religious and sue
sie man hay charged eity officials with  diverimina
tion after he was escorted from a recent commen

Chauming fis hat has,
a black Poughkewp

couneil session for refuss
Johnson's complaint seeks to overtuen
rule prohibiting men from addressing Uh
with their hats on tn 4c he alleges the
without an Anglo

discriminates, against
backround
Johnson protested Mayor
that his refusal to remove his hat disrupted
decorum of the meeting He said the hat “has

k Keonomou's ruling

uugnifie relative to my identifiewtion to. the
black lifestyle and to black conserausness

“For me, wearing a hat has religious and socal
meaning in that iC is @ continuing expressing of
mourning for the injustices perpetrated again
black people by the bigots of this country,” he
sand

Bloodmobile Desires Donations

by Karen Klevanosky

Attention, everyone! Yes,
everyone! As long as you weigh
over 110 pounds, are reasonably
healthy, with no history of hepa-
titis, malaria or heart failure, and
haven't been on antibiotics for
the past two weeks, there's =
good chance you can donate
blood. The Red Cross Blood
mobile will accept your dona
tion of a pint of blood on
Tuesday, February 6 from 10
a.m, to 4 P.M, in the Campus
Center Ballroom.

Donating blood is quick and
simple. After a brief interview
and tests for weight, tempera
ture, blood pressure, and hemo
globin, one pint is taken. Since
the average adult has 10 to 12
pints of blood, you'll hardly
miss it! ‘The actual donation
takes less than 10 minutes. A
short rest and snack follows. The
entire visit tikes tess than sn
hour, And if you come int
morning and/or vall 157-7210
for an appointment, you won't
have to wait

He ned for donor blow has

twcent months, Blood! cullected

Team volunteer danas the

otfint Uspeviically, the

Viti), thts iver os a teen

dhomanid for ood. trnm vlan
A

Hrowth, sterwieal and
vances, ee panded
fariities, and. greater
blood component
There i san bineorematis
concenteation of hemaphilies
the Northeastern New

yt HI

Mn ye

area, and surgery for just one of
these individuals can require 600
units of cryoprecipitate,
processed from 600 donations.
‘There is a great number of leuke-
mia children barely hanging on
to life, and they need’a non-
ending supply of platelets, each
unit of which comes from one
pint of blood.

Whole blood is used to treat
severe shock or to replace blood
lost in an accident or due to
surgery. Whole blood is needed
for operations including open
heart surgery, the number of
which is increasing each week,
requiring 6 to 10 units (pints) of
fresh blood. Babies with Rh
problems are born every day
needing complete transfusions.
Kidney transplants, as well as
weekly blood therapy are a com:
mon e this area, Accident
victims must he accounted for,
and blood must be available to
save their lives

(On the average, the area blood
progam needs approximately
200 units of blood a day to keep
Functioning, and due to the re
Iuetance 6f potential donors,

they aften fall short of their

with 0 positive
sitive blood may assume
ne NPIS Ee WeRy
here should bee eneangh
hese Ly pes, andl
Uemendous, Bor

with Band AB

Blood P

type are so difficult to find,
There is no waste of dom
blood. The blood that
lected and processed goes im.
diately to fill specific order
patients in local and nation ul
hospitals. A small numityr
id on reserve ty

s. Many would rather not

give for fear their blow vill Ie
used for an abortion, ‘hy
the Red Cross eannot dicist
usage of blood, statistw

that in five years of operat

cases,

‘There is a personal advan
for you in donating bl
sides providing an essentvs
munity services (the safe
Program possible), de
satisfaction from helpiny

a life, people with a bh
donations have a pre
ceiving blood far them:

Northeast

If you know se
needs blood, ye
that you are
person, Howe

ter note that thi

fs committed
region with bl
those who need

Thi

"

hatede

cells. and plist
Sit wall ae

there anythin

INEXPENSIVE AND SLIGHTLY

PARMIGIAN

‘ LJ
Te Ghiin LASAGNA * BURGERS

CLAMS * SANDWICHES

mo GLZEB 1001

Chek Lali

eS F

PAGE TWO

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

WELCOMES YOU TO AN ITALIAN

AMILY FESTIVAL

TH SOME EXCITING NEW “GSTS,
d ‘Ail you can eat uff L

WESTERN AVENUE at FULLER ROAD

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

Bers Backs Waterman on Promo, Tenure

by Glenn von Nostitz

Psychology Professor Caroline
Waterman's tenure prospects
never appeared particularly fav:
orable.

So we were rather surprised at
an unusual turn of events in her
dragged-out controversy. It came
directly before the inters
recess in the form of a positive
recommendation from Melvin K.

memorandum labeled, “Action
by Associate Dean,” Bers clearly
sided with Dr. Waterman, saying
that she should receive both
tenure and promotion
‘This latest development came
on the heels of a negative recom:
mendation by Psychology De:
partment Chairman Robert
Teevan, along with a depart:
mental vole against the be:
leagured Assistant Professor.
Bers’ memorandum, copies of
which were given to Dr. Water:
man and I. Moyer Hunsberger,
an of the College of Arts and
k full of com:
sorely needs in her
file if she hopes to teach here
next year, Bers said that he hax

undergraduate
primarily

strongest in
teaching, the evide
being student testimonials to
that effect

He also touched on the other
four traditional evaluative eri
teria, including her “substantial
ability as a scholar’ and her
continuing energy and drive,”
qualities. which Bers. maintains

are conducive to continued im-
provement.

Throughout the memo the
Associate Dean emphasized un
dergraduate education as oppos:
ed to graduate programs, point:
ing out that nearly 80% of
SUNYA‘s students are in the
former category. He disagrees
with Department Chairman
Robert Teevan’s commitment to
“major attention to our graduate
program,” a commitment which
he says should not be pursued
“through the sacrifice of first
rate performers in the under-
graduate area.” Presumably, he
means people like Dr, Waterman
Prospects Somewhat Improved

With this highly favorable re-
commendation in her hands, ax
well as the recently released
Science Citation Index figures
working in her favor, Water
man's prospects for getting ten
ure seem to have improved
somewhat, But hat still isn’t

ing much
still faces Dean 1. Moyer

Hunsberger and his Faculty Per
sonnel Committee, as well as the
Couneil on Promotions and Con:
tinuing Appointments. ‘The ease
is expected to have its tou
going under Hunsbe
Dean has made some stat
recently which do not bode well
for the junior Psychology Prof

1 a negative recommendation
is expected soon from Huns:
berger and his committee. It is a
recommendation that will earry
much weight, since Hunsber;
has often been considered the

king-pin’’ of the tenure
machine.

‘And Wa
down the strongly negative letter

written by Dey

erman still must live

SALE

Over 300 flare
slacks. . . denim,

brushed cotton,
corduroys.
Were 8 "
to 15"

Ye OFF

THE HAVEN OF WELLS & COVERLY
STUYVESANT PLAZA

as the departmental vote against
giving her promotion and tenure.
In the transmittal letter, Teevan
said Waterman was “below aver-
age" in service above the depart-
mental level, and that her prod-
ucation of articles is “below
average” for a “tenured member
of a good department at the
University level." In a later,
supplementary transmittal letter,
the Chairman quoted "five facul
ly members" who said that her
“research reflects little origin:
ality,” “trivialization” and that
her work is of small significance.
Personality Produces Problems
But it seems the most difficult
obstacle in Dr. Waterman's path
is personality. According to
Associate Dean Bers, she is “out
spoken and active in support of
her views," but she “tends to
produce some discomfort among for continuing growth, But all of
those most supportive of — these factors in her favor seem
raditional academic conven (0 hold little significance in the
tions." Furthermore, Bers cited face of the personality problem.
facully members who said that ‘The issue of personality seems to
“her behavior is ‘disruptive'," It be obscuring those of teaching
was concluded by Bers in the and research,
So Hunsberger and colleagues
will have to dig deeply if they
¢ to unearth evidence that can

memorandum that Waterman is
4 “strong-willed — individual”
whose values and beliefs are
sometimes at “eonsiderabl used officially to diseredit
“with those “of many n. Personality clashes,
of her senior colleagues." and the “production of discon
Personality clishes are not, — fort” are not considered offici
however, a generally accepted evidence, Whether or not Huns:
evalu criteria, Whether a berger can justify a negative re
person is “liked” on a personal — commendation on the basis of
level is not an official evaluative (raditional eriteria, then, is what
yardstick, although it does seem we The report
io be a very important one of the Faculty. Personnel
Committee should be released

entering this case, Indeed, per
sonality so important soon,
Supporters Pleayed
What seems to be pleasing
Waterman supporters now ix nol
outstanding only the favorable recommend:
teacher, atin by Bers, but the fact that
and may show great potential — they are nat alone: There is

undergraduate

A Reminder

someone in the administrative
ranks who is on their side. Mel-
vin Bers agrees with them that
Waterman is extremely well
qualified in terms of the tradi-
ional criteria, and he has down:
played the personality issue,

Even if Hunsberger and
committee should decide to ar-
gue personality, claiming that
Waterman is “disruptive” or
"destructive," he will fice some
strong counterarguments
According to Asso vate Dean

my efforts to obtain ¢
dence that Professor Waterman's
‘disruptiveness’ is destructive
yielded little” and that “in many
cases the most serious incident
retailed by the faculty member
was embarrassingly trivial.”

So it looks as if all the official
evidence is on Caroline Water
man's side. That, however, does
not mean she will win her ease
Wh xood lesson on the
functioning of a university
bureaucracy

Aid Applications Available

extended from February 1 to,

Undergraduate Finanewl Aus
pruary 15, 1973

Applications have heen mailed

iawil’ wudbiue arent Additional applications for any
Hudenty recenving aid wall re

man available until Pebruary
OPPOSITE
MACY'S
459-2170

cowing aid The deadline tor
filing these applications hay been

THEATRE

IT WILL MOVE Cena STARTS
—MOVE THEM TRULY, THAT | "
—AS FEW FILMS EVER HAVE TOM Ww!

PAULINE KAEL [UNIVERSITY STUDENTS 10
New Yorker Magazine [WiPHOTO 10. mM 0

TAiadnite Wait Productions

(GED Group sates: 459-5300

taurine VAMING SHARING + HYABPINE SS!

ge HAERINESS IS SHARING Talented?

19TH in the offiee of fi
Business Ad:
ministration, Room 109

nancial wids,

Additiwnal National Direct
Hi Jonsey Loan monies are i

ble for spring se

New appheations will be ae
cepted aay well ax requests to
Increase existing NDS. Laitns.
Appheations available an BA

Keom 109)

All students tiling for New
York Huher Education Assest
unee Loans, for Spring 1973
must have applications on file in
Finanenl Aids prior to Feb
119 "Those receved after
His date wall he subject Lo new
mid more Comples processing
procedures

Auditions for TELETHON '73:

Jan 29

PINES 1S SHAHN

3 aa
TELETHON '73

SS ANIMA « DNIUWHS SESS ANIME +

IS SHARING

Feb 1

Time: 7 to 10 pm
Place:
EVERYONE WELCOME!

DNIUVHS SESS INIGUYTE s DNRUWS SLSSINISWHT +

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UNIUWHS SESE

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE THREE

piper an eteesiepe la saan

Legislative Shuffling; Rocky's Cards on Table

by Duval Snowden

On Wednesday, January 3, a
newly constituted New York
State Legislature convened, hear
ng the emphatic delivery of
Governor Rockefeller's fifteenth
State of the State message,

Each house met briefly, then
gathered in joint session to hear
the governor's speech, this time
urging, among numerous other
Proposals, a life-term sentence
with no hope of parole for drug
Pushers, some type of no-fault
automobile insurance, and a
take-over by the state of the
Medicaid affair,

Out with the old, in with the new

The opening of the session
brought many new faces to the
legislature and gave new faces to
otherwise old legislators.

Senator Warren M. Anderson
of Binghamton will wear the hat

as the new Majority Leader and
temporay President to succeed
former Senator Earl W. Brydges,
of Niagara Falls, who retired.

Senator John J. Marchi of
Staten Island will edge into his
new seat as Chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee.
Three new faces include flam-
boyant and outspoken Senators
Karen Bernstein, Carol Bellamy
and Mary Anne Krupsok

‘Things remain pretty much the
same in the Assembly as they
re-elected Assemblyman Perry B.
Duryea, Jr. from Montauk as
Speaker and Assemblyman John
Kingston of Westbury as Major:
ity Leader. Speaker Perry Dur
yea then named Assemblyman
James L. Emery of Geneseo as
Deputy Majority Leader and
Glen Harris, Caroga Lake, as

Wh

TELETHON '73
Personnel Interest Meeting

Anyone interested in working for Telethon this year:

{selling food, answering telephones or checking at the door,

come to a meeting, Tuesday,
“HAPPINESS IS SHARING”

Jan. 30 at 8:00 pm in LC 4.
so share your time and help

us make Telethon ‘73 the biggest ever!!
For info call Anne 7-8774 or Barbara 7-4012,

the inter
film

7:15
admission:

$.50 w/student tax

$1.00 w/out

Meanwhile, everything on the
other side of the fence remained
the same with Assemblyman
Stanley Steingut and his count:
erpart in the Senate remai
as Minority Leader in their res
peetive houses.

New Approach

‘The trumpet from Capitol Hill
this year comes in the form of a
get-tough policy with drug push
ers and addicts, stemming from
Governor Rockefeller's message
that the time has come “for
brutal honesty regarding nar
coties addiction”.

He continued to note that
“every possible approach to stop
addiction and save the addict
through treat
ment” has been hopeless. and
little if any cure
through a rehabilitative process

education and

‘Therefore, because of the com
bination of erime and drugs, six
basic points were outlined by
the Governor as guidelines for
his get-tough policy.

= =Any illegal traffic in hard
drugs would resullsin a penalty
of life in prison and would
forbid aeceptance of a plea to a
lesser charge, probation, parole,
and for suspension of sentence.

Crimes of violence committed
by persons under the influence
of hard drugs would measure up
to, and be provided with, the life

youthful offender in-

volved with the illegal traffic of

drugs would be subjected to the

. except that they

would be eligible for parole after
fifteen years

Imposition of a 100 per cent

same sentence

State tax on all goods, property,

or monies confi
of the lle
drug.

$1,000 cash reward foo
Person oF persons jr
formation leading tw the ny.
hension and convietion ut,
drug pusher.

Expansion of thy

 traftie of arg

Narcotic
Court structure

ations of
funds,

State and

So What Else is New
After the excitemen
Governor created
sage, the legislative bella
tinued with the ust us
of no-fault auto insucsnce
repeal of New York
abortion law=now
the Supreme
ruling, ne longer a

So what else rs nw

Pollution, Ignorance Threaten Pond

second of

feom

The following 1 the
4 twe part statement
SUNYAS  Eneronmental De
ersians Committee on the status
uf the campus pond

Prelim
ed students and studies by the
w York Stite Department of

¥ironmental Conservation (En
Con) have shows that the ps

water meets morgane standards
for demking water quality. pnw
vided the water i filtered and
chlormated Penudue testy pier
Formed for the campus infirmary
indieate: that the pond ty unsafe
for swimming and the Envir
mental Deesions Consmitter de
eomrages suel aetavities as skein
bond ts ted hy spree and

raunage ppes from the athlete
fields andl a parkiny bat 4
the pond to keep the water
supply high enouth tor srragatien
Purposes, No study at th

budget has ews ads wr
fF (Crom papes, es)
water, The hi

murky

that ate
important at

color whieh ini

following rain, ! .

A student project report on

group

funded by student tax

The Cinema of Japan

UGETSU

FRIDAY, JAN. 26

& 9:45

PAGE FOUR

evening- WOMAN O}
midnight-WHAT’S UP

some chemical properties of the
pond water found that oil

axe, perhaps from a parking lot
may be a problem in the leke
The EDC is discouraged by che
fact that much of this olf seems
to come from students who un
knowingly empty their crank
caw dramings into the parking
Jat dean tof the southwest lat)
which subsequently enters the
pond,

The EDC

encourages: student
studies of the pond,
We do not yet know the effect
of salt

und onl dramage an the

pena and its biota, If damage

Eran these substances iy proven

Hen one alternative would he bo
the
cam the

hy pie 1 with the: jape

Vesa Kinng bat

Stubs thy snd by
Gary Selwyn (chemistry mayor
clos OF 1971) show. siinifieant
ssvgen depletion in the seae
Haltom water caused by dee
ing Orgame matter natucally pre:
wat an the lake, Dredging of the
Jake may alleviate som
problem. ‘This

shy lakes, En Con my
fish stocking of
(1964.1970)
11971

trout
large-mouth bass
) and performed
two Fish surveys,

The first survey in 1965 show

state university of new
york at albany

Lecture Center 25
next week:

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

F THE DUNES
, TIGER LILLY?

ed youd eatebes
survey in 1971 she
only “trash fishy
dominantly. goldtot
population was

of emplantation
tains that th:

bass population
fish are linn
could be

With this
reafliems. 4

pond. std

Is Heal
hank
improvement ther

uch prrenced
Wer streangly: eh
Of the region
buildings and
Poses and urye that
any kind for ins:

We recommen th
use OFTHe pened a
for purposes af stil
cation by student
biological serene
mental stuche
ther interested
hot discouray
fishing or ot

Stood Unat a tase

the pond is fo

‘campus grounds

We foot that

function of the

dd environs is tht
ake steell

y matusral '

within ann
the busy. pressure
hfe to vigil the

The EDC tapes th
ment hay eberits
Variety of anprese
University cons
about the eames
hot have all
nly

ot the

fons Mastly, wea

students,

paul

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, |

Reactors Linked to
Diseases and Death

into it for its water.

In this case, too, Sternglass found another sudden
jump in the infant mortality rate for McKeesport:
rise of 57 per cent between 1964 and 1966~and
again increases were seen downstream along the
Ohio. This time the effects of the contamination
were seen in Pittsburgh.

In the two years following 1968, Sternglass found
a third rise in infant mortality that he laid to a
renewed increase in gaseous emissions from the
Bettis labs during that year.

It was easier to correlate infant mortality rates
with incrases in radioactive wastes because the
impact is far greater and more quickly seen on small
children than on adults, who can linger for years
with cancer or leukemia before dying. Radiation can
act on an infant's growth and
to immaturity at birth and lowered resistance to

A strong connection between radioactive wastes
from nuclear power plants and lethal affects upon
neighboring population centers has been found by a
University of Pittsburgh radiology professor. His
findings are helping arouse public resistance to the
construction of new reactors.

Dr. Ernest Sternglass, a specialist in the effects of
low level radiation on the human body at the
university's School of Medicine has recently released
a study linking nuclear waste discharges with in-
creased infant mortality rates and with serious adult
diseases.

Since then Sternglass has been into a new project
concerned with three wholly unexpected rises in
infant mortality in sections of Pittsburgh and in
nearby towns such as Aliquippa and McKeesport
since 1960. Sternglass blames each of these rises on
three excessive releases of radioactive wastes from
nuclear power facilities around Pittsburgh.

On April 3, 1960, a serious accident occurred at
Westinghouse Electric Corp.’s Waltz Mills Materials
ting Reactor on the Youghiogeny River som
from MeKeesport and 25 miles
Pittsburgh. It by a per,
ing of the radionctive core of the — Health
reactor, resulting in the creation of a lethal molten have a

‘The accident, unpublicized at the time for

obvious reasons, released an estimated 5000 curies
of “highly radioactive fresh fission products” which
their way and the He
ughiogeny River

ality rates in MeKeespart had dectined
$ per 1000 live births
weident

diseases,

doesn't mean thi

miles upstream nuel
“En

Stern,

upstream from was caused

intense over-h

and emphysema

found into the atmosphere found,

fver the 1950s tera rate of 23, respiratory

mn 1989; hur in 1960. the year the

contaminated the MeKeesport’s. water supply. the far the: sami

rate jumped te 6 and in 1961, soured 10 19.8

declining agin 1962 to 26,7 and in 196: 10

Stornulass said that ‘%e stmilar sharp peak im anfant way very low

mortality way observed: in the city of Aliquippa
10 miles further downsteeam from,
nye th

distance uf some 150,

MeKeesport, and for every county: al Ohio w reacts i

throughout thy whole pened (95962). on

was att overall decline in infant mortality for mal

ta andl Obi, Sterrnyelas

ssuelden rise in the

lu there was a waNeous — Huguesne Laight

Bettis
Located just outside of Pittsburgh an

nd hqu
Westunnghets
Laaboratenies

McKeesport

facility, the

Atamic Power
A gond portion of the wastes-whieh at

their worst never even exceeded the maximum — never

permissible limit set hy the AEC ended up in the

Monongahela at the poit where MeKeesport dips

WESTERN AVENUE

Gire

| {sammee Planning ———< 1973:

applications for conference assistants now available!

Applicanons for Conference Assisuint positions for
available in
130.

The

1 Planning Conference "73 are now

Student Lite

Sunn
the Office OL

futerested undergraduates are invited ta apply
smimitment of

Campus Center

position will inyolve a aniniman time c«
1973. AIL CALS will receive a

and board for the entire
deadline 15 February 5,
quired to attend ONE of

June 25 fo August 5,
salary of $X50.00. plus toe
conference petind. Applicat
1975. All applicanty ave

y titerest meetings. Phin to be present on
Sunday, January 21, 1973.40 7:00 i CC Ballroom, OR
Wednesday. January $1, 1975 at 7:00 in the Assembly
by Campus

two dat

imformation stop

addinenal

Hall, For

Center 130.
cat 262e 2eM2 O02 ABOARD OBR BOBBOAGRGAOE

But the ease of correlation with infant deaths

radioactive gases released from nuclear reactors and
r tests with diseases in
ronmental

ass concluded that such gases “may
us eff
diseases of Ue respiratory system such as bronchitis

effects of conventional chemical air pollutants.”
for instance,
testing in New Mexico between 1915 and 1950,
there was a sharp rixe of deaths due Lo noninfectious
diseases
Incredibly enough, that was duable the d.
diseases i the m
industrialized: state of
222 advent of nuctear testing, the nite for New Mexica

lass contends that the comp
not only app
Ih hazards they pore
purposely seri
equipment that will «
but at
(the builder of the

Pitisburh reactors) didi

well together 4

by John Covert/Alternative F

olism, leading

isn’t any evidence linking

In another
Human

adults,
Radiation and

‘on the incidence of chronic

equal or even exceed the

that along with nuclear

in that unpoltuted state

th rate
ch more heavily

New York. Prior to the

Efforts Fail to Curb Drug Use

Despite the use of 40 million pamphlets and posters, numerous
radio and TV spots, and 20 films, the government's educational
paing to stop Americans from taking Psychedelic drugs has

| failed, ‘This, conclusion was reached by two different studies

commissioned by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
According to Psychology Today (January, 1973), both research
teams~ one establishment-oriented and the other more closelt allied
with counter-culture views--contended that “psychedelic drugs have
positive effects on many users; and in the case of self-destructive
abuse, educational programs are now effe and potentially
harmful",

The report of the counter-culture research group declared that
“The search which young people pursue with psychedelic drugs can
be a highly moral, productive and personally fulfilling one.” The
establishment team suggested that “in place of prevention as a
reachable goal, drug use on the part of youth could be accepted ~-
especially marijuana use."

Financial Aid Not in Jeopardy

(ZN8) A special provision in Federal law which denies financial aid
to students who are convicted of a (quote) serious" crime has been
overturned by a Federal appeals court in Chicago.

‘The law has been commonly dubbed ‘The Agnew Provision"
because it had been strongly supported by Vice President Spiro
Agnew as means of disciplining unruly college students. The
three-judge appeals court panel handed down its decision in the case
of Jeanne Deloff of Chicago; Ms. Deloft’s Federal loan payments had
been stopped two years ago after she was arrested during an
R.O.T.C, sit-in at the University of Chicago campus to protest the
Cambodian invasion,

In overturning the law and ordering Ms, Deloff’s payments
reinstated, the judges criticized the phrase in the provision which
refers Lo (quote) “A Crime of a Serious Nature.” ‘The justices ruled
that the word "Serious" was legally vague, would have a different
meaning to different people und, therefore, was unconstitutionally
broad, David Goldberger of the American Civil Liberties Union
hailed the decision ax (quote) “one of the first to counter the
hysterical on Of congress to the student protests of the

1960's."
TAIT RDRA wine FINANCIAL Alb
FROM "UNRULY" STUDENTS?!
MAN, IF THAT REALLY TOOk
EFFECT EVERYONE WOULD,
BE LOOKIN’ FOR PART-TIME ys

WORK ay Act a

wily unconcerned

but that the
ping on safety
Westinghouse cham it can
Here waster,” say's
Of course, expensive, and
lwo new

1 for that

But then, profi and a concern for human hfe have

the United States

s Service

Winter
Film Festival

Janus Films presents:
the original
uncut version

unseen
for 35 years

JANUARY 27 & 28
at 7:30,9:15 pm.

}OX OFFICE

0

HOMEMADE
PIZZA

FRESH

Subs Chicken

Name Your Fixens

By the Pieces
Ice Cold
Bud! Soda!

Give A Call!

Hours Phones

Wed & Thurs 7:30-11:00 pm 457-3827
Fri & Sat = 8:00 pm-12:00 am or

Sunday 3:00-9:00 pm 457-3205
Campus Center

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE FIVE

arts and leisure ©

‘State University of New York at Albany January 26, 1973

AAS? /!

The Damned: What Nazism Was Like ;

War is Over

(pape ape

\s tim up
|

«/
aed
A

On Giving a

by Pat Curran

“You don't give a damn about
me, do you!

“And you think I feel the same
way about you, when my whole
purpose and goal is to serve you

"| do my best to make thw
campus, this ‘university com
munity’ a better place

Yet you hate me, You crite
cize and demean me. You dis
trust and despise me to the very
core, or ele you ignore me,
because | am what [am an
organization: Student Assocu:

tion.

If S.A. could talk, perhaps
that's what it would soy. Pethaps
it would aay, "I'm trying, but L
don't seem to be making many
people happy.”

But then, who cares about the
“third floor clique” of the
pus Center? Who cares whether
oF not those juvenile politicians
‘on Central Couneil give $159.59
to the Protowalling Club, or how
many bills Lampert vetoed this
week? A student pays his or her
$60 mandatory tax, and what
does he/she get from it?

All of this wouldn't be worth
writing about, or getting in
volved in exeept for the fact that
we'll face the same thing when
we enter “the outside world

organization and government to
solve our problems, others point
to government und say, “There
is the problem.”

Let's take a look ut Student
Awociation, assuming we'll give
fa damn ubout it for a few
minutes, at least, What's not
right ubout the organization’?
How many people really get
excited about the student gov:
ernment and the activities it

72 TOR Tay
ae ieee
ee Rea ate

1ORRNCE. AND MON
sig TARE

iF copies To Fest K
DAV.” BOY WHAT A SRUARY

cer
beat

5 THEY
tat Tl
18S

BE)
13 tow,

sponsors? Does anyone respect it
Ws & representative system which
can make things happen, and
bring about meaningful change?

‘Take a glance through Friday's
ASP. The biggest issues currently
seem to be: continued anti-war
actions, federal aid to dissident
students, the Waterman case--
none of which Student Associ
tion has uny direct contact with,
‘The paper also contains stories
on Wild Wild Weekend activities,
and athletic events, in addition
to numerous advertisements for
groups and happenings which are
funded by the student assess:
ment.

So what?!? Is 8.A., supposedly
the formal organization of the
student body, taking on the
tasks that will effect people's
lives (assuming that the Associa:
tion is basieally and potentially
good means of doing so)?

Granted, the SUNY Board of
‘Trustees hax cramped student
governments’ range of activity
by limiting the use of mundatory
student fees to educational,
social, and recreational pursuits,
und for the student media. While
loopholes presently may permit
governments to stretch the ‘Tras:
tees’ resolution lo accommodate
“questionable” projects, it is
clear to this writer that a volun
tury lax is by far the best anew
to these restrictions.

But what then? Suppo. S.A.
could extend its interests, Would
more students become excited

about what the Association's do
ing, oF would, in fuct, 8.4. fold
up becuuse people no longer ure
forced to support it finuncially?

It's no different in the “real

C
Damn

rad

yok gos
scar ka

world,” is it? Government casts
us more than its worth in view
of what we get in return, Poli
ticians are, at best, removed and
unresponsible, and at worst
downright corrupt. ‘The general
mood today is one of uninterest

“apathy” is the wrong word,
for it implies an obligation of
the individual to ask the govern
ment what it’s up to

We're saying, “The less govern
ment and I see of each other, the
better.”

In a “community” of our r
tively small size, especially an
educational munity,
should be much les willing to
accept anything short of an ideal
way of life. If the government
(student government, anyway)
isn’t what it ought to be, don't
ecept it! Rebuild or bury the
thing! If representatives are
neither seen nor heard, dump
‘em! Demand that they report
nd unswer for all the
If the system has stagna
it upside down! Why tolerate the
$60 mandatory activity asseas
ment when you're not satisfied
with the way it’s being spent!”!
And what of today, ut this
university? Will representatives
establish the ties with their con
stituents which may restore faith
in students’ ability to make
things happen? Cun elected atu
support af
they represent, gain
of the faculty and
Most impor
tantly, will S.A. become truly
the Associatio
this campus?
Before we'll yet affirmative
answers Lo these questions, we'll
all have to ‘give a collective
damn."

of students on

As we stand on the threshold of Mr. Nixon's “generation

of peace,” let us hope
futility of war. If we have learned this, then maybe our

that our nation has learned the

boys have not died in vain. We have witnessed in the last

ten years a steady deterioration of our national character

No one can measure the harm that this war inflicted on us

as a nation,
of people by forcing them to choose between conscien:

yet it divided us violently, alienating millions

and country

For many of us on this campus, Vietnam has been «
inuel a part of our lives as our education, Who can forget
the marches, the solidarity, the enthusiasm, thase Spriny
strikes, and anxious waiting while those we cared al
were awarded their lottery numbers. It will be difficult t
us to think of a world in which bombs don't deste:
hospitals and kill peasants working their rice paddies

What happens now will, of course, depend on ma
factors. We leave an ally that is not equiped co handle th
responsibility of self-government. The Thiew government
has always needed American business, American weapon
and American troops. It remains one of the most corrupt
governments in the world. We have invested so much
lives and money to support a man who has refused
abide by anything that even resembles democracy. Th
who bave opposed him in any way remain locked uy
inhuman cells, and Mr. Thiew has changed the stati
political prisoners to those of common criminals se he
keep them jailed

We can only hope now that there will be nem
Vietnams, and no more young men having wo fight th
wars of old bureaucrats and sick generals. We muse guard
against even the smallest U.S. involvement in the interna
affairs of smaller nations, Let us join the world in pea

instead of dividing it in war

Another Alternative

SUNYA's Jewish Student Coalition last Wednesday ny
held a meeting to discuss the possibility of publishing «
alternative campus newspaper. The people behind this 1
paper are yet uncertain whether co aim it at the avery
State student, of whether it ought to be  publil
expressly for Jewish students

In either case, the ASP welcomes this addition
campus media. No matter how hard any newspaper tr
naturally cannot be sufficient co satisfy all the needs of 1
several diverse groups to be found on this camp:
Consequently, the more media to be found at SUNYA.t
better served and informed the average SUNYA stud:
will be

PAGE SIX

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 197

In 1968, when Luchino Vis
conti was in New York to direct
“The Marriage of Figaro” at the
Metropolitan Opera House, he
observed, “I have the impression
that the ferment among young
people in thetLS. is more sincere
than pethaps it is elsewhere
Here the concrete protest against
the war in Vietnam is one 1 ean
understand. 1 tvel that protest
an be both benefiexal and nece
idler cettann condition:
Maat time Viscemny bat
ull 1 he
1 Wario Bess diana
HEC IS on Satueday
shy V
ue ol
vy making Damned
neritions who de nat
what Nazasmwas lke
uid In poring the
A responsibilty at Get
midustualisty wha helped
te the madness of the See
1 World War be backing Hitle
Uns film, the leaders of a vital
Meel empire choose profits and

with vital arms, Viseomts pomts
wt The young people must
miderstand that t asthe absence personal power rather than ob:

4 protest it constitutes the struct “that g 11 from Ber

vil anmy diama. tn hi

Sherman Will Play Liszt

Piewnted by SUNYA Pamsts, a toup of pane

tudenty aond faculty ar the State University of New
Y J Albany. Russell Sherman ay the fest mea
J patists and harpstclmandists whe will atte

toad swnety an the Capital

teddy His series will ponetall
Hiscussiane at the progeny a

the chamman ob the Pray departinent
6 Pigtail Conservatory al Music. Sher
Fopane at age eleven: wail bdwand
{ ynaduated trom Cohnnbia Univer

Fe be career, which Hay featured
Huy premieres tel pettonnances of comtemporary
appearances with mayor
6 York Philharmonic, Las

J the Delon Symphony, OF

webvesthay site
Angeles Symphony
jum, the New York Limes says, “His technical
ommuand ty sich that he qd lose fmself mm tis
uterpretations without concern about then dilticul
fies.” Gunther Schuller, the noted
snd ead at the New Englatnd Conserv
“Russell Sherman sone of the

ontemponary
composer
tony also has pute
most extiauidinanily accomplished
pianists of fs generation, Remarkably, he ay equally
skilled wn the contemponny and classtealvomante
Ineratures; an shott the adel piantytarnist
Aut altemnoun at keyboard music ty listed for

Maun Theatre, Pertormmg Atty Center, State Unive
sity of New York at Albany when pianist Russel
Sherman pettoms on Sunday, January 28. at 1-00
PM. bollowany
sion Tickets. $2.00 (students $100) at the box

cancer! there will be a diseuy

sitice AST ROUte
) consists entiely of branz
Sune 1941

Sherman's progt
Liset’s twelve “Transcendental tudes
when Jose Huth presented them, rarely has any
pianist in this county attempted to play all twelve
eludes at one concert, Sherman, however , leels that
the piece ts exactly the right length for a recital

cach hall bemg thity-ive to forty minutes long,

Meehan Needs Help

Kay y Mechan needs someone

really, but especuully
who can act and
sing Kay is the woman who
bingy shows to the Albany VA

Hospital and to homes for the

anyone

men and won

aged and infin all over the area
Kay has been performing tus
selfless task for over twenty
years now, and has gotten from
iConly the satisfaction tat she
is. making an unhappy person
happy. For, after all, what can
cone doin a hospital or a home?
If you have the time, please get
m touch with her, Thanks
Kay Mechan
25 Cardinal Avenue
Albany, N.Y. 12208

Tower East has King of Hearts this weekend as well.

Faculty/Student Baroque

“Baroque U1," a program featuring music by Telemann, Couperin,
Laillet and Bach, to be performed by faculty members from the
Music Department at the State University at Albany, opens the
Spring 1973. season at the Performing Arts Center on Monday
January 29, 8.30 PM in the Recital Hall

jaying are Marvin Morgenstern, violin, Irvin Gilman, Qute, Ruth
MeKee, bassoon, Rene Prins, oboe, and Findlay Cockrell, harp:
stehord

Included on this chamber music program will be the performance
of Johann Sebastian Bach's Brandenburg Concerto Number Sis,
Scored for two solo violas, and small chamber orchestra, the players
will be Ann Roggen and Valentina Charlap on solo viola, accom

ied by Elaine DeSorbo, Nancy Mack, Gail Smiley, David Huseh
and Findlay Cockrell on the coninuo harpsichord

The next concert at SUNYA's PAC will be Russell Sherman's
recital of the 12 Liszt Etudes for Piano, on Sunday, January 28th, at
37M. :

Twenty-four ho
forming Arts Cent

information service about events at the Per
is available by telephoning 457-8000.

| Albums: __.
| Miles Again

EBBIE THE EEP

view/comment/preview/comment/

Young View of Washington

by Bill Brina

The very mention of the name
Miles Davis conjures up a ka-
leidoscope of images that cover a
great deal of what's gone down
in jazz during the past twenty
years. from the Birth of the
Cool to the Fillmores and the
age of electric space jazz. Miles
was never the first to head off in
the next direction but he was
always the smartest; he'd move
when the timing was perfect and
he'd reap the rewards of success,
On The Comer (Columbia KC
31906) represents his latest
move; it’s a consolidation of the
street" music that kept slipping
in and out of the Live/Evil al-
bums, The personnel are un-
identified, but I'll go out on a
limb and make my guesses
Michael Henderson's on bass,
Keith Jarrett’s. the keyboard
man, and D'Nugu's the drum-
mer; there are others aboard and
on some multistracking, but for
that you'll have to ask Miles, To
discover where his latest diree-
tion in music will arrive at, you
might do well to ask him also,
Ivy all very
lean, and

Im not too sure
interesting,
muscled (like the man himself),
and more self-consciously black
than his earlier work has been
The multiple
ments ure very Afro- and not at
all Latin, If you're into avante
garde jazz you'll definitely want
this; if you're not, I'd suggest
starting somewhere else

spare

percussion seg:

Imitation, saith the sage, is the
most reliable sign of ee

That happy. situation
has come to pass for the Maha
party
guilty part is named
believe it or not, Good Gud
(Atlantic SD 7244), For an ob

success,

Vishnu Orchestra, and the
of the

NICORICICI ICICI NIMC

viously imitative band, Good
God isn’t bad. . .in fact, the
album makes a good introduc-
tion to the gente of electronic
Jazz-rock: The musicians are ex-
tremely competent, the arrange-
ments are very well laid out, and
the material outstanding.

Good God takes the Mahavish-
‘nu approach — total assault on
the sonic frontier — and slows it
down til it's almost mellow.
Drummer Hank Ransome and
keyboard man Cotton Kent keep
things moving while reedman
Greg Scott and guitarist Zeno
Sparkles front the music. Scott
has tons of technique but no
readily identifiable style; in the
context of Good God, that be-
comes, happily, an asset rather
than a liability, Guitarist Zeno
Sparkles is all style ~ 9/10 John
McLaughlin and 1/10 John Cip-
polina, His riffs were stolen from
the first John and his phrasing is
rather reminiscent of the second
John, but at least he picked the
best to rip off, and he does it
well, Those who are put off by
the dense ferocity of Mahavish:
nu may well find Good God
Kent,
until recently

more accessible. Sparkle:
Scott & Co, we
just unknown musicians in the
heartland of America
people of this caliber popping

to find

out of the woodwork is a most
encouraging sign

Merry Clayton at Union —

Jazz-soul songstress Merry Clayton will appear in concert at the

PR
eS

TALK ABOUT SCHEDULES}
TRY HAVING BAD GUT
YY FRIEND 4, 70
ATISTIC ON A

You

8th Step Calendar

id Albany, The Eighth Step ,

jena coffee house, The Frame
and Unele Ray’s have all ecaptur-
half of
the only American act to play at
the Icelandic Woodstock, held in
Summer of
he resides in

House the
lane, A self-styled student of
American and British folk music,
he concentrates on the early
country blues and ragtime artists
such as Blind Blake and Blind
Willie McTell, In addition, a trip
to England a few years ago has
provided a wealth of unknown
but interesting British tunes The weekend of Febr
His main in the aad 3, 1978, will fi
tuitar, which has been played — ¢tt appearing at the
since forever, however, he hi
been known to also perform on
the banjo, fiddle, piano and re folksinger uses mate
corder, For the past four years from all the traditions of fol
he has played clubs and coffee music 4
houses in such areas as Norfolk, his own unique sty
Va., Washington D.C. ean only be d
warding musi
What
uniq

od his talents, He is one

Reykjavik, in. the
1971, Presently
Cambridge, Mass. where
main diversion is learni
cereal commerieals

A psychology professor at Ya
Ed Trickett is
who

Boston
| experience.
makes ‘Trick
is his cone

Memorial Chapel of Union College Saturday, Jan, 27, at 8:50 PM

Comedian Robert Klein will open
ure avs We before the show at
Albany) and at Union

Ms. Clayton fust attracted atte

Jagger on the Rolling Stone's “Gimme Shelter

to be one of the finest singles ever
studio beginnings to attract
crowd-pleasing eng

held together by her magnetic stage personality =

p ever-growing following with dynaniie
ems all aver the
unique blend of all the musics she

the show. Tickets are $2.50, and
Van Curler’s (128 State Steet

APL

ion as the vocalist backing Mick

considered by many

released, Meniy went on from het foxidatiy

Albany Public Library's
TALK OF ‘THE MONTH sche
duled far Tuesd

country. Hee music as
"S Knlown or heen associated with February 6,

1215 pm Susan EL Spell

Ts olalefe s)5_ is)

starring

7:30 10:00

The Beguiled

Clint Eastwood

Fri. Jan 26

$.50 with tax & ID
$1.00 without

cua SINONOYOCIOOKONN IodaRiainEIg

SUNYA Cinema presents

LC 18

The Damned
Rated X

Sat Jan 27 only

7:30 10:00 LC 18

$.50 with tax & ID
$1.00 without

iso an excellent
Js result of being

1d transforms them using
into what
cribed as re

Color it’s many moods and its
will he discussed at
next

factor, combined with
musicianship mak;
ations that audience's easily
late to, His arrangements. 1
are different, in that they |
out what lies within the mus
and not additions of ext
material, His background es
from a musical family wih |
classical und folk traditions
youth he sang for several
in the choir of the Wash
Cathedral, From there he
to camp songs,
‘The Weavers and fin,
into the folk music

for intecpsret

to the mu

k counselor at Camp Cibola,
along the way he hus ws
the tra

All in all, it makes for on
esting evening.

U's style
ration on
song and insight into the
reflection of a person's fife that
is at the root of the song. This

Program time is 9:00 PM
Eighth Step on both mght
mission is $1.50 for

and $2.00 for non

Events

meyer, an inte
will speak on the (

of Color to the |
crowd at Harmanus Bleek:
brary, 19 Dove Si

Using fabrics,

treet
wall ja
Spellnw
thoes
a
single color. A
ator for May faie, Inc, M
meyer studied fine att at |

and then atte

1 hw

Ds
those planning tat
progeam mnvitedt
along a lunch, Coffe
provided by the Fre
Library.

OIRO

MUSIC

The Music of Joct Chas

Min SU
st

Tues Jan. 30
8:30 PM
Students $1.50

Director of Llec

Death in Venice will not be shown.
(We apologize for the inconvenience)

Te siete]

ae laoaesnGnincy

Saunt Agnes Schioul
216 Loudonville: Rest
Albany NY

For into please call 462

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 197

Acupuncture: A Good Point

WASHINGTON - If Americans
have been dazzled by the
amazing artistry of the Chinese
acrobatic team which has been
touring the country (and believe
me, they put on a magnificent
show), American doctors have
been equally dazzled by what
some have called the “'specta-
cular” effectiveness of acu
puncture, the ancient Chinese
needle * treatment which has
come into vogue of late here in
the U.S.

‘The idea, bizarre as it seems to
Western medical technology, is
that needles inserted at strate
points in the body can reli
pain and sometimes prevent or

often when

and drugs fail
among the
Seems to know why
works, but clearly

cur, iments,
modern science
No one
Chinese

acupuneturi
in many eases it doe

‘The American medical com
munity remains highly skeptical,
limited
experiments and research are

to say. the least, but

producing a few cautious con
Just last week, the chief of
training at

ology
shington Hospital Cen
mnounced that
have

ym Albert
30 patients
1 with acupuncture

been

at the

mid: December

says Dr, Alber, with

veular” eesuilts

wast American physicims
knowled

Albert primanly

ents cole as

puncture, Dr
stressed the treat
pain reliever
eave at at that

although acupuncture

eome paris of the world ix a

for such problems as asthin:

intestinal and digestive pe:

nnd skits eles
apunetiuriats dee aveat haste to
physie Lon Chins

women's forum

apparently they work closely
with medical doctors from the
start, There is disagreement over
the amount of training needed,
and estimates range from a
period of months to perhaps
three years,

‘Therein lies the problem for
Congress, Presently there is no
federal legislation regulating acu:
puncture and acupunturists, and
so far this year none has been
introduced. Since Congress has a
way of reacting to problems
rather than anticipating them,
the Senate Subcommittee on
Health the House Public
Health § should be
put on notice that stiff regu:
lations will he needed, and very
quickly

Already centers
are popping up in major metro
ion's

acupunctu
politan areas, th
cupital the Acupuni
of

December,

treating a high
patients Dr
Washing
swamped by
the treatment
hes will proceed slowly

are already: far

but stresses that
Clearly, there
too many eager patients and far

persons qualified to

provide the treatment, fn a
word, the almosphere is ripe for
con artists out to make a fast
buck at public expense before
regulations are effected and
udditional trained personnel can
be provided, much in the fashion
cureall cancer eliniex
much

f those
whieh caused so
heartbreak and suffering a few
15 hack

As Dr. Albert said

ise acupuncture after three days:

“You can't

f tenning have

amended that to say “you
shoulda't’, heeause only

prompt, effective regulations

will prevent some peaple trom

Queasy Congressmen

Dozens of congressmen may be
feeling a little queasy when they
return to the Capitol this month
‘The reason: Miles Laboratories,
the huge drug firm, has stopped
providing bushels of Alka-Seltzer
to 24 senators and 44 congres

men who are on the firm's
official gratuity list.

Confidential interoffice memos
in our possession reveal that, for
years, Miles Laboratories took
care of the sneezes, wheezes and
vitamin deficiencies of impor

Lcongressmen and other
Washington VIPs.

‘The Capitol Hill eare packages
which contained Alka-Seltzer,
vitamins and  bactine were
personally wrapped for the con
wressmen and their staffs

According to the

nate Repulican Leader Hug!
ait got a double allotment,
which he requested as his right
ful due after he was elevated
above the rank of a

memos,

ordinary
senator.
Last Mareh,

tories

however, Miles
abruptly cutoff
of free pills and

Labor
the fle
powders.
aceording to

he gifts were stopped,
Miles spokesman

G.N, Jolly, for a combination of
reasons. ‘The most compelling
was the new campaign financial
disclosure act which requires dis-
closure of any gift or combina:
tion of gifts which total $10 in
value,

‘The company was afraid all the
free medicine, if disclosed, might
appear improper.

Juggling Statisties~Top police
officials continue to lament the
current state of official crime
reporting in the United States
In Washington, D.C., for exam
ple, the Justice Department
claims the D.C, crime rate is
steadily declining, but » special
swuit of police department crime
statistics has revealew that many
D.C. crimes simply have not
heen reported. In Philadelphia,
meanwhile, official records. in
e that the rate of erime is
spirating upward,” But most
knowledgeable police officials
say that the crime wave is an
illusion caused by a uniform
system of crime reporting pul
io effect two years ago. Ax i
result, crimes not previously re
ported in Philadelphia are now

Married Women Back Women's Lib

York, Dee 20-Contrary
hohe

New
tw ¢ marred

mothers

yoals af the
pport the go

Ss Liberation Movement

alinost ay strongly ax women

who are unmaried, sock career
with their

fr are dissatisfied

lives, according to a survey
120,000 women released today
The survey, conducted by Hed
book mingazine and ceported in
ts current (danuary } tysue, tle

ie that ss
may be wrong ate averemphant
nig female sexual disgatinfaetiens
Nearly G0 at the

pondents, 745 af the

unbern
were between the ages of 20-and
edd a igh: depron et

their sexual cela

4 100 question
ire published by: the
st April the survey
alse
Nine out of ten women believe
that women are treated ty
ened cians citizens
full om

Mherhuud can satisfy most
yen ay tour feet th

Awareness of Diserin

Only 10%
Women whe partierpated in the
suevey sand that there is no real
ngainst wom

y, more than nme

diserumnation
On the conte
emit ot teat are aware that women
than men far dom the
Fully 94
the argument that
than

we wt oppeased
deserve le men
heeanse women are leas. reliable

workers, and 71 agreed: that

aus, newspapers, cull.

de women
portraying them
objects or mindless dally

But while most eespondents
ageeed that discrimination exists
they ddd not agree on how 10
end at Nearly ball sand that a
woman whi wisher Le overcat

must u
Hy

hersell, “working mdividu
prove ther) abilities and educate

The neat must popular
favored by ane woman
working with men
Only two

the women believed

stratexy,
a thee, was
i ongatazed groups
percent

that women should jum toget
in exclusively female groups t

fight disermnation,

FRIDAY JANUARY 26, 1973

Approval of Women’s Movement

The overwhelming majority of
the survey respondents said they
favor of the We
Movement

were the

Lewst
« than once, with
This: perce

among women
for the first time, to

in support
rise ta 6H"
marewd
divarced

among women.

79% among single
Most of the women (44%)
whe participated in the
their det

survey

have already made

ons Lo marry and have familwes,
snd the large majority (85% ) a

at toast eelatively satisfied with
this decision Therefore, they do
not feel that the W
tion Movement will have
effect on their fives, but they do
es will have

en's Liber
direct

think their daugh|
greater opportunities because of
The mayority of the respon
plan to
both sexes with similar a
tomy Asked a
tans to indicate whether boys
should be treated

dents sand they

and urls

differently while growing up, the

espondents said they would et
study

courage both sexes lo

medicine (45%), to
younger siblings (96%),
household chores (91%), to do.
gardening and chores
(44%).
Satisfaction in Traditional Role
72% of the respondents to
Redbook's survey said “the best
way for most women to develop,
their full potential" is to. take
jobs that most fulfill th
GR" of the wa

outside

individuals,
who quit their jobs when th
children were born were hi
to do so,
But since
the wome
full Ume motherhood ea
most women, Ht would seem
that they view muthering as a
lemporary career Neve
of the mucned wom
dents tothe

three out of four of
donot believe that
satisfy

and child
wid they are at
sd with this

and 76%
atively satis

loust 1
division of labor
The majority of women who
participated in the Redbook sur
vey, which the editors believe to
yest current sample of
ale opinion about women’s
didnot
’s organiza

s, also said they
belong to

showing up on the record hooks.

Deadly Sleighs—The winter
snowfalls are expected to bring
out more than one million snow:
mobiles, but owners are cau:
tioned that last winter over one
hundred people died and 6,000
were injured riding this modern
version of the one-horse-open-
sleigh, The safety hazards con-
tinue to worry federal regula-
tors.

IS FAMINE POSSIBLE? -
Government experts are quic'ly
expressing concern that the
United States may run short of
grain sometime in the 1970s.
‘American bins have been loaded
with so much surplus grain that
the idea of famine may seem
remote, However, foreign
nations - most notably India and
Russia - have come to rely on
the United States for their grain.
‘The expected run on U.S. grain
in the next few years could leave
this country dangerously short
To prevent this, the government
may soon start Lo bring millions
of reserve acreage back into pro:
duction

INCOME TAX DAY

a Fred Harris of
homa is now beginning to

w National Day of
Mourning for all Americans who
pay high income taxes. The day
of protest is tentatively
scheduled for April 15th, Harris
intends to make Income Tax
ay 1973 as dramatic as Earth

Day in 1970.

Silver Spoon Schools
Thousands of youngsters
attending the nation’s presti
tious private schools not only
have silver spoons in their
mouths but also, thanks to the
luxpayers, food to fill them:
Turkeys, flour, shortening,
rolled oats, raisins and more
peanut butter than the students
can consume are lavished on
those schools which register with
the Agriculture Department as
nonprofit and tax-exempt
‘A typical school, knowing
which side of its bread is
uttered, ix the Bemint School
of Deerfield, Mass, Bemint has
only 121 students from families
which well-to-do. in
order to afford the
$4,100-a-year tuition, Last
the Bemint School coll
$2,207.25 worth of food relief
at a cost of only $100 for its
delivery
John F. Downing, the business
director af the National Associa
tion of Independent Schools,
says he’s nut sure just how many
silverspoon
food.
them.

must be

of the nation
schools indulge in the fre
But he doesn't blame
They're merely trying, he
“Lo get everything they c
CIA ON GRASS « The Central
Intelligence Agency has quietly
joined the environmental move-
nt, As part of an experiment,
the CIA has Laken its excess
classified documents, mulched
them into a grey mass
hunded the mulch over to a West

Virginia firm to be converted
into fertilizer, What used to be
secret. documents hw
pouired over the strip-mined land
of West Virginia to revitalize the
earth, ‘The program appe
be successful. If the C!
out secret documents,
help the grass grow in
West Virginia

“ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 3A

preview/leisure/preview/ leisure/pre\iew/leisure/preview/leisure/, preview

Movies

Machismo in "Getaway"

it is their common struggle with
his fragile male ego that occupies
Peckinpah's attention for the

= Gremlin Billaae Gene Mater
ree ZERO WHO?
ZERO POPU— WHAT?
ZERO POPULATION GROWTH?
NeveR HARP oF IT!
wWHar Do You WANT ?

Since the Patroon Room is no longer serving
dinners, the ASP is without a prize for the
Crossword Puzzle Contest. We need practical

experience are supremacy and
humiliation; the world is divided
into cool professionals with class

by Pam and Michael Rosenthal
jervice

Friday, Jan. 26 Sunday, Jan. 28

ate your help. Please turn in any suggestions Alternative Features

Country Dance: New Fennig’s All-Star
String Band, Eighth Step Coffee House;
84 Chestnut Street.

Aldenberry Cinema: “Hunchback of
Notre Dame” with Lon Chaney, at 7:30
pm in the Waterbury Hall Main Lounge.
Admission is free.

Saturday, Jan. 27

Jenny Grit at Henways: sponsored by
Women’s Lib and Gay Alliance; 9:00 pm ,
$1.00 w/tax, $1.50 w/out

Electra: 7:30 pm in LC-7, &.75 w/tax,
$1.00 w/out. Sponsored by the Greek
Club.

King Kong: at SPAC, 7:30 and 9:15.

Albany Symphony and the Mahavishnu
Orchestra: in the SUNY Gym at 7:30 pm.
$2.50 w/tax, $4.00 w/out.

Russell Sherman, Pianist: sponsored by
the Music Dept., 3:00 pm in the Main
Theatre, $1,00 w/student 1D; $2.00
general admission.

Spencer Livingston, Blues: at Baxter's
Cafe, 810 Madison Avenue (between
Ontario and Quail) , 9:00 pm, Free

King Kong: at SPAC; 7:30 and 9:15.

Electra: 7:30 pm in LC-7, $.75 w/tax,
$1.00 w/out. Sponsored by the Greek
Club.

Walden Quad Board: return engagement
f “Reefer Madness” at 7:30, 9:00, and
10:30 in LC-18, Admission is $.75

On Campus
iFG

UGetsu”

Fri: 7:15, 9:45 in LO25

ower East

I*King of Hearts”
Fri&Sat: 7:00, 9:00,
in LC

11:00 Sat

Cinema 7
SUNYA Cinema

“The Beguiled”
Fri: 7:30, 10:00 in LO-1R
Delaware

(“The Damned"
at: 7:30, 10:00 in LEK

Diversion ae

“Secret War of Harry Frigg”

FrigeSat: 7:30, 9:30 in LC 1 — Fox Colonie

FRET
Sat

rid Sat: 7:00 & 9:30 LC 25

Peace Project

*Mash"*

Fri&Sat: 7:30, 10:00 in LO?

Fri&Sat: 7:

Sat Matinee,

“Ruling Class"
Fri: 7:00, 9:30
2:15,5:15. 8:15

Colonie Center (459.2170)

9:30

Movie Timetable

Circle Twin 785 $4x8

“Pete and Til
Pri®Sat: 7:15, 9:15

2:00 Sat. Matinee: 2:00

Towne (743-5539)

“Poseidon Adventure”
Fri: 7:15, 9:45
2:00, 8215,

TRS 125

“Young Winston” Sat
Fri&Sac: 7:00, 9:45

$O24714

“Deliverance”
30, 9:30
2:00, 8:00,

Hellman (459 5300)

“The Getaway”
FridSats 7:15. 9:30
Sat. Matinee: 2:00

10:30

Madison (484 5431

“Across 110th Street”
915
845

Fr: 7:15,

Cinema 1234 \159 x 300

“The Getaway’
FriW Sat: 7:00, 9:30
~The Getaway”
Frig Sat: 7:30.

459 1020

1776
Pr&Sate 7-00

losno

“MATS HT

Fri&Sats 7215

“Up the Sandbox”
0),

10:00

addressed to the Preview Editor, in the ASP

office CC 334.

i}
! 1
| '
| '

1
Js suggestions for a new prize and would appreci i
{3 \
\ \
\ \
\ \
\ 1

ASP Crossword Puzzle

7

ACROSS

Tribe emblem
Emotional Shock
Chewing Sound
acitten Grant
Short Foon
Accelerate

{Unavailable Energy
ek Underground

5 1955 Wurricane
Kine of Huns

ola

Fise Vanderbilt
Brewers Pitcher

* OF the Velum
Spanish Spo

8: Uenented: Var.
13: Conjunction
erfumed

i eager
the Unief

19; bale Shee!
22. Defane P
nset. state
t musical Tiece
281 Intrepia

President

7, Figure of speech

Todd

Pixed quantities

37 Radioactive elenent

38. Declination
39. Soil for Growi ne
40. Tells

41. excited (Colloy.)

42) Cld-fasnioned
45. High Landmass (1
8s Honshu Cit
49, s

52: United States (aver. )

53: Reddisn-brown
6. Practice (scot.)
Gram Poree Ban aeaaaeet ete

(Solution to last week's puzzle)

58: Goddens of mischier

It is difficult to disengage
The Getaway from the elaborate
mythologizing that has sur
rounded its production, ‘The
Steve McQueen-Ali MacGraw
backstage romance made no im:
pact, Taylor and Burton having
put that sort of thing out to
hoozy middle-aged pasture, But
the romance of the screen star
has been replaced by the equally
fantastic romance of the dir

tor, and right now, Sam Peckin
pah is the white hope of Amer

1 film-freedom

His considerable talent aside,
Peckinpah occupies this position
lirgely because he so enthusiay
tically plays the Hemingway role
of artist as brawny man-of
We learn from adulatory
Life and Rolling
Stone that he refers to himself as
Hi Jefe (the chief) and spins off
about the difference
women” and

tion,
sures in

between “real
pussy
The Getaway is
Peckinpah's epic poems te the
vulues of machismo as a moral
system, MeQueen, a jaited
bank robber asks MacGraw, his
, to make a deal for his
freedom with Ben
Johnson, Johnson has MeQueen

politician

sprut
off a bank, which he does; only
to discover (this is still «
early in the film, mind you) t
acGraw has been sleeping with
{ has arranged to kill
after the robbery’s
completion, Although she de
cides to kill Johnson instead,
McQueen's fragile male eyo has
ed a tremendous blow, und

Meetings:

Mandatory Newsmeeting
Mon, January
Mandatory Staff Meeting

Sun. February 4

PAGE 4A

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDA‘

ANUARY 26, 1973

29,9700 pin CL

10 $00 par in CO

rest of the film, while they run
from the police, Johnson's men
and McQueen's confederates on
the hold-up,

McQueen's first response is to
slap her silly (to the great delight
of half the audience). Thereafter
he broods, snaps, and generally
impairs their collective function
ing, until MaeGeaw
him te five and let fi

persuades
and they
drive off into the horizon in a
parodivally happy ending, their
marriage saved and half a million
dollars in their pockets,

On this comparatively feeble
Peckinpah

steueture tries to

heroie morality

pan relavons.

construct an
play about ho
fails to come off, for a variety of
The one that all the
reviewers have seized on is the
unbelievahility of Ali

complete
MacGraw

comes an like

oy a ‘Texas moll, She
1 Vogue model
being photographed
her Wellesley College cool
che

ong rus
ties,
uunruffled even by the w
ness of hee aching. 1s unfare
Uheee, and
seupwgeat MaeGraw for the fail

The part itself

however, 9 stop
wee of the film.
basally unphiyable, sien it re
(quires an active and responsive
Female presence ina steve where
the anty me 1» the

pursuit and: maint

wating fer
nee of viril
He as hardly
The Wad Bunch
jetwce and the one

weeidental that in
Peckinpah’s
bent
which his reputation rests, the

aren women outside uf bit
parts, Peckinpah views the world
Jockemroom

competition, The only poles of

ee |OC
WSUA ‘640

Coming Soon:

Beginning February 4th

“The Shadow”

Sundays at 11:00 pm

“The Lone Ranger’

Saturdays at 10:30 pm

Listen for the New Sound

coming soon to WSUA!

415

All members must attend

and style, and whiny punks who
are so far out of it they are
better off dead.

MacGraw is supposed to
her right to share McQueen's life
by proving that she belongs to
the former category, that she is
as superhuman and tough a dude
But you cannot have
super-human characters without
sub-human characters. ‘These are
provided in the subplot, con:
cerning McQueen's ex-accom:

couple he takes

Struthers appeurs to have been
waiting for years for some virile
outlaw to fuck her and humiliate
her w hushand, Wife and
outlaw bed down in a series of
motel rooms, but the real kicks
are provided by the presence of
the husband, tied to a chain and
frend i wateh, He finally puts:
an end to the dreary charade by
killing himself

Peckinpah: has generally he
ed the libe dd
not Kill off innocent bystanders
nymore Ob
dis do not
under his

critics,
in fight scenes:
viously, wimpy husba
fy as innocent
fact the implication is
1 of this world's nasti
hess could he avoided if there
“seal men

nd their women,

powerless

that in
in control

form,

The bitch of it all is that Sam
Peckinpah is a really brilliant
filmmaker, and if his work
weren't so suffocatingly masty, it
might be a pleasure to wateh,
The opening credit sequence is
knock-out. The whole is eut
pasted and occasionally
freeze-framed into an achi

that communicate
s tedium and frustra

few
minutes
MeQui
tion in the penitentiary like @
New Deal photograph from the
thirties.

Hut as Peckinpah’s stifling ob:
session with oneupmanship as i
way of life takes hold, the beate
tes of the film, and the
action sequences, become aby
stract. Whe ean really
fd about twa people you don't
much hike, escaping with a for

iat all deserve

na falls through,

hecause in Peckinpah's world of
ind superhumans there is
9 inter

sub
really 0
action.

Top Ten Albums

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1 urope

» Loggins and Messina

{Seventh Sojourn, Moody

Blue

4 Living in the Past, Jetio Lull

Why Dontcha, West Brace &
Lanny

ty Anthology, Steve Miler

Carasanverat, Santana

8 Demon in Disguise, Davul

Bromberg:

oor the Roses, Jom Mitchell

10 Rhymes and Reasons, Carole
King

& "Ask the ASP"

Many accuse Albany State of
being cold and unfeeling. The
impersonal aspects of the cam:
puis can overwhelm you at times,
especially when you have a
problem and ne ene to whom
you ean talk, Our purpose is
initiating this weekly column,
called Ask the Axp," ix, to
provide the means for open dis:
cussion of these varied problems
At this point, we should clarity
the types of problems with
which we feel we ean deal. At
one time or another, difficulties

whips and
with friends,
roommates, and parents, all of
which migh( seem to beunique to
yourself, However, these per
sonal problems are universal
Although a problem may appear
particular to only your own sit
ity, it is probably
ng experienced by many
others on this campus

You might wonder why four

Albany State students “th
all the answers.
don't, We ol
even psycho:

rine in hoy-qirl re
tolationships

psychologists
logy majors, We do not have the
traditional qualif that
most newspaper columnists of
this sor possess. But we have
encountered many such pro:
lems. We have gone through
them ourselves and ha

watched friends dot

You may not necessarily
but we
bjective
ive you

follow our advice,

to provide you with an

viewpoint and per

an insight into the

pussible solutions to your pro:

blem,
Letters

be sent to us in
care of “Ask the ASP," The
Albany Student Press, Cumpus
Conter 826.

Dear Ask the ASP,”

1 first met Diana (false name)
when she was going out with my
years ago. 1 fell
and have

beat friend thre
1 love with her th
love with her ever since
always considered
as of her closest
* and was constantly
confiding in me about all her
new boyfriends and asking me
fr advice. Needless to say, this
pained me very much, but Twas
willing to put up with it in order
that I could see her now and
then.
AL the present time,
beginning to show some affee
tion toward me. Do you think 1

friends,

she is

should be hopeful that our rela
tionship has a chance of growing
from friendship into love? §,H.

Dear SH,
‘As hard as this might be for
you to aecept, we think that it is
your best interests to forget
yy three yeurs
ul the role of
life and it is

th of time, You said sk
has no steady boyfriend now
‘Therefore, she might be lonely
and that could be the reason she
ix showing you affection, The
only way to “get over’ her
would probably be not to see
her for a substantial period of
time, We know this will be
difficult for you, but as we see
it, this relationship really has no
future

Dear
A good friend
having a running argument in
regards to the way we view our
respective parents. 1 feel I have a
fairly yood relationship with my
parents, So (she claims) does
she. ‘The difference is that Lam
closed-mouthed about many of
my actions when speaking to my
parents. She tends to tell her
parents everything (whether it
angers them or not). She claims
honesty is best, I feel it’s none
of my parents’ business what 1
do, Who do you feel is right?

“awh the ASP.
nd 1 have been

Dear EM.
Can your parents be your
friends? ‘This seems to be the
question at the root of your
argument. 1 believe thi
a qualified yes. ‘They can be,
the parental instinct to protect
perhaps dominate prevents
them from being good friends,
Just as you would not usually
confide completely in someone
who is a casual friend, you
would naturally not tell your
parents “everything.” Neither
extreme you mention is com
jotely right. Talking to parents
ives you the opportunity to get
viewpoint, a now
student, non-young opinion so
difficult to find in this university
community. However, there are
rain decisions and actions
which, if known to your parents,
would elicit parental pressure or
se un sary anger and up:
«You must ider the
possible consequences when
deciding what and what not to
tell your parents.

another

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 5A

Inside the Sci-Fi World

by Bob Gallo

‘A light drizzle fell on Manhat-
tan as | walked towards the
Hotel Commodore, site of the
INFINITY CON: an unusual
composite convention en-
compassing science fiction,
science, occult, comics and
horror.

‘After registering, 1 went
through the dealers rooms. Here
one was able to find a wide
selection of new and. slightly
used science fiction books, SF
and horror movie stills, 35mm
clips. posters and magazines,
thousands of comics, occult
magazines and devices,.even
genuine tribbles. Science books,
SF histories and SF criticisms
were also represented,

That night, author Frederick
Poh gave a short and lively talk
on “Population Levels of the
Future.” Following Pohl was a
woman who talked about and
demonstrated” “Psyehie Act
puncture” At the risk of
sounding  closed-minded, she
seemed 10 be a complete crack
por Her silence-oriented
“demonstation™)" Wats ne
Uoubtedly the come high point
of the convention ay she staked
4 subject's arm and waved het
hands mystieatly in Hront of the
10 minutes
(with no visible effect) Atlin

subject's lace toe
progam of honor and: super
atural filiny bewane a) 80

On Saturday the 20th, my
friends and 1 retumed to exam
ine the att display which lee
tured onanal Sk. fantasy, and
connie ant an yaniouy mediums: hn
the Commndore’s Grand Ball
Keith
Lauer esteemed SP water
spoke on Mil Over Matter

Although shy and

room, Guest of Honor

Laumer made excellent pouty

Jor ty antyoceult stand

ASO Double Bill

The Albany Symphony: Popy
under the direction ot dulius
Hepys will perforin a double bill
with the
with John MeLaughhin andthe
Mahavishnu Quehestra at the
SUNYA gym Sunday January
2X, Doors npen at 730 PM

The Symphony having just
completed a “SOLD OUT" Paps
at the Palace Theatre way invited
to bring some of the same work,
SUNYA Campus. the
include Willi
Morton Goukd
Family: Album, the very success
Hil Many Lombardo Variations
ina Mod
gytmphony mv the rack anon

popular rack yroup

to the
progam will
Tell Overture

Mood, suite tot

The program will also include
suangenenty of popular tunes
and by request the
Symphony will pertorin Re
spighit's Pines of Rome

Saxophionst Paul Aldi wall te
peat hus perlormance of thers

pectal

Concerts

Ticket are on sale at the Cam
pus Center at the State Univer
Sty Tickets will also be avail
able at the Albany Symphony
Othe, 1Y Clinton Avenue. The
price 5 94,00 for general adims
Fron and 92.50 for SUNYA stu
dents

Speaking with him afterwards,
I asked how his farcical stories
of Jame Retief of the Corps
Diplomatique Terrestrienne
related to his experiences in the
Foreign Service. {t seems that
Laumer was not too impressed
with the Foreign Service and
concluded by saying that it was
no wonder that this country was
in such sad diplomatic state . The
man is amazingly cynical, reply-
ing to an arriving Isaac Asimov's
jovial “Keith, how are you?”
with a completely serious
breathe in: | breathe out.”

While a panel which included
Ron Goulart and Hans Stefan
Santesson diseussed21st Cent
ty Man” anda filmand discussion
on “Black Holes and Space
Warps” proceeded, friends and |
talked with Asimoy on military
history, The Foundation Trilo}

and The Gods Themselves.
seems Asimov likes his The Gods
Themselves best, perhaps be-
cause it answered critics who
claimed he could not deal with
non-human main characters
Following a session on “Myths
and Legends in Modern SF” was
an excellent talk and slide show
‘on Lasers and Holography. Up-
stairs a large exhibit of
holograms was opened. Perhaps
most interesting in the talk was
the advancement of the idea that
holography could be used to
create an an invisibility sereen
Since hologams. beside being
able to reproduce color and
brightness like standard photo:
graphs, can reproduce the angles
from whieh light comes, a man
could conceivably be surrounded
by a cylindrical sereen which
could holographically duplicate

the image behind it ( in full 3D )
and render the man effectively
invisible.

‘That evening, following a Cos-
tume Call, films were shown. A
film on assorted movie mad
scientists preceeded a Superman
episode never shown on tele-
vision and a reel of Star Trek
“Bloopers.” These are a collec
tion of “outakes” from the
series, edited together by the
production crew at the end of
every season and showing us that
botching
jound and
walking into Enterprise doors
which didn’t always open on

tors are people too
their lines, fooling

Sunday was the big dayfor the
convention as after a talk on

Academia” — Isaac
Asimov

“SF and
Asimov stoke show
started out by

What Public Broadcasting
is Offering Albany

Kid. Note, Channel 1

ay, Jor some tine new, been providing the

Albany area with the only acceptable TV programming. We will
continue to publish their releases as they come in, and urge You to
financially: support the station aswe have done. Their ste support is

private ~ lend them hand

One of the most illustriony names of filmdonr in the [inities comes

to Channel 17 Briday

January 26, when Douglas Batbanks Je. stars

in "Cathenne the Great" Elizabeth Bernier has the title role

Fairbanks plays Archduke Peter. nephew of kinpress Elizabeth

Who martes Catherme at the Empress’ command, but then teaves bis

bride fora former mustresson then wedding night

Catherine ty broken-hearted, but cont

ties to love hee husband

and eventually the Linpress blizabeth tikes her side ayarist Peter

When the
Aungdenn

Fipiesy dies

her love

snd Catherine

far Peter ty 90 strong that she would idly

sacrifiee her crown te fave The man she loves

Released nm 1938

great tihny trom that era berg revived on Channel 17
shows fo alternate view ye oni Sunday

‘Catherine the Great” ty

me aba series ol 2
Ht wall be

Januaty 28-at 5 pan

The Lilie sees, an evelusive focal afteringe ot WMETE EY. ry anade

porsible by membership domatiaps te the station

Jean Renwor's ananterpiece
of the greatest lly it the
WME Channel 17 Saturday

Gand tlusian

acknowledged as ete

Instory ob the emema, will an on

aX pin

Grand Masson’? as Renon’s epitaph tor the traditions of nobility

Js poent fot peace abeut Une fitality at wat

Made ne PEST just one year belore Hitlers arumey begate ter anttely

actors Euan

the stony es set an Work War EH ansolves a group ot

Prenct atticers bere hell prisoner by the Gera

Connnatuder at the privet campy betel von Strabeun wher gives a

Hawerng perlarmaniee ay an tnist

kind of “gentleman atticer

heotherhowd ab nobility with one al Hs prisoner

fate unartitieh Wh

is doomed Stohenn a

Kaos that hn
aptor feels the

Gannot understand how hey comterpart ny eaper ter shatter the grand

usin of his rank when the prvenets try to escape

Goand Mlusion
appears on the

support at its viewers

et the Channel 7
stea’s wally public televiyon

Talis Outy ssey sees

Station through: the

Modern scence will Lamnel: viewers inte the mysteries of aute

space and explore the hilhion year hte history af the Universe on the

PBS progean “Buth and Death of a Star’ at

January 29,0n Channel 17

This glimpse ante the cosmic ite span literally star studded
show, was produced by KCET, Los: Angeles in

Amersean Institute of Phystes

y pam Monday

Making wide use al specuil elfects photogrphy, Dr John A

Wheeler, a Prin

Iibutor to eatly research ite tiuclear physics,
scwnnitic colleagues will explain the latest knowledge of the stars

ay Unversity Professor at Physics and a con

ssocnabion wath the

and five ot tas,

that man hay been aecumulatinng
Followingthe premier of “Birth
film will be made available tor
and. service organizations
How are stars born, how do th
they die? Measured ont huntal
hut on a cosmic seale of by
mysterious evolutionary. prsiee
nants become part of the debris
the making at new slaty, Slowly
distant fate
Buth and Death at a Su

Angeles, am aysnctat
Hranynitted nationally by the
made possible by at grant fen t
naske wath the cooperation of Uh
Observatory, National Astione
National Radin Astionomy Obse

David Uatberstam the Puli

show US involvement ne Vietnam, “The Maku

wax ane cat the first atid best analysey of Amener
Book Heat hoomiy

Vommininent, wall appear on

4 M0 pan on the Pubhe Brsadea
Halberstiant will discuss
longawatted book an Amenea
host Robert Crome on the pro
Halberstam’sbook ty the sty
snd bughtest nen in the count
Presilenty and exeseised or ta
He hay drawn indepth prota
the Kennedy ena Robert MeN
Burnly Dean Rusk. George BB.
Laylor and Presidents Kenedy
But the book wy more than a ¥
the decistanimaking process
present posttuan in Viet
Halberstan
war in Vietnam toe the New Yor

won the Pulitzer

A thn wudaptation of ther
Hiudge of Sati Luty Rey." will att
110 sO pan

Staring a the 1944 move ate
Cathey and Akin Lamu 1
wre urtled to then doom ia

did i etumible just at that monet
und a pest ssdeeply alfected by
He decides to make a study of
whether he ©
Mortals ito eternity at precisely
“Lhe Budge of Sun Luts Rey

Channel 17 which y presented

station

cruise to see the Apollo 17
launch, spoke on the space pro-
gram and then advanced a
thought provoking hypothesis.

Consider the moon in the distant
past being captured by the earth,
and the great tides caused by it
producing evolutionary pressure
on sea life. which then washed
up on land to effect an adanta

tion to land life and subsequent
intelligence

All in all, the convention was
an excellent experience; a
chance to come in contact with
new ideas of science and science
fiction;a chance to hear and talk
writers like Asimov,
Laumer, Moskowitz, del Rey
Gerrold, Goulart, Pohl and
others, All in all, a greatly

with

describing his rewarding experience

over the fast tew decades,
y and Death of a Star,” the half-hour

owing to schools and. varies civic

ey hive out then hives, and how dh
1h tine Seale, stars: seem everlasting
years they ane part of

then burnout rem

ions. of
ss Stars die
of space, and that debris goes

they evolve into some unknown and

KCL. Los

a” was. produced by

1 with the Ameniean Enstitute of Phystes and

Pubhe Broadcasting Service. 1 was

le National Setence Foundati

ale Obyervatunies, Kitt Peak Nat

smy and tonosphere Center

tvalory

ter Prize-winning onunnalist whose

of a Quagamne

Asian
Jamuary SP at

sting Service

The Best and the

in the last decade, with Hook Beat

Buphtest he

tant anted locally on Channel 17
ny of what happened when the est
ty came to Washington by serve 18
ed Lo exeerve. shen power iy ett
ity af the men whee came be power ay
jamata, McG Wallis
all, Willams Westuvreland. Maxwell

ge Bundy

jeune of portals [aya narrative

hy which the nation anived at 1
Pare iy 1964 tor fies reporting ot the

tk Lanes

nite Wilde's «Lasse
a Channel 1

novel Tk

Duiday. bebritaty
Franay Federer, Lynn Bart, Lou
he stary concerns hve persons whe
deep gorge when an agesald bridge
they are crosamg suddenly collapses Why. alter thunteds of years.
1? The acetdent creates a sensation
the catastrophe

the tiv

oof the victims ty determine

find some clue to God's imtention an casting tive

the same moment
fone of aseries af featine films on

through viewer contributions to the

PAGE 6A

ALBANY STUDENT PRE

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

OFFICIAL NOTICE

INTERESTED FOLK

Students calling other students in
the Infirmary should use 459-9725.

Degree Applicants: Students ex
pecting to graduate in May must file
‘9 doqree application no later than
Friday, February 9, 1973. Applica
hons and forms may be obtained at
the Registrar's office, degree
earance, Adm, bldg B3 Com
piered applications should be ve
utnwd to the same office

None toall faculty. stall, students

nqunizations who have univer:
sity rented post office boxes Kent
tor sping samester, 1973, if nat
atready pid, os due by 1/30/73 Ht

Fo haves any questions cate
1 the SUNY P.

job interview films
Hannay 23, 1976 at 400
Feucational Corn

Hoom SB 13

POWIMIA info. 08 tye ston
tt Gal Kol at 4h

1s 1104 Lavan

MAJORS & MINORS

DELTA SIGMA PI wus \1" School
of Business swe cmsion

1 at VW puns Platsehay, 44
wy 1 WA Mos tonne Profits and

Productenty.

DELTA SIGMA PI

Atenton business students

Lambda \

1 Guotogy Chub

tii ol ae Alliance Fae

Care oh AMatey Hershey bay oh
AAs pone as tha Assuntty Hall ot

" 1 Aux Quatre coms da
langage: do Vu

manthe anglaise.

ante sglase 4 ta

Leamue 4 is touking fi a mate or
female bowler, | wry Mistutay night
at 9.00, 1 nt

TAZ.

Tw Students International Med
itation Saciety vill juewnt at inter

Transconwtental

body language
Y mudity 0

Canwra/Phata Clubs

Recant Cow)

dancing, testa poetry, announcing

OFF Camus Pabherty

Telethon,

Tetetun 14

Can you spare two hours for Tele
thon ‘73. (Feb 23-24)? Volunteers
needed to answer phones, sell food,
work at door, run errands, Interest
meeting Tuesday, Jan, 30 8:00pm in
LC 4, If you can't come but you're
witerested, alll Anne 7-8774 of
Barbara 7-4012 before the meating.

Everyone is invited to Shabbat ser-
vices every Friday night at 7:30 pm
and Saturdays at 10 am, all at Chapel
House, Oneg Shabbat follows all Fri
day. services, and Kosher lunch is
served Saturdays,

Episcopal Sunday Service, Sunday
Jatwuary 2Bth at 10:30 am in East

wy Tower Penthonse, For further
information contact the Rey, Harold

Bune, Chapel House, 489-8673,

(ive Quad Volunteer Amt
erin isa REALITY, First organi
int for all Men's, pros:

id advanced first

Wea, ve at 140 ins LC

State Quad Coffee
ed call Elie 2.3003,
avttow Chinen

fan Fellowship out

Interested m1 going abraad for

study? " 1 out tia at

Voewopnnnets “20°04,

Applications are being accepted for
AMIA Council. They can be picked
up in CC356, Any questions call O.
Etkin-7-6918 or L. Fishman, 7-3016.

All those interested in AMIA
Handbell (singles and doubles) and
AMIA squash (singles) can pick up
individual rosters in CC 356. Due
date is January 31, 1973.

Any organization planning on
holding a food fast during spring
semester must file a solicitations
application inthe Student
Association Office, CC 346, by 5 pm
Friday, January 26,

Anyone interested in helping
prepare services and onegs tor JSC
‘each week (or occassionally), call Jim
a1 457-7839 or Joann at 457-8796.

Help us spend money! CCGB meet-
ing Jan 30, Bom, Fireside Lounge,

Everyeane welcome

All Jewish Students’ Coalition
members are hereby notled of a
qeoenal membership meeting Sunday
January 2Hth, at 6 PM. an tte CC
Caterer

WHAT TO DO

WW! Telethon '73
‘Happiness 1s. Sharing”
Hs Walehwivnd

inna shadien He banpy

Foreign — Correspondent,"
ny Mat Ham

it

siete cc

Need something to do? Come Bavil
ing with the Gamma Kap Girls on
Tuesday, January 30, Meet the sisters
In the Gamma Kap lounge, Herkimer
Hall, at 7:30,

Party: Drinking and Dancing; John:
son Hall, Second floor - Friday, Jan
26 at 9:00 pm,

Aldenberry Cinema presents the.
original Hunchback of Notre Dame
starring Lon Chaney, at 7:30 p.m.
Friday night. It will be shown In the
Waterbury Main Lounge, and ad-
mmission, as always, is free.

Come 10 Albany Public Library's
shire coffeehouse on Friday, Feb-
ruary 2 for an evening of bagpipes
‘and contemporary folk music, The
program will be presented at Har
‘manus Bleecker Library from 8 to 11
fin, There is no admission charge,
Even the retrash free,

MISCELLANEOUS

All Levittown, New York,
MacArthur High Schoo! Graduates |
have es aaa tane Het e 1 wen yOu,
wow adress
eurran campus
in This
4 ress
SUNY at

AD 120 Thank: yo

GAMMA KAP says.
Hib

Try oy, qou'll

Fon stotination on fibrary hours
457-8551.

HEIN OREM RAEI

FIVE QUAD AMBULANCE
SERVICE IS A REALITY

! Ist Organizational Meeting for All M.E.T.'s,
Prospective M.E.T.’s & Advanced Ist Aider’s

Wed. Jan. 31, 1973 7:30 pm LC 3

This Ist meeting is a must, problems contact
Joel 75228 Barry 7-8834

#61 iuepnis AG pepuny

SOMONE SOO RESO

UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD presents

The Albany Symphony

directed by Julius Hegyi

Sunday
Jan. 28

preceding

John McLaughlin and the
Mahavishnu Orchestra

SUNYA Gym

Doors Open at 7:30

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1975

ALBANY STUD

Tickets:

$2.50 with tax card and ID
$4.00 with proof of age
$2.50 children under 12

funded by student tax
ss

PAGE 7A

FOR SALE

Gibson Gultar-2 yrs, old. Asking $125
ut willing to discuss. 438-586:

For

"63
An

at7.

ara.

Ster
405

Top

wat

work, $125

fate - 1961 Fatcon, 88,000 ora
miles! New Clu volta

mune ore

$320,

"65 VW Cheap 457-7713.

‘67 SAAB, Exc. condition, $495, Call

6657.

"61 VW @usGood Condition, First
$200, 869-5781.

0 tor sale,
3766.

Sale, Reel to Reel 4 track Sten

SEIDENBERG
JEWELRY

earrings 2 for $1
buy 4 pair get 7 free

cigarettes 39°/pack

CLASSIFIED

Circle appropriate heading:

FOR SALE
HOUSING
PERSONAL,
WANTED

Adi Lo sead as follow:

Costs 4.05 per word each time your classitied appears
Nam
Address
Phone

Classified ad deadlines are
Monday:

Bug, beautiful paint job and
lor, sunroot. Needs some engine
for best offer. Call Karon

$60, Call Helaine

Afro earrings

264 Central Ave.
cor, No. Lake Ave
Albany

Scott 382C AM-FM Receiver, 27
Watts RMS/ Channel-I5 Montns Old.
$140. 489-3136, After 5.

can Lee -———__——

1). Lafayette AM-FM Stereo Receiver,
6 months old, 35 AMS Watts per
channel, List $269.95. Sacrifice for
$175. 2}. Fender Telecaster Bass, a
luxe case, Excellent condition, New
$350 Need Cash, Best Otter over
— $200. Inquire at Adirondak 206,
Indlan Quad, or call 457-5036,

Drums--7 pieces, evmbals, ete.
Michael 229-8483,
MARTIN 0:18/ deluxe case, $250

936-4256,

GREAT" skis, custom made, 100"
lass, Retail $194, price $144, Bema
available, Call 400, 457-7712,

Typewriter tor Sale - manual ex

ers anid cellent condition. Make Ctter, Mats

Heise lites WANTED |

List $670.
5, Ca AIA

WANTED DEAD OF ALIVE. Linnie!

wanted tap tae Cogan ¢

457-5003,

aannans,

WANTED: Waitress/ Wa
(experience in Chinese Rostau
rant) and busboy
‘Lunen and/or dinar mows,
Open 7 days a weok
110 State
436-8612

wok like an Olym:
poixe and
balance thi way! “at
home!-with a SkiSkil!--Before
try the hills! Write Forster
in, Ine. Saginaw, ML AK6O2

SKIERS!--L

ADVERTISING
FORM

LOST & FOUND ‘
HELP WANTED atid
SERVICES

RIDE/RIDERS WANTED

— fO1AL ENCLOSED

10:30 A.M.

12noon ‘Thursday:

HELP WANTED

Use your skilis In Latin America, Fill,
Jamaica, Africa or hi the U.S.
Gain valuable experience setting UP
co-ops, corporations, credit unions.

goals at all levels of government.
Teach production marketing etc. The
Peace Corps and VISTA need you.
Contact: Theresa Martin, Division of
Minority Recruitment 90 Church
Streat, 212-264-7124,

Waltress needed--part-time at
Farouk’s. To work Tuesdays and
alternate Fridays and Saturdays.

Apply in person-238 N. Allen St.

Wanted: Senoir Counselors, Spec-
lallsts, & Waterfront Instructors for
the Summer Staff at Metropolitan
Baptist Camps, Poughquag, N.Y. For
Information & application contact:

tan Baptist Camo, 297 Park

Babysitter needed to occasionally
took after two enildren during th
day. Call Mrs. Cheng evenings
weekends at 434-4314,

Students Part Twne to

Hales Wasitea
seit ad space for
Commissions. paid
Weite: Apt, Publications,

Renssetacr, NY ar «all AG? 0874
French Majors Want
Entish an 1 French

Marewa

pate tune (440

NEW YORKIRANKI URI S59
round-tew.  Woukly

ules write seas tou CO,
5172 Ww rat tebe

1085 FOR STUDENTS:
Furane,

General Meeting
Wed. Jan. 31st
Fireside Lounge 7:00p.m.

for anyone -

writers

typists
ad assistants
production assistants
etc.

kA wl RS

—a coffee house, a place to share
talent, opinions, yourself

begins SUNDAY, JANUARY 28 at 8:30
Chapel House

Bring Your Own Poem

Roommates wanted for comfortable
coed house 10 minutes from Campus.
Own rooms, $40- $50. 477-7821.

{ull time, expenses paid, sightseeing.
Freb Information, write, TWR Co.
Dept. E6, 2550 Telegraph Ave.,
Berkeley, CA. 94704,

Room for one or Two on Busline.
Reasonable, 465-1350.

Male Roommate Wanted, Near Bus,
Large Rooms, $50 a month.
436-7113.

SERVICES

CREATIVE RESUMES:
ly composed, distinctive
‘nt, Our resumes will set you apart
from the hundreds of resumes 1
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PAGE 8A

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

Letters to the

Struggling Along

To the editor:

It is in the spirit of social
progress and solidarity that I
comment on two things at this
time: first of all, the expression
of hope that my article of Tues, and it is ax a united force thai
23, entitled, “Thoughts on the they should make their tet
D.C. Action” was generally well against them, With an explan
received by the readership, and ation of the error made, | wel
secondly, your ommision from — come ie a0 com
the ASP of a particular section ments by you or anyone who hax
of my original story, an action read and thought about what has
whieh I fear is a mistake. Dew cad ae rte

By so questioning, I hope to correspondence.
correct the mistake and also
attach a postscript to my article
that may improve the under-
standing of what actually went
on in Washington on Saturday
and what it means for politica!
consciousness and action, Ti the editor

To begin with, Isee t the The Committee of
feast, the ommision of the see: Central Council is AWAKE, We are
tion on who attended the action refreshed after our long slumber.
and in what number may have

ators, the big businessmen.
Moredver, it should be under
stood that in generally, all work-
ing people, Asian, Black, Latin
and White have always been the
hardest hit by wars such as this

fe or in this

In struggle,
Bruce B;

All ye that are
heavy laden.

Grievance

‘There is a Gripe box across f

diluted some of the political the Campus Cent tion
impact of the story and al most, — Desk, On the hox are grievance
may have done some disservice forms. If you want a question
lo the anti-war, anti-imperialist answered or a trievance investi

a, (the form, making
fame and

movement as an expression of a
middle-class
should be

leave your
phone

sub-conseious
chauvinism which
fought. In particular, 1 at

and/or stress

tempted to say that while the — the committee will be im touch
middle-income, middle-aged with you within one week from
groups were better represented — the day you submit your griev

than ever before because of the — ance
devastating degree to which th Gri
War has affected the American tigi

nee Committe be inves

ing, institutions and polocies

people, also (though un-afferuny students on our own
‘mentioned in the story), wax the initiative ‘These presently in
unprecedented attendance of clude the library and the pro
valiant Third Worlders, This lat motion and tenure policies

fact is due to their heavy fn about one month we will

resentation in the working probably start new investiga
class, in fact, in its most ex: Gans, Jom us and help us decide
ploited sectors where the living — what next, ‘The infirmary is

ndard has been the most fer
ociously and relentlessly at

tacked by the effects of the

very possible area,

and wants some new
workers, whe ate

newdls

kond hard

Editor

We will accomplish much this
Semester with your help and
involvement. If you want to join
Grievance Committee call
543 and ask for Barry
If I'm not there, please
a message where I can
contact you. You ean also leave
Me a message in the Grievance
Committee mailbox in room 346
in the Campus Center, I hope to
hear from you.

rry Davis,

Grievance Committee.

Sorrier

To the Editor:
1 don't know how much
thought Mike MeGuire put into
his Friday, January 19th article
“In ry State,” but it
doesn't appear to have been very
much. For some reason, Mr.
MeGuire that the
no longer sell
win, ole., if the government
takes over heroin distribution,
That sounds very
Paper, but for all

world will

logical on
intents and
is merely wishful
ms ure legal, yet
purchase pr
ual item through ille
nels. ‘The underworld may
ddiets a lot of money
for drugs now because the drugs
but should. heroin
legalized, the under:
world distributors would merely
cut their prices

As for even implying that an
uldict can hold «responsible
Job now eeally, did you think
shout that at all Addicts aren't
even responsible enough to han
dle their awa tives, Let alone
becoming involved in someone

purposes, it
thinking. Fi

charg

are ile
become

revolves around his next fix.
Legalizing heroin would in no
way minimize. this fact, except
that the addict would know
where his next fix was coming
from. I for one, don't exactly
relish the thought that my teach-
er, dr my child’s teacher, or a
lawyer, or a doctor, or anyone
that I need to depend on for
something, is a drug addict.

And Mr. McGuire, what do
you propose we do about the
Pregnant heroin addicts? Ob-
viously, you know that a baby
who is born to an addicted
mother is itself an addict, and
must go through the tortures of
withdrawal as immediately as
one minute after birth. Your
solution for those on “hard”
drugs is to leave them alone as
long as they are not hurting
anyone, There mothers are hurt-
ing someone else. Just because
the baby has not been born yet,
does not mean it should be
forced to be born an addict and
suffer the pain of withdrawal.

Vietnamese War and its perpet interested in these mvestigations

Peace Will Be Rough

by Mile MeGuare

a huttte:atder,”* began a

“Wait until the war is over, and we're bath
Jim Morrison song.

‘The war i8 over, according to President Nixon
years older, and maybe a fittle yrayer too. But now Ul
President has bowed to public opinion and ended what was perhaps
our most unpopular war, there are those whe are beginning te have
second thoughts.

“What will our children have for secusty naw
psychologist, “If they ever felt apron they
a television set and know that at least one thing was stil the same
ow they won't have all
The death of Lyndon Johnson, the

buildup of the war, will also have a detrimental effect. say
veo alway had

ad child

ny roots 3
who began the

the same

Presielont

expert. “No matter how much other things
Lid to kick around. Now our children ae losing one of the
realest sources of sulue
What will be the end result of these changes sn our children’s
eoviconment? “A feeling of al vad doctor,
“possibly leading to a ‘lost generation’ sumilar to the une after the

But while that generation produced lit
rald, the doctor saw no such hope for thes
dlddedl with a twinkle in bis

Fist World War.
the level of F.Seott Fitz;

generation, “They're just tao dumb,” hi
eye. Leaders in other fields see similar dangers wt the absence of a
war. ‘The head of United Philosophers of America, the union af
Professional philosophers, said that there are not any values to guide

at leant i
saul De

impressionable youth now.
our child thing to
Harry Aristotle. “Now th
One American Legion Post commander
anonymous, said that he foresees a deci
quently, says Simon Legree of Walla Walla,
will care if the dominoes start falling an the Kepubbe
Md will be unsafe for democracy
President ual law until we can
ng Lo replace th
we Movement”

Bombing and napalmeny
asuire goood and evil ayant

e's just a vou,

eid Las fet
iy pataotan Subse
Wastungton, “Nobody
4 Panbukts
Vee asked the

Meveondangly

idl as expected Ler be expecially ramyel
Mental health atfierats over the

The effect of U

FF maverent leaders are

They all separ a sense

of despondency anil las of any. purpase ut Tate,” sand one thospatal
director, “Most of them just sit and stare at the wall They don't
notice if it's day or night, and they eat harlly: ans thing

Doctors a 1 unfortunates, and

divided an how ty treat these po
indeed over whether any treatment will help at ull
SugKest sitting and sturing along with them, and others suggest taking
them on Lours of slums so as to ygive them a purpese aga

Whatever your station AL least we

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

else's life, ‘The addicts’ exinter
ee =
With our snvolvement in View Now at

nam drawing to tty “Final” close
1 think tas important that we
strugule

in ils. proper

observe the which is
continuing there
No doubt that with

perspective
t immi

4 peace
can all breathe a deep sigh of
relwwf, Nevertheless simply be

the United States is with
drawing from the struggle the
struggle does not end, What ends:

rican casualties, Uh
ay of the
and the op:
uxt be paid

ae the

worry over the si
American POWs ,

portunity cost that

ed from
war, What

nunist af

when funds are dive

continues is com
stent and the lonely fight af

i
President ‘Thiew and his people
to resist

Under President Johnson we
took that fight as our own send:
ing at one point over 530,000
Ainericans ty Vietnam, Our oby
jeetive, though it way never real
ty explaned, way to halt the

itack apon South Vietnam,
feat which the South Viet
army (the ARVN) was
nplish alone, Yet

unable to ace
Mowe a war without an end
Clearly the best way lo save
South Veetnat from aggression

weld have been to destroy
Newt Veetnam’s ability to carry
stack, Had this be

could have

whyective the war
heen brought ta a quick re

President Johnson
we were determined not only to
raat terse Che war un Vietnaan but
pat win it So we fought

Hut under

alse
And fought. And fought. Wath
costs and casualties mounting

and strony tationnal desire to
welude our part in the war,
Huchard Nixon assumed power

this, point President
Nixon should have come to one
important decision: Vietnam (is,
is not) vital to our national
security. If the former he should
have asked Congress to declare
war. If the latter, he should have
negotiated for the release of our
prisoners and brought the troops
hon

Instead, he changed the ob:

jeetive for which we wer

ing, No longer w
tu stop communist aggression.
Instead we were fighting to pay
for time (in American blood,
atience) in order to

money, i
allow the
build up their army

What's It All Worth?

by Mitchell Frost

over the struggle without Amer
ican troop assistance.
something else ullogeth
communist aggressi
world is not a purely local m
ter,

exerts itself
wherever — th
ad Red China

communiin ay a threat to free
which as ‘Phat is, at
least an Ame

dom,
requires

red President
tThiew

Not so, deel
Nixon, Let us fight 50 th

Bince, as was stated earlier, I
believe that addicts cannot hold
responsible. jobs, the: gover-
nment, in addition to paying for
the addicts’ habit, must also give
money towards the addicts’
food, clothing, and shelter--in
other words, welfare, This mon-
ey comes from us, you and me,
and I do not want my money to
go towards, helping someone kill
themselves with drugs,

‘The addict is hurting someone
else, He is depriving starving,
sick people of food and medical
attention, just so that he can
have enough stuff Lo “shoot up"
every day.

Legalizing murder would not
make killing less frequent, Legal-
ization is not a solution, With-
drawal, and re-education of
addicts, teaching them skills
which they can use to make a
living, while not an ideal solu-
tion, is a start, and wouid bene-
fit society many times more

than legalization of heroin ever
could,

Sharon Kuflik

to lke on the fight
Communist aggression,
is South Vietnam's
‘The reason,

preps
alone.
said Nixon,
problem, not ours.
ing behind this
questionable at best, Worse Ui
that, though, is the
fonee that much was ac
plished-that is, once Secretary off
Defense Melvin Laird announced]
that the ARVN is now a stron
an announce:
ree eae
dent Nixon upped thel

ment he

the communists to sign an}
agreement. Amer:
ordered

“honorable
ican soldiers were

point, as was the

our involvement

Now, we are told, we have that
piece of paper. Whoopee. But
the fact remains that we could]
have ‘disengaged from the war
long ago, in when Nixon]
first took office oF late:
the ARVN was ready to go i
alone, B n't. We waited
Now
Let's see}

President Nixon has it,
what good it does him,

n't do Thiew mue
ust have that feeling. Sad.

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE SEVEN

Keeping Up
With the Jones

To The Editor:

‘As one of the many students
closely involved in the Waterman
case, I have witnessed the admini-
strative blunders aptly described
in Elizabeth Jones’ satire of
January 19th, While one can
mock some members of the
bureaucratic machinery, it is easy
to lose sight of the main issue;
that of Student power. Under-
graduate and graduate students
maintain little voice in promotion
and tenure decisions at Albany
State. Dr, Waterman's case exem-
plifies student impotence in
dealing with the archaic
psychology department.

Sincerely,
Richard Weinbaum

Stalag Colonial

To The Edit

An old problem has grown to a
fever pitch recently on Colonia!
Quad. This is my fourth year on
Colonial and I've had the pleasure
of seeing all types of residence
staff blunders. This “trained” col
lection of “professionals” has
gone one step farther than this
student can take, In a year of
refrigerator problems, furniture
crack-downs and questionable in:

spection methods, my Quad staff
members have made little, if any,
attempt to air student opinion on
the above problems, Gestapolike
notices preceed all’ search and
seizure operations. The food has
reached an all time low and still
Dr. Fischer, head of residence on
campus, can't understand why
students are moving off campus in
increasing numbers.

Such ignorance from above
seeps down through the residence
staff bureaucracy and the ones to
get stepped on are the money-r
Paying tenants of the state, the
students, Rumor is the law of the

udents hide or remove
“staff designated contraband" to
a place where staff can’t find it

\d thus impose removal charges.

For four years, honest attempts
at hearing student grievances have
been lacking. This is my last
semester here but I would like to
recommend all campus residents
to consider off-campus housing
for next year, Save money and
arief.

Lawrence H, Pohl

Communications should be

typewritten and sent to:
Editorial Page Editor
Albany Student Press
0326, SUNYA
Albany, N.Y. 12222

Unless there are extenuating
circumstances, all letters must
be signed.

Everybody's Column

Change Registration Now

There is a need for some new
and effective course

iH SUNYA. For

» student has had

itisteat ion
procedures he
far tow lang,
ty mold and modity his or her
dowd

neademie interests and

sometimes even (herr futues, due
to one ever-present onerous fie
tor © which day ov they: regs
ter?

The decision makers at Albany
should investigate varying altern
lives and choose a better way
of selecting

AL present

Feysteation peo

rites the rotating
alphabetie bins has seemed ian

equitable institution, exeept if

your name always (urns up ut
the middle, und the courses
whieh you prefer to eneoll in are
closed out within the first few
days But there hay recently
heen talk of witching to a sen
Jor junior sophmore freshman
senionty system,
Why”

I can be stated that a senior

rewistra tion,

should be able to ake courses
over lower-division students be
cause it would be their last
opportunity to do so, oF be

ry for gradua

tin favor

it might be nee
tion Another argu
of such a system could possibly
te that upper division students
ane now cha
$150 fur tution and, therefore
they

wd an additional
since they pay more
should i
Both of these ary
shaky

tray privileges
ments ure
Why

should monetary amounts deter

built on round
Should
who pay considerably more tui
| privileges?

university procedures?

oubof state students
also have 9p
And where does the log
lant chance of taking «coun
students ure

fit when other

attempting to structure an edu

eation for themselves tram
beginning to end ane ate eters
Hut af all the Courses aveesners
fora solid foundation

Perhaps a system should: te
devised that enables even frost
man to choose Lentative felis af
study and then an titen jaunts
these declared majors preference
for registering 41 courses in their
This

serious students the more advan

department would allow
Lageous choice of when they can
take

certain courses and would
alter the time when other
students may take various popu
lng eleetiv

might be an easy
registration

dilemma of undergrad
at least this problem deserves
additional recoynition and some

thought

Stop Pretending We're Democratic

(at)

Straight talk from Senators is
as rare as winter flowers. No
matter what's coming down,
they always seem to be telling us
that everything will be alright,
thanks to our superior system~a
system that sends them off to
plush, paneled offices and sleek
Washington suburbs.

Veteran Arkansas Democrat
William Fulbright, however, has
been unusually frank about the
impotence of a tractable Con-
gress, and the steady drift
toward an authoritarian state.

‘The Senator's “observations on
growing presidential power and
the fragile nature of democracy
are often tinged with resignation
these days~a resignation born of
twenty-five liberal years on the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee, struggling with the in-
exorable rise of militarism
through the era of the Cold War
and Vietnam.

‘The Senate has deteriorated to
where nobody listens to any
debate", said Fulbright in a re
cent interview with the Pacifica
Radio network. “It's dominated
at the moment by the administ.
ration and the military, ‘They
win all the votes. It is the rarest
thing to have a dialogue or a
debate on the floor of the
Senate, as we did in the old
days. You see, they have » new
system of setting down the vote
under unanimous consent; and
«vote is set then every
t and you ean’t

when
body clears

can't get ‘em on the

find ‘em.
floor
This has
system which, in my
has undermined any real signifi
F think it
rtant part
hut f think

developed into a
opinion,
cance of the Senate
to play an img
ernment
iy part _now is simply as an echo
of the Pentagon and the White
House.

This has beer a trenel far the
last, twenty-five years, since
World War IL
when concerned

you tend to delegat
President.
ed in past
President

with wi
your
‘This has always hap
wars... When

wats,.in the

power to the

nobody

thought he was infallible, He was

just another Ser

blocks und then you

him as if he has this private

to God Of course,

that's the way it used to be in

medieval times, Wi
y far from th
of Kings of Ch

After all, th

‘There's just a very slight patina

of civilization between then and

tor He moves

just not
Divine Right
ex the First
's in our history

ind it's very easy to revert

For all its occasional huffing
and puffing, Fulbright doesn’t
see the press establishment as a
particularly dependable ally
against the authoritarian trend
either.

‘Many of the press," he noted,

e acquired television sta-
tions which makes them subject
to the FCC which is subject to
the President, and therefore,
they are in the position to be
intimidated through that, I
mean, some of these big papers,
they don't want to lose a station
that’s worth fifty million dollars.
So they tend to say, ‘Well maybe
we better not go too far, and
maybe we won't give over-
-exposure to any criticism of the
White House.’

“It reminds me a little of
Louis the Fourteenth--the defe:
rence that everybody gives to
the leader in the White House,
and I think this is almost inevi
table in a big country. Small
countries, where there's a sense
of community and people know

‘one another, have succeeded in
preserving a high degree of dem-
‘ocracy; I mean people like Nor-
way and Sweden and Denmark
and Holland...But when you get
above that, you look at China,
Russia, ourselves...
“The Senator's resonant voice
trails off, mumbling other com-
parisons, thinking perhaps of
Oceania, Eurasia. He seems like a
tired, old dove in a hawk’s sky,
willing to accept what his
experience tells him is probably
inevitable
“Whether we can pull it out
and preserve some degree of
democracy remains to be seen. I
hope we can, but if we can't
we'll be no worse off than other
people. We'll simply develop a
ifferent system, and maybe in a 100
years we'll quit pretending we're
a democracy and admit that
we're an oligarchy or plutocracy,
which it seems to be
“IVIL be a long time after the
change has taken place that any:
hody will admit it,” the Senator
concluded. “We always pretend
that it's something else; as we do
today.”

Sweet Jenny Grit
A Band of Women

Wine & Beer

1.00 w/student tax

1.50 w/out

is

Sponsored by SUNYA Gay Alliance & Women’s Lib
ie 2 “

SATURDAY NIGHT AT HENWAY’S with

9:00 PM

PAGE EIGHT

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

“Big Daddy” Is Coming Home

by Robert A. Dobkin
AP Military Writer

WASHINGTON AP — “Hey, big daddy,” says a
Pentagon pamphlet for returning prisoners of war,
when your young son or daughter comes to you
and says, ‘Do you dig?’ you can say, ‘Lay it on me
dude, and right on." "*

‘The pamphlet is a dictionary of
to help POWs — some of whom
in eight years — understand the . ve Lie

1 expressions

youth.

‘The head of a houschold, advises the pamphlet, is
“pig daddy.” Being high on either drugs or alcohol
is “blasted,” while to focus attention on something
isto “tune in,” The

“This is a part of the language and the slang being
used by the youth of today ~ your sons and
daughters," says the pamphlet.

The POWs also can be expected to he unaware
that Americans first landed on the moon July 20,
1969; that Richard Nixon was elected in 1968 and
reelected in 1972, or that “U.S. infantry troops
entered the South Vietnamese village of Song My
My Lai in March 1968 and murdered 450 civilians

Summaries such as the latter are included in the

University

Stat

roe's des
president

The summary was pre}
Peter Hackes and Gordon Hart of Oklahoma State
Navy
summer training

Famphlet to bring the prisoners up to date on major

events, sports highlights and deaths of

individuals since 196: Sey
The pamphicts will be handed out to the POWs as

they arrive at Clark Field in the Phillipines, first

stop on the way home ;

_ A Pentagon spokesman said the news summary is
nat mandatory reading

age the news,

Some of these guys are going lo be out of touch

with current ev

just another way to bring them up to d:

spokesman said,

and in “no way intends to

ed by NBC newsman

reservists who wrote it during

Other synopses cover such events as the Kent
shootings, the
Frazier Muhammed Ali prizefight, the attempted
assassination of Gov. George Wallace, Marilyn Mon:
h, the 197:
advisi
negotiations to

aron Tate murders, the doe

presidential rat
Henry Kissing
d the war

and, finally,

The Wives Wait For Husbands

Some have punted

by Kathryn Johnson
Associated Press Writer
VIRGINIA BEACH, Vi
With peace in Vietnam finally at
hand, Navy wives awaiting
ther word on the return of 1

homes Others ae ele
xp Ss
thy time

vem instead af 10 bog,

prisoner husbands are marking

time in different ways. dotiey [Hh

Fellowes

called “In Bri POW Vin afend that Pmt

A Catehup on News from Mix BUCK Freed thy

sg Vow pile all nayghit ane my te
One had a sign on her front the alteartive: red tt

When Li Cri

fawn for more than
hushand Make Che

She took

proclaiming that her
was a prisoner of war
a down when the bi
North Vietnam resumed

A child who doesn ( rememb
her fi
her POW beac
yard

her is planning te bury
metal POW

jet in the bach

BEFORE YOU
G0 10 POT...

THIS MONDAY NITL ONLY JAN 29
LAST APPEAHANCE

Stomping Suade Greasers Rack and Roll Revival Hand
DRINKS

————————

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

to massaften, but
1 went te say thank
sid Pat
Fellowes, whose hiishand, Cmdr

Fm gong to take off my
Inacelet and ure it
And

comes home

n the buck
Daddy
Lo digit
up and show at to him, ‘then VI

age when auburn

Waured — Charlutte Christian

Then nest home. she naterd

How ant af style her husband's
Wiluatt elerthes wer
Var looking at theny inv the
a Wealnies

sean” he
ii
home they ee
Poetudy
Code

1 dunt

The saddest diay. «
he jaded

hetwwe am atany anare the IS
nivelvement mn Veetaain | teth an
my heart that my: husband had
ald net

(teres Has weatee icdat UL way

suddenly yaw male vent

MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT-ATGSB
OCAT

NAT'L. BDS.

+ Preparation tor tests Hequitad foc
admusion to graduate and protes
Sonal schools

*Votuminous m
ied by

Special Compact Courses during
Weekends ~ Intersessions
Summer Sessions
STANLEY H_ KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.
sey ann tae og a

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Jubilant South Vietnamese soldiers laugh, sing, and smile upon
hearing news that a cease-fire has arrived.

Viet Roundup: All Sides In High Gear

by Lewis Gulick

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON AP —

diplomatic Lalks leading toa Vietnam cea

The United Stites swung into high-level
e-fire that goes Into effect
tomorrow night

All sidey hurried preparations for implementing the complicated
pee settioment, including a stop or

all Ai

at thw Pentagon on virtually
an Gly previously ordered to Vietnam

ary of State Wil
Mutehell Sh:
UN

In Washington Seere im P. Rogers met with

Adis Malik anal

with Indonesin Foreign

Ministe woth Seeretary € Kurt
Waldheim,

neral

and Tudonesia ace two of the four countries supplying

contingents for the international control group supervising the
Waldheim is to take part inthe

ol Vietnam peace quirantes conference due

Vietnam cease fee T2-nation

mnternatie to be held

within a month after dhe Satucday signing

Under the peace agreement, US troops are tobe pulled out of
South Vietnans over a (0sday: span and the Communists are to free
Amwrieity prisoner
US medial ov

nation tenn
hateh of POW

were poised to fly inte Hanon to
Js son ay they get the geew hyht
follawing thes erase: fee

US neyutiat

Henry A Kasinger says the prisoners are te be

brought out in toughly equal size wroups divriag each 1 day period

Of the GO days while Amenean forces are coming hame from South

Vietnam.
wndany

Phe four nations 1,160 truce supervisors to South Vietnam

ted to yet there advance contingents on the seene within bs
Saturday

Hungary and Poland are the other two members of the internation

whreb as 10 hegin at ;

hours of the cease fier pam
a polwang eoup

The Huingiran government vorced offeit willingness today. to
take part in the ceane fire control effort Each countey is to send
shout 290 men Poland hay Hot yet made public its response but is
expected to particypate:

for Paris to join in the signing with hiv
South Viet

Government foreign

Rogers leaves today
sounterparts from North Viet Vietnam and the

Cong’s. Provisianal Revolution Hanov's
minister, Nguyen Duy ‘T
lists from the United States

Viet Cong met on de

arrived in the Preneh capital today
jorth Vietnam, South

ails of applying the cease-fire

In Paris, spe
Vietnam and thy
nygement
Nguyen Van ‘Thiew predicted that if the
Communtits violate the cease fire

will join South Vietnam in fighting them:

In Saigon, President

and wage new war, many nations

TOWER EAST CINEMA:

De Broca’s Crowning Touch!

ALAN
BATES

This Friday and Saturday: January 26 and 2

7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 Lc 1

$.50 with state quad card $1.00 without
COME EARLY TO BE SURE OF ADMITTANCE

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS,

PAGE NINE

A Mobile Introduction To Vietnamese Culture

by John Jekabson
Alternatiye Features Service
Jacquelyn Chagnon is a young
woman who fervently wants to
lose her job. She has dedicated
herself to
about the people of Vietnam
until the war ends, For over a

year

she has been

throughout

The
tional

telling Americans

traveling
the country with

Indochina Mobile Educa.

Project

(Box 39013,

Wash.. D.C. 20016), to shopping

malls.

count

churches.

ty fairs

and college campus

“I's a
years how Americans know so
litle about the Vietnamese as

ing after all these

EBBIE THE EEP

PEACE PROJECT pRrESENTS:

. Jl
Ik

people. about the kind of lives
they lead, their family struc-
tures, or their culture,” Jacque-
lyn says, “We're so used to
seeing them merely as body:
count statistics on the news.”
To show the ordinary life of
Vietnam, the traveling exhibit
has photographs, not of atroci-
ties but of a farmer with his
water buffalo plowing the rice
fields or of a young boy eating
the fruit of a harvest. The
photos are purposefully low-key,
for the idea of the exhibit isn’t
to instill guilt in Americans
Films, music, poetry, and e
food from Vietnam are other

RATATAT

s .

aspects of the exhibit,

Jacquelyn spent two years in
Vietnam, first working for the
Catholic Relief Service, and then
with the International Volunteer
IVS. was

out by the Thiew regime
in 1971 for its support of the
student peace movement in Sai-
When Jacquelyn returned
to the US., she and another
former IVS worker, Don Luce,
organized the Exhibit to show
Americans the character of the
people they had known in Viet- A

(IVS). The

gon.

nam. (Lue

uncovered the infamous

is the reporter who
Tiger
Cages at Con Son used by the

government of South Vietnam
to imprison political opponents.)
The mobile exhibit spends lit-
le time in the anti-war centers
of the US., concentrating in-
stead on the heartland of middle
America - places as Lowa,
Alabama, Georgia, and Florida
“We've had little hassle.”
Jacquelyn says, “but whenever
local politicians try to block us
as in Augusta, Georgia or St
Louis, the publicity attracts
larger crowds.”
collection of Vietname:
poetry that Jacquelyn helped
translate and edit is an impor
‘ant part of the exhibit, Many of

suc

DAMN! THEY'RE DUG IN
DEEP! rit BE SLOW
GOING FROM HERE ON!

‘SARGE!

17s INCREDIBLE! IT
SAYS THAT LE DUC THO
‘AND HEINRICH KISSINGER

VE COME TO AN
OREEMENT, APPARENTLY
FAVORABLE TO US!

*1

Friday and Saturday,
January 26 and 27

7:30 and 10:00 pm

$1.00 with tax card

Proceeds go to Medical Aid for Indochina (Bach-mai Hospitals)
|

$1.50 without

«I
|

LC 7

es

the poets in the book have Jong
since disappeared into the dun.
geons of the Thiew dictatorship
Some are probably dead. The
collection includes poems smug
gled out of the Tiger Cages to
Don Luce

‘Poetry is a very impor

part of Vietnamese life,” Jacqui
lyn says. “Their culture is best
understood by their poems. It
isn't @ poetry of a literary set
but of the people. Peasants who
cannot read or write compose
poems in theit heads, memoris
ing lines by rote. But today most
poems of peace are banned. 4
are ali those by Ho Chi Minh.”
Jacquelyn learned to
y herself while in Vietnam.

write
poe

fe've been taught to hide out
emotions she sayy,
“The Vietna
Poetry forces you to reveal yout

what you stand tor

feelings
nese don't do that

self and

what you stand against

bor years the

vied the ad

many
the U.S, perperu
that the

Vietnam:
eve place a lower value on ite
Jacquelyn says

A Viet

namese mother eres just as hand

than we do

That simply isn't true

ay any mother when her child as
killed
able lo aveept the Lact that the

Amcticans just weren't

Vietnamese have a cause they

were walling to die tar 7 Hay this

mability to accept then humane

ty, Jacquelyn believes, that

made it so easy Lor US. sokdiers

to regard “vapping”™ laceless

gooks” from helicopters ay
sport
Visual portions at the mobile

extubit depiet the history ot

Vietnam from ats days under
Chinese domimen to the pre

sent Pietines ab the joys. 0

everyday life share eq
wath vagiettes of ys
froupht hy th
hala

sehaly and

the stcet hildin

me sl

Pi
Hes Ton yy

yoni tte
Hiiger ot gant at
Very
ut Amer
went F thiuk ths

Jacquelyn say

duecily

nile y
incl aby
vol
poophe anes nant hy
Hewes
thar al
the estaba th.
vandalved

culdren inained: atid stetsnnan
by napalier
Once the war isaver she thitth

stot ot American money will p
to Vietnam ses people cant salve
But fb ton’t

wall Hike

then conseren
huow it the Vietnam
that kind of aud she says “hn
the past they have Nad so many

reasons to distrust American

REO S Hb eB Or

AL Looks Ahead

by Nathan Salant

‘According to the A.P. release
on Wednesday, January 25,
National League President Chub
Feeney said that the N.L. club
‘owners do not consider the
designated pinch hitter rule re-
tently adopted by the American
League a good one. He believes
thatthe rule may detract from

appeal. Feeney says that
re rie allright when ad-
Gisable, but that the N.L. does
tot believe in change for its own
sake.

‘The rule, recently adopted by
the A.L,, is basically as follows
‘A team has the option to desig:
nate one player as the player
who will bat for any pitcher in
that game. This designated pinch
hier must be listed on the
jineup card prior to the game as
the DPH

believe that Mr. Feet
perfect example of the conservir
tive morons who have prevented
baseball from taking any major
steps to improve the game since
1901 foul ball as
sirike three was dropped. as a
it would appear
that: Feeney lied
about the NI
club owen, er

when the

rule, In fact
may have
ion of the

misconceptions with regard
on fant appeal
Hy my opines

NI
the DPI

Cubs, Mh

nd St

How, Lantiy
hitters y of whe
pushing

reluetanily

ve more), would
etoed the met
ance they stand to benefit mest
How

anyone vaguely ass

J with baseball can hela ve
at this new rule will detract
from thee appeal of t
the fans as beyond: me
walls st
the complaint ine
ed by ity detewe
Certainty the elimination of th
«hitter will hive
A thos departanent, un

srabunt O67
Secondly. this
dy prolong. the

rule will

1 veteran

Frank Mobinson
Kilhbrew, Orlando Cope

Harmen
and a hast af «
nate players. Can any

bly tell me tan

sat the
Fant tu see these: players stay
Hf you think that the
fans dh

Hol ca
You 0 the

Mets wh

let_ me refer
ns of the New York
Tommie Aye
a Stadium because he
playen
Waltae

ater field aster
Mays. Will
of fans whe chan
“We watt ah ia
«home run” compha

# DPH bats instead of a
Pitcher who would be lucky te
feo tt tthe hall at all? Whe

With DPH

would you r
Matty Alou or Fred Be

One wonders if Mr. Fi
listened to any of the Ne

Sports shows during the
following the adop
new rule, Pe

bat

ney
York
week
on of the
ple were not calling
to discuss the super howl
instead to ask
Sterling or

but
John
lary Albert thought
of the new rule, The
dominated sports news across
the land, despite the upcoming
battle of the champions of foot
hall, Who said that I
not populart!

AS far as interest i progress
and change, Feeney

strates neither. If he w
sive, he would y

yroxres
fn his horse
and push for interleague play, oe
4 realignment af the

each league ‘ jor thy
N.Lts DrIL
Instead, he tn

the cansiste
NA
although
permissie

perme

Viet

Starting sate
Selection ot

ofa Master degeed

satis el
In September

789 O50} Lor tarther details

tudent AML thay

LEAGUE I

Old Timers
Unity
Dutchmen
APA

Skapis

EEP
Gridders
Nads

Jean Valjvans,

LEAGUE ILA

4. dohoson
The Dead
Dee Action
GM Boys
Birktoose

ids
Nod
KOK
Pavuliy

HW Ammals,

LEAGHE IK

Goccososccoccocor cose UNIS CIDOCCOUOSETOCCOOO!

SOPHOMORES!

10000 per year

AMIA Basketball

LEAGUE III-C

EEP-A
Los Tainos

Dirt Bags
Straight B
Slaughter House 5
Avengers
Bolsheviks
Gophers
Clarkstown

LEAGUE IV-C

w

1

6 Dweets

4 Park Avenue
5 GDX Dudies
5 Niplets

4 Cretins

2 Fu Chu

2 L.A, Jams

1 Koscios

LEAGUE IV-D

Wileats
Phi Up

Dirt

LL, Potatoes
Clanks

MBA

Ducks
Oy-Oys D

LEAGU

Coplas

tle Murderers
Alden Dukes
Mensorpause

Please Follow Smokey's ABC's

ALWAYS hold
matches till cold

BE sure to

favors ‘Ss :
Hulluirs i 7 drown all fires
on : CAREFUL to
eet crush all
smokes

LEAGUE IVA

Aces

APY Strokes

LRAGUE IV

eeeeee

ih Learn to SCUBA DIVE
i SCUBA COURSE

A

‘Frist Meeting Friday,
6 pm at Pool

? January 26
BE PREPARED TO SWIM_#

: All interested, please come! ° |

1 Regular or Reserve Officer in the United States Army upon

Lange and commitments are as little as 3 months at your option

senior year Any Commitment may be deferred until completion

ROTC leadership management option (2 hours per week only) during your

\ attending our 6 week summer session, and begin ay a Junior next year as an

snd lw

yan drawing $100 per month for your rem

and you must take t physical exam

or come ay to building Qa, Si

expenses will be paid by the Army, Additionally you will draw $460.80

ining two years of college ($2000).

Applications must be completed by March 1. Approximately 2 hours are

tion, Call MAJ. Bill Van Herpe (518)

College Campus any weekday from 8:30 to 4 pm

PAGE ELEVEN

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

i a
PAGE TEN FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

DPH Looks Good AMIA Standings

Page 11

YY.
Ly i STUDENT Vol, LX No. 4 ‘State University of New York at Albany January 30, 1973

Cease-Fire Breaks Down; Impasse Feared

Page 11

Another Road Loss

Danes and mysteriously puts

night, they were downright em: Cul

From the line They committed — Coon led the way tea

by Bill Heller took a 6-0 lead after four mir:
utes of play, Albany came back

Oneonta, N.Y. Population, — to tie at 4, get the lead 12-11,
30,000, Many bars, gas stations, and then died at 16. The Danes
ete, Home of two colleges: Hart virtually stood still for the last

wick and Oneonta Sta minutes and were lucky to get

Famous for absolutely nothing into the lockerroom only down
except a strange curse concern: by 7 at the halty
ing one Doe Sauers, head coach All of Doc's incantations at
of the Albany Danes, ‘There isa halftime (ind) 1 imagine they
spell that attacks Coach Sawer's must have heen pretty vivid)
couldn't break the curse, Albany
to sleep whenever they scored just 10 pointy in the first
a ame in this city Ciyht and a ball minutes. of the
nonth, Albany traveled to Hurt second half, but were still an the
got throruughly game U-21 Then Byron Miller
whipped 72:57 On Wednesday Uirned on and tit 2 jumpers to
the load tod The visiting
harrosing an lusmg 8 key fans e to Hite, but at was to
SUNYAC game (o Oneonta St be the Danes last gasp
50 yphamere dim Coon (high
Everything and everybody was with) 15) personally dealt the

hud for the Great Danes. ‘They Danes the final blows Seoring 9
shot 31% from the field, sto! pointy i les Chun thew munutes,

18 turnovers, ‘They went the last spread with 6,15 left, Albany
minutes in the first half needed a big play ar xomeane to

without scoring a point, And get hot, but everyone wits tee
although «they oub-rehounded cold. ‘Phe rest of the yume wane
the opposition, they couldn't merely the motions, ay Oneonti

to there advantage just poured ton

Phe Red Dragons (25 Kong Besides Coon, 6°6" Don

Into the game) had lost four of — MeLeod and. 6'5" frosh Stove

their starters from the beyinni Wolcott played tough for the

of the y d were suffering — fled Dragons: MeLwod hilt
the pangs of rebuilding. This, for 12, and Wolcott block
and a very rong contingent of shots, and hitting the boards, It
Albany routers were qood signs ty Oneonta Couch Don
for the Danes to romp. It was Flewelling, put it, "A maximum
nat to be fort from everyone,”

Oneonta came out psyched or Albany, Byron hit 13, and
nd took it to the Dunes in: the only Dane to score over

mediutely, Playing aygeensive, nted, Werner Kalla and
tight defense, and an ext

y mith both played hurt,
patient offense, the Red Dragons but 37 points for a total?

we win all our games and so und
so loses, then maybe,
the Danes have come

though the upcoming schedule is
the important ones are

Fomorrow night
Danes host Southern Connect:

They have to bounce

challenges: mean

pushed the Pups record
Tomorrow. night
the J.V.x go For the

nardlens of their individual y
are alimacted to colle

pe bed of canes
members of the beam represent

elit
that have ta be
rated among the best swunnter

Dims Danes

ly hurt, leaving the
2 in the SUNYA
They now have to

Aquamen Are A Hard Bunch

players have always

event ay sophomore
Van Ryn is the workhorse of the
t swimming 5000-5500
yards a practice. Albany is equal

fact that simply ly strong in the butterfly event
is enjoyable 1 fielding Peter Gerstenhaber and
have bewn watching the

Albany Jaik Shubert, both consistent
winners. Mare Exon is a standout

weeks now but the mystique of jn the huctatroke event while Lax
s escaped — Puretz ably handles the breast
his to be stroke |ees, Ken Wever, our
SWINK other man in the distaner event
000 yards every. prac

Fn atom with Van Ryn, hay vastly

tudeat eee amproved from fast year and hay
mnwer be taken several freestyle events on
sinply dewsa't exist

his own Diving chores are

handled by Bobb Canter, whe iy

Albany State a seme in high school took the
sam ammediite Hp Nassate County diving champion

» unuty an the Albany swim

themselves 1 The faet that the win

sahisfaction other that eerasient ‘eAleall- Comes nisi

any event betas deterred either the team ar

Swim Coach Brun Kelly

Frequently The prospects far the ap
wort ancl there ate i

coming, svein season are hopeful
Albany has a atrang nucleus
However the Geeat Dine sven
team will have: Le face seomve stilt
competition ‘The smaller state
colleges have a habit of holding

Haugh teams Corthaned State and

Dane
Hatnpered Uy Ube
H hackup swine
every event Last Satur

y's tems te Stany rook
mudicative of a fatal

Phe remaining members of the the Albany

Fe preven winters devi. A. ciupie
1 Ityn in the bolder af six

pled swimmers may

ace (afth ts keeping Albany
mdividual from having & real banner year

PAGE TWELVE

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973

a nan

By George Esper
Associated Press Writer

SAIGON AP - Hundreds more
reported cease-fire violations and
casualties by the thousands
threw the Vietnam truce into
bloody turbulence Monday.
bringing swift U.S. diplomatic
intervention.

A weeklong land-grabbing
effort and diplomatic bickering
between the Communist. Viet
namese and the Saigon govern
ment left lar s of the
countryside in chaos from the
demilitarized sone to the
Mekong Delta. The attacks and
counterattacks left military
positions of both sides in diy
order and added to the already
confused pattern of disputed
holdings.

ICCS STALLED

The International Commission
of Control and Supervision, still
ui the preliminary stages or ot
ganization, stalled over haggling
between the two Vietnamese
vides Lacking enforcement

suthionty. at faced a imnenumen:

New Pre-Reg this

by Ann E. Bunker

With the implementation of a
seniority based system of pre
registration this April, some of
the aggravation related to regis
tration will be eased
According to the new system,
gradnite students will register
irst Nowed by senor,
juniors, sophomares, and fresh
men Provision will he made for
open eegistration Limes
Adoption of the new syotem
resulted from diseantent with
the. previuusly used alpha cube
t system Under alpha
consideration W
on

made ay to chose year

Feyatered accerding to whet

Gne's alphabet romp wie

assigned, regress af clas

talus While alpha catation wi

Tustituited te afsuire: each person

1 fare shot al early: regestration, at
fell far short oof
The prunnnary evsanphant

Alpha cotatum way the elused

problem One could be

eautese regard

year Many upper

vid themselve

Wasting list

omen tliat they: sth
tion Whe rationale: toon thas
hat an upperctasaian, ch
out ata course, had tran chance
thaw an underelasanan to take tt
mal The fuet that
upperclosmen pay $150 more
twitron per ye
underclassmen with
at reqistration was a
annoyance, as well
Research results have shown
that the drop rate for underclass
men led in upper division
(300) and 100 level) courses

tal task in restoring order

Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
was due in Saigon Tuesday after
noon on the first leg of a seven-
nation Asian tour that also will
take him to Cambodia, Thailand,
Laos, Singapore, Indonesia and
Malaysia. Agnew's press sec
retary, J. Marsh Thompson, said
the trip is intended partly to
assure the Asian countries that

re not abandoning our
friends.”

US. Ambassador Ellsworth
Hunker was reported 10 have
intervened for the second suc
cessive day in trying to solve a
second diplomatic snag that
could prove embarrassing t0
Agnew

AIRPORT SNAFU

Neatly 180. additional North
Vietnamese delegates, own
from Hanon to Saigon showtd
two US. An bore C180 trans,
ports to. yom the foe party
military. peace commission
unitatsd then Viet Cong allie
sid telused to budge trom then

planes,

(approximately 34%) is
considerably greater than the
drop rate for upperclassmen in
upper level courses
(approximately 9%). ‘This means
that many upperclasmen get
closed out of courses by under
elassmen who eventually drop.
any way
Tn fight of this, advocates at
the semority based system tee
the diserimination aygunst under
clasamen iy jtintified Current
velassmen will benefit fram
this sytem when they reach

The delegates were parked at credentials. The cease-fire agree» The Americans and South

Tan Son Nhut air base in front
of U.S. base operations, in the
same area, where Agnew's jet was
scheduied to land

They “will be there till
morning,” said an Air Force
man. “The big man is coming,
and if they ain't gone by thes
we're going to tow them away or
taxi them away.”

DISPUTES ARISE

There were reports that the
first two meetings of the four
party Joint Military Commission
broke up in acrimonious. diy
putes over the failure of at least
one of the two Communist
delegations to present ereden
als

The US and South Vietnam
ese demanded that they otter
such documents But the Viet
Cong chimed they did not need
them because they had been
invited to the meehng, it way
learned

There were conthermye reports
yt whether the North Viet

Spring

Upperelass statun and will appre
ciate the opportunity to register
early in popular upper division
Lutfi Fights Red Tape

Fundamental in the adoption
of seniority based
pre registeation was Sandy Latti
* yumor at SUNYA A
psychology mnyur, Sandy
Hecume aggravated at beng
Chased om at courses, aggravated
enough to try to do something
abut

After making mquuries, Sandy

5300 Begins Volunteer
Training Sessions

by Ron Donovan

Everybody's talking but hardly
anyone os fistenig. On Thursday
fight there wax a meeting af
those wher want fer bsten

The S000 swatelbenard 0s just
me at the tea 1 thy
irqunizatin Knwwn as Muddle
Karth whieh a devoted ta givinye
Heuple a taeudly ear when they
now at

From their othice i Ten Eyek
Hall on Duteh Quad members
donate their ime answering
questions that range trom
Livities on campus that night
tu those about suicide and pr
nancy Although the members of
ths 21 hour serview are not
actually qualified ax counselors
they have a wealth of informa
tion that they can offer to
people looking for alternative
solutions to their problems, If
the operators don't know the

wer to w question they can
quickly provide the number of

who does know.

At te time does anyone con

nected wath the switchboard try
ta salve a person's problerns
Mather, they act ax vue

mircors sbawing the callers whit
they seem tes be ssaysng. Ln this
way the callers become. mere
Famuhiae with themselves and 90
mare familiar with the causes of
their problenw. ‘This i a start

toward solving them

tuvalved uy thus

yourself
switehbourd 1
who are mterested im helping
Trang of ne orm boeinan
this Friday evening 2
the woman's auxiliary) gym
will be a fantasy trip
from 7 pam. to 11 pam, While
this expenence receives many
different reactions it is without
doubt interesting and is certainly
g you couldn't easily
sewhere. IVs open to
who wants to attend.

ment makes no mention of cre:
dentials in its section on the
military commissions,

The two sides were said to
have accused each other at both
meetings of cease-fire violations
One source said the meetings
accomplished “absolutely noth-
ing

Vietnamese walked out of the
first meeting about noon, short-
ly after the Viet Cong delegates
arrived from Tan Son Nhut air
base, The 10 had stayed on the
base for 20 hours aboard a plane
that hud brought — them

cont'd on page five

Colon’s ‘Monster’
Grows Kinder

by Mike McGuire

“I's been a good bookrush,”
said University Bookstore
manager Arnold Colon, and the
feeling seemed (a be universal as
this reporter spoke to students
and to bookstore employees.

The lines were shorter and every
body seemed happier about the
whole situation than they did in
eptember.

Why has Mr Colon's. “mon
ster’ of last semester suddenly
grown benevolent? “Re
hooks,” replied Mr. Colon,
adding that carry-over courses
often use the same Lexthook
both semesters, He also cited the
three-book-per-course limit
which the Bookstore hus pliced
upon the faculty, Any books

1 the original three will only
be carried Inter in the semester

Colon credited the faculty
with “eloxer cooperation in
Hiving us accurate class enroll
ments
ment figure
under - orders of the text by th
huwkstore

Colon seemed to feel tha
posting a divided booklist th

helped the crush sume:
he fill.a student hadl
of knowing Da text wits

the murs bookstore. ‘This
any books available i the main
houkstare are denoted by
asterisk

The Ovemight Delivery Service
wan une of list semester's mont
prominent headaches, ‘This
nemester iL was upagraded so thy
We could handle one thousand
orders a day, However, said Mr
Colon, only ye huudeed order
Were processed ii the threw days
ODS was in aperat iM
mentor He atterbutes part «
the dechow to dwindling of line
by the feet counties an the
tunnels near (he Physics
luting.

Expanded hears and better
Hranning af hey were aloe eited
hy Colon as reasons for better
conditions during booke ust

stare employee whe

be identified agreed
with Colon i that the bookrush
was leas hectic, but offered some
differmg exphinations, Private
transactions of texts between
frwnds cut down on the number
of new texts that must be sold

There is also a tendeney for
students to take a lighter course
load in the spring, which means
that they would be buying fewer
books.

that the Overnight

Delivery Service worked simply
because it was organized better
this time around, There was
space set aside for ODS orders
this semester, and they were
kept in numerical order, He also
ave some eredit to the increased
numbers of studenty hired for

1M LG0KIN" FOR THE
BOOK LINE!
a 7)

BOOK LIME,
Can HE

the hookrush, But, he
overkill, Some

up to punch

in, only to find that they
weren't needed due to shorter

This reporter spoke with Mark
Pickering, a student hired to
work the boukrush, Mark told
ASP that he saw the three-book
Limit ais being the main cause of
uy Improvement thiy semester
He discounted the early hours
which hud been added te

hours, saying that
wanted to buy text

hooks before eight in the
morning anyway, However, he

people tended to avoid
k hours when longer lines

formed, and this helped to keep
the lines short

One widely heard theory for

the shortening of lines this

enwaster om that feulty bought

Wexly through other bookstores
mn Albany. Mr. Colon admitted
that a few teachers did this, but
tida't think it wax very
prevalent. This v wits

voutirmed by iw eall this reporter
made to the manager of a local
bookstore rumored to be
involved in such operations
Mihough the manager said that
wome teachers “send a little
Dusiness our ways! he de
Uhat any teachers went so far as
to urder textbooks from him.
Thus, outside orderi

seom Lo be a signifies
the shorter lines here

One gripe students still had

was over the price of books.
Examples of what students
consider overcharging would be
8 paperback bought at alist
price of over $6.00 oF a logic
text, hardbound but about the
size of a small paperback, which
this reporter bought for $7.95.
Although there is w large sisn as

Continued on page thee

Metadata

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CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 24, 2018

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