Albany Student Press, Volume 55, Number 20, 1968 December 6

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Court
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VOL. LV NO. #2

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

Study Abroad
In Israel

Now Offered

by Amy Gurian

Study abroad programs have
emerged with 2 integral goals:
promoting academic excellence in
a field, and promoting
international understanding. In
cooperation with the American
Friends of the Hebrew University
of Jeruselem, SUNY offers a
full-year program in Israel with

these goals in mind.

Undergraduates are required to
have completed at least 2 years of
college before their departure. A
few graduate students are also
eligible.

Prior knowledge of Hebrew is
not absolutely required, although
a familiarity with the language is
desirable. Students will be given
an intensive language course, the
Hebrew University “Ulpan,” from
August through October. Students
will be enrolled as full-time
students for the academic year,
from November through June.

Courses will be offered in both
English and Hebrew, and in
addition, a course for SUNY
students will be taught by a
professor accompanying the
group. Students will receive up to
36 semester hours of credit from
SUNY.

The joint project was founded
by Dr. Yonah Alexander,
Associate Professor Political
Science, at the State University
College at Oneonta with the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Dr. Alexander has also organized a
summer session, for 6 semester
credits.

Early application is
recommended. Additional
information and application forms
are available in the office of John
Nicolopoulos, Coordinator of
International Programs, Social
Science, Room 381.

KALEIDOSCOPE REHEARSAL FOR opening chorus number. The
All-University Talent Show opens tonight at Page Hall. Tickets are free

with student tax; $1 without (see story on pg. 6).

Court Re

scinds

Mandatory Tax

by Barry Kirschner

The Supreme Court has ruled
that the ‘referendum’ held on
October 23-25 concerning a
mandatory student fee shall be
interpreted as nothing more than
an opinion poll. The Court
unanimously decided that “since
no legislative proposal was
presented to the student body in
the ‘referendum’, there was no
referendum.”

The decision of the court
substantiated the claims in the
Nealy, and Schlecht and Kichen
referrals, that the ‘referendum’
was no more than an opinion poll.

Campus Liberalization:

LAAC Bill In Final Stages

by Nancy Durish Staff Reporter

In recent years, the University
has become more liberal in its
attitude toward the students’
formulation of standards and
limitations in non-academic areas.

This liberalization, giving
students more freedom and
responsibility, is seen in the
continual changes occurring in
policies concerning alcohol,
women’s hours, and visitation
periods.

The LAAC Bill concerning
Proposed Changes in University
Residence Policies is now on the
verge of becoming a reality. On
Tuesday, Student Affairs Council
passed three of the four points of
the bill, as follows:

I. There are no curfew hours
for any University student. Il.
There is no mandatory sign-out
procedure for any University
student. A voluntary sign-out
system may be provided by the
residents of the hall/or hall
government.

Interact To Help
ASP Foster Child

INTERACT, a community
service organization is sponsoring
a Tag Day Drive for Graciela
Garcia, the foster child of the
ASP.

Today tags will be sold in the
Campus Center at the cost of $.25
each. These tags will entitle the
bearer to free coffee all day.

Saturday night, INTERACT is
sponsoring a mixer in the Campus
Center Ballroom. The cost of the
mixer is $.75 per person, or $.50
with a tag. All proceeds from this
event will also go towards the
foster child project. ‘The
Originals” a popular local group
will be providing the musical
entertainment. Graciela lives in
Bogata, Columbia where she
attends grammar school. The ASP
has been sending money to her for
five years; however, care for the
child will now be assumed by
Interact.

Funds for Graciela’s support

have been successfully solicited in
the past from the student body,
and it is hoped that this year’s
efforts will be as productive,

III. During visitation, all
students may exercise their right
to privacy by leaving suite and/or
bedroom doors closed and locked
if they so choose.

The bill is scheduled to be
presented to the University
Council by President Collins for
final approval on Dec. 12.

At this time the outlook for the
bill is very optimistic, and
assuming final approval is given,
will go into effect as soon as
possible according to University
procedure.

April of 1967 marked the end
of hours for all upper-class
women, and determined the
restrictions to be placed upon
freshman women.

Prior to this date, many
proposals to ease restrictions on
women’s hours had been drawn
up, including the Key System
Proposal in March of 1966. This
proposal, in which existing
curfews would be maintained
while extending a key privilege to
every upperclass woman, was
passed by Central Council, but no
subsequent action was taken on it.

The first major legislation
concerning the alcohol policy at
the University was passed in
March of 1967. According to this
policy, beer will be served in the
Rathskeller, and alcoholic
beverages will be available in the
Patroon Room and at specified
University functions.

watch their
Z e F

include the Mohawk and Dippikil
campuses. No alcohol, however, is
allowed in the residence halls or
the residence courtyards of the
quads.

Various proposals are scheduled
for LAAC hearings in the near
future, according to Vie Looper,
Chairman of LAAC. They include
proposals concerning aicohol in
residence halls, a lock-box
cylinder system for women
entering the ahhalls after closing,
and the residence policy in which
each dorm will be able to
determine its own visitation and
open house policies,

Firing Line

of Supreme Court's
decision, there will be no
mandatory student fee in the
Spring ’69 semester.

A dispute over the meaning of
the word referendum brought up
in the Nealy referral and the open
hearing of the case before

Supreme Court led the court to
define the word ‘referendum’ as

the “submission of a legislative act
to the students for a binding
vote.”

The Supreme Court also
declared unconstitutional the
‘Waiver of Payment of Mandatory
Fee for Economic Reasons’ and
‘Penalty for Non-Payment of
Mandatory Fee’, since these bills.
assumed the existence of a
mandatory fee.

Also pointed out in the
decision is that to act in
accordance with a decision of the
Trustees of the State University of
New York, the Central Council
would have to be elected by the
student body and not the student
association if they wished to
establish a mandatory tax.
Presently only those members of
the student boay who pay student
tax are members of student
association and allowed to vote
for Central Council. The court
also ruled against the challenges,
in the referrals, concerning the
wording of the ballot and the
absence of a minimum
requirement of the number of
voters. It also decided that a
majority vote was sufficient to
enact legislation.

Debate :

Because

Birth Control Methods

by Doris Steinhardt

Another Firing Line debate was
presented last night on the subject
“Birth Control-Methods and

ity.” The speakers were Dr.

Wood, Rev. Frank

Snow, Prof. Joseph Blaiber, and
Bill Rhode.

Dr. Wood first stressed how
serious he feels the problem of
overpopulation is. by the year
2000, world population will
double, and there will be 7 billion
people to be fed.

Dr, Wood believes that massive
starvation is a strong possiblity,
and that people are not going to
just “sit around and starve or
children starve.” We

THE PROBLEM OF BIRTH CONTROL was debated in the second Firing Line presentation. Future over
population is to be delt with by technology according to the opposer to the pill, and through birth control
by the pill’s advocate. Panelists, (I to r) Dr. Joseph Blader, Dr. Curtis Wood, William Rhode, and Rey. Frank

Snow. by Sue Stieger

may have to contend with riots,
mass slaughtering, and overthrow
of governments.

What can we do now? Dr.
Wood believes that married
couples should stop at two
children, If the average number of
children per family is three, the
population will double every 40
years. “For the future welfare of
the country, we must level off
somewhere.”

Dr. Wood is Medical Consultant
for the Association for Voluntary
Sterilization. He advocates
teaching people the advantages
and disadvantages of all methods
of birth control and performing
sterilization when it is desired.

The principle objection to Dr.
Wood’s comments raised by both
Snow and Blaiber was that the
moral question lay in the fact that
the resources we have are so
unevenly distributed. We should
attack this problem because there
is over-population right now,
rather than worrying about the
year 2000.

Dr. Wood also said that
technology would not deal with
the problem of overpopulation.
Cities under the sea and
settlement of the
South Poles are possibi
he feels that they won’t become
reality. Rev, Snow, on the other
hand, expressed the opinion that
technology will be able to deal
quite sufficiently with
overpopulation.

PAGE 2

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

Anti-Vietnam

Students Raid.

NYU Lectures:

NEW YORK (UPI) —
James M. Hester, president tat
New York University (NYU),
Thursday condemned raids by
radicals on two campus meet-
ings as “crude and revolting”
and said two raiders had been
identified as NYU students and
suspended.

More than 50 young persons
swarmed into the university’s
student center last night, threw
a pitcher of water and an egg
on South Vietnam’s observer at
the United Nations, Nguyen Huu
Chi, then disrupted another
meeting where James Reston,
executive editor of The New
York ‘Times, was giving an
address. One raider was arrest-
ed.

The Students for a Democra-
tie Society (SDS), the new left
group which has stirred revolts
at Columbia University and
other institutions in the city,
issued a leaflet which claimed
credit for the raids.

Hester said any NYU student
identified as having taken part
in the raids would be suspend-
ed, pending further disciplinary
action by a committee of the
Student Faculty University Sen-
ate. He said persons identified
as nonstudents would be
charged before civil authorities.
There were reports that some
of the raiders were Columbia
University students.

“The disruption of speeches

. was a crude and revolting

violation of the most basic
principles of the university,”
Hester said at a news con-
fernce. ‘Violent _ interference
with the rights of others to
speak and to be heard
demonstrates gross insensitivity

to the requirements of member-
ship in the university ... such
unprincipled disregard of the
fundamental human courtesy on
which the life of the académic
community is built cannot be
tolerated.”

Benjami

by Marty
BACK IN ALBANY, Paul O’Dwyer spoke at the Unitarian Church of
Albany. To O’Dwyer’s left is Otto Honegger, one of the founders of the

Students,
May

by Marcia Stalker
Uperation Gooawill will be at

work in Stuyvesant Tower next
week. At the tower, students will
be able to find out how they can
get in touch with servicemen
overseas.

People interested in writing to
servicemen can obtain addresses
from the student representatives
in Stuyvesant Tower next week.
Servicemen who want letters hzve
sent their addresses to Operation
Goodwill; from there, the
addresses .will be given to those

who want to write to the
servicemen.

To protect any specific
servicement from receiving

“crackpot” letters, no names of
servicemen will be given, and the
addresses will include only such
information as the name of a
serviceman’s company or ship.

The letters will be posted at
requested locations where the
servicemen can pick a letter they
would like to answer.

Indoor Competitions
Sponsored By ACU

Contests in billiards, bowling,
bridge, chess, and table tennis,
sponsored by the Association of
College Unions, (ACU) will take
place from Monday, January 6
through Saturday, January 11,
1969.

All events will be conducted in
the Compus Center, and will be
held under the direction of the
Student Activities Office.

Registration ferms for each
event may be obtained at the
Campus Center information desk
from Monday, December 9,to
Thursday, December 19.

Students desiring to enter the
tournament must have amateur
status, which is defined as never
having acepeted cash or
merchandise prizes in the sport
they plan to participate in.

After registering their ID cards

with the University, students
should contact one of the
following persons: Billiards,

Joseph Sjlvey, 457-6733; Bowling,
Nelson Swart, 457-6314; Bridge,
Harry Nuckols,, 428-3859; Chess,

Lee Battes, 457-7942; Table
Tennis, Donald DeCicca,
462-0371.

Students will be paired for
competition and participants will
be notified by each tournament
direcotr.

The winners of the local
tournament will be eligible to
compete in the Region Il contest,
which will be hosted by Cornell
University on February 14-15,
1969."

THE
ATE DROP

JUST ONE
FRESHENS
BREATH

INSTANTLY!

local chapter of Citizens for a Democratic Alternative (CDA).

Correspond

Soldiers

Friends and relatives can send
taped messages to servicemen
during the holidays through
Operation Goodwill. Anyone can
tape a message either by calling
Operation Goodwill at 465-1441
or by going to Fort Orange Redio,
904 Broadway. Tapes can be
made by phone through the use of
special telephones connected to
tape recorders.

SEANYS

Program

Aids Ed. Majors

The Student Education
Association of New York State
(SEANYS) is a statewide
Professional organization for both
public and private college and
university students who have
shown an interest in the teaching
profession as a career.

It is sponsored by the New
York State Teachers Association.
SEANYS is also affiliated on the
national level through the Student
National Education Association.
(Student NEA).

It would seem natural for an
education-oriented organization
such as SEANYS to be present at
a university like this one, which
evolved from a “teachers college.”

During the present year,

however, SEANYS is undergoing a
“rebirth” on campus through
regenerated interest in the club on
the part of education majors and
through expanded club activities.

The success of SEANYS’
renewed vigor has been reflected
in it’s first event of the year~A
Student Teachers Panel Program,
which was held on November 19.

The purpose of this Panel
Program was to enable education
majors to find out what student
teaching is “all about” by
providing an opportunity for
them to question a group of
students who had recently
completed their student teaching.
program.

The student teachers answered
questions concerning various
methods of teaching, discipline
problems, teaching at Milne versus
off-campus teaching, supervision,
and improvements that need to be
made in the teacher education

SDS To Present
Draft Program

An important Draft Education
Program will be presented this
Monday at 8 p.m., for all students
and faculty members interested in
a better understanding of the U.S.
draft system. The exact location
will be announced by posters.

The program will probably
consist of three or four short talks
followed by discussion periods,
although the exact format will be
decided by the size of the

attendance. Emphasis will be
placed on education and
discussion.

The speakers will include Dr.
Riley of the English Department,
a member of the University Draft
Counselling Service; Frank Snow
from Chapel House; and Dr.
Whitney of the Boston Draft
Resistance Group.

The program is part of a
continuous effort by the Draft
Committee of Students for a
Democratic Society to inform
draft-eligible students of their
rights under the law.

‘My best shirts get
ripped to shreds
when | wear your
after shave’

We keep warning you to be careful how you use

Hai Karate® After Shave and Cologne. We even put
instructions on self-defense in every package. But
your best shirts can still get torn to pieces. That's
why you’ll want to wear our nearly indestructible

Hai Karate Lounging Jacket when you wear
Hai Karate Regular or Oriental Lime.
dust tell us your size (s,m,|) and send
one empty Hai Karate carton, with

$4 (check or money order), for each
Hai Karate Lounging Jacket to:

Hai Karate, P.O. Box 41A, Mt. Vernon,
N.Y. 10056. That way, if someone
gives you some Hai Karate, you can
be alittle less careful how you use it.

Kes

Send for your
practically rip-proof
Hai Karate
Lounging Jacket,

Allow 6 weeks for delivery. Offer expires April 1, 1969. If your favorite store is temporarily out of Hai Karate, keop asking,

xem

FRIDAY NIGHT

SLEIGH RIDE

WEATHER PERMITTING

HERE ON CAMPUS

WINTERLUDE
DECEMBER 13 & 14

SATURDAY NIGHT

DINNER DANCE

WITH A LITTLE BIT OF SOUL

9 pm

- tam

PAUL LEE & THE WALKERS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

students what they were looking for in interviewees.

Youn
Holds

by Peggy Blugar and Bill O’Kain

The Young Socialist Alliance
held its national convention at. the
University of Ilinois in Chicago
over Thanksgiving vacation.
Student revolutionaries from
France, Mexico, Canada, Iran,
Japan, Germany, and the
Dominican Republic participated
in the convention in addition to
YSAers from every section the
United States.

The national convention is held
annually to decide the policy and
frame the national guidelines of
the organization for the coming
year. Each local chapter of YSA
elects delegates who represent the
group by participating in
discussions and voting on the
resolutions proposed by the
national committee.

The convention began on
Thursday, November 28, with the
first of four reports on the main
areas of action for YSA: anti-war
work, Black self-determination,
new youth radicalization, and
political alliance with the Socialist
Worker’s Party.

Included in the activities of the
four-day convention were original
films of the May-June French
revolts; speeches by Black Panther
Party representatives and George
Novak, a leading Socialist writer

Chic

and philosopher; and a celebration
party. In addition, were panels

discussing international youth
radicalization, minority group
problems, and G.I. anti-war
activity.

Nation-wide publicity was given
to the convention as a result of
the protest by an Illinois state
Senator to the fact that an openly
radical youth group was using the
facilities of a tax-supported
university. The 1968 convention
was the largest to be held since
the YSA was formed in 1960. The
group has more than doubled its
size since the 1967 convention
and currently has chapters on 101
campuses in the United States and
numerous U.S. high schools.

Members of various Leftist
groups who attended included
representatives from SDS, Black
Panther Party, Peace and Freedom
Party, Worker’s League,
Spartisans, Socialist Labor Party,
and the Communist Party.

The Albany YSA members who
attended the convention have
begun preparations to bring
leading speakers in the socialist
movement to the campus,
including George Novak and Paul

SUNYA Lacks Color
Says UB’s Spectrum

Two Buffalo University
students have described the
Albany State campus as “The
World’s Fair Gotham
City—the year that the plague
wiped out the populace.”

‘Throughout the body of a three
page story, which appeared in the
U. of B. Spectrum on Nov. 19,
Linda Hanley, Feature Editor of
The Spectrum, the official
University paper, makes reference
to the absence of activity, the
seeming lack of students, and the
sterility of the Albany Campus of
the State University.

Phrases such as “hollow
desention (on) an uncampus
campus” and “there are no

students on this campus” are seen
throughout the story.
Accompanying the feature are
eight photos of the campus—all of
which show a marked absence of
student life on campus. Alan
Gruber, Asst. Photo Editor, and
Miss Hanley took the pictures and
gained the information for the
story on a trip to the campus late
on weekday afternoon last month.

The story and photos with it
have been done in an essay
manner. Figurative descriptions of
the campus such as this
one—“They (the students) have
become assimilated into endless
stretches of black and white;
shrunk behind the dark glass;
taken hiding in back of millions of
wafer-thin white columns; been

crushed by flying saucers when
the chains finally broke.”—are
sprinkled throughout the story.

In closing, Hanley states, “The
campus has an unnatural aura
about it of not having been
designed for students .. . All
around everything seems just a
facet of a very beautiful work of
art, but somehow not a campus.”

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE 3

by Stu Ritter

DELTA SIGMA PI business fraternity sponsored a meet the interviewer's night. Companies represented
were (I to r) Mobile Oil, Macy’s, President of DSP, a CPA firm, and General Electric. The panel explained to

Socialist Alliance
ago Conference

Boutelle of the Socialist Workers:
Party. Plans for next semester
tentatively include showings of
the films of the French revolts,
and the development of an
independent, educational “Red
University” with guest lecturers

and classes to further
revolutionary awareness on
campus.

Collins Discusses

LAAC’s Reforms

by Tim Keel

President Evan R. Collins, back
from his recent visit to Europe,
discussed the LAAC bill
concerning resident policies with
students at The President’s
Conference with Students on
Monday.

Collins noted that the bill was
still in “the channels”, but “if it
reaches me before December 12 I
will bring my recommendations
before the University Council.”

Vie Looper, chairman of
LAAG, remarked that points I and
II of the bill dealing with the
abolition of freshmen hours and
the abolition of signout had
received faculty approval. Looper
further anticipated the approval
of point IV concerning the option
of closing doors during open room
visitation .

The thrid provision of the bill
which would allow the individual
halls to decide the length of time
open room visititaions would last
was sent back to LAAC for

revision. The question of
administering that point was
raised by the faculty.

Collins while in accord with the
bill noted that “I would like to
deal with the provisions as a
package plan.”

In the same train of thought, a

Golden Eye To View
Scientology Tonight

by John O'Grady

Neil Brown, director of the
Scientology Center in Albany, will
speak tonight at the “Golden
Eye.” The talk will begin at 9
p.m., admission is free; the “Eye”
is located at 820 Madison Avenue
downtown. The purpose of the
talk, said Brown, will be to
acquaint those interested with the
“promise of Scientology,” its
possibilities for bettering the
conditions in which an individual
learns and lives.

Scientology is a world-wide
movement founded rather
recently by an American writer
and adventurer named L, Ron
Hubbard. Hubbard’s best-selling
book, “Dianetics, the Modern
Science of Mental Health,”
appeared in 1950; its success led
to the transformation of dianetics
(the study of the workings of the
mind, or spirit) from a mere
subject of research into an
effective method of changing
people for the better, known as
Scientology.

In a recent interview, Brown
defined Scientology as “an
applied religious philosophy with
a technology that betters
conditions”; other than this
statement he was surprisingly
reticent about the methods of

[eo SS |
Seniors and
Graduate Students

Career hunt with 90 of the finest companies
having operations located in the New Jersey/New
York metropolitan area. On December 26-27 at the
Marriott Motor Hotel, intersection of Garden State
Parkway and Route 80, Saddle Brook, New Jersey.

For more details, including a listing of spon-
soring companies, see your college placement
director or write to the non-profit sponsor of the
second annual “Career-In’’: Industrial Relations
Association of Bergen County, P. O. Box 533,
Saddle Brook, New Jersey 07662.

Scientology, preferring neither
publicity nor propaganda.

Commenting on a_ recent
exposee in ‘Life’ magazine, in
which writer Alan Levy detailed
the methods of Scientology and
condemned it for tampering with
the human psyche, Brown
thought the article was very
aceurate, graciously accepted the
publicity, and felt that each
individual was entitled to his
conclusions.

student asked what the
community of Albany saw as the
image of the University.

“A number of letters are sent
to the administration from
concerned citizens,” Collins
commented. ‘Most. of the letters
indicate that we've got to place
social regulations on students.”

“T feel you get exercise for
responsibility by first. exercising
responsibility. Students should be
given this chance,”

S.E.C.T,

The week of December 9th
marks the beginning of the
accumulation period for the
information in the SECT course
guide.

During the week, from
December 9th through the 13th, a
SECT committee member will
visit each participating class to
distribute student questionnaires.
As these questionnaires are
computer tabulated, the
co-ordinating committee asks that
all of the involved students bring
number 2 pencils with them to
class this week.

Walt’s
SUBMARINES

Call IV 9-2827
or IV 2-0228

FREE
DELIVERY

(Three Subs Minimum)

Mon-Sat
Tpm - tam
Sun & Other. Special
|___Days 4pm-iam

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UNIVERSITY

Jo All

Sale Starts Monday Dec.

BOOKSTORE CHRISTMAS SALE

OFF

REGULAR
PRICE

GIFT ITEMS

Sweat Shirts, Tee Shirts, Mugs, Glassware ,
Night Shirts, Jackets, Stuff Animals

9 thru Sat Dec.14

Just Arrived For Chistmas A Large Selection Of
Childern’s Books,Paperback Books, Great Gifts.

Happy Holiday —

And Jo All
A Good Book

University Bookstore

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

oT

o43

CHAPTER

NATIONAL
BRSTHERHAGGD

OF
, ARMADILLOS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER’, 1968

AerFé

THE

P EDITO

RIAL SECTION

A New Club: Student Association

A new club was created by Supreme Court this week, and it will be known by the
name of Student Association. Once Student Association was regarded as the body to
which one looked to for the expression of the student body. If Supreme Court’s
definition of the representative powers of Central Council, as expounded in its recent
judgement on the Student Fee Referendum, is not withdrawn, then Student
Association may as well fold up. Since the court ruled that Central Council was not
composed of any “duly elected representatives of the student body as a whole,”
Council could not represent the student body, i.e., declare a mandatory student fee on
the basis of the vote taken by the student body on October 23, 24, and 25. If this
judicial decision is extended to the other aspects of the student government, then no
governmental branch of Student Association can act on anything that will affect all

students, since it cannot represent the student body.

The seriousness of this decision lies in the fact that one function of Student
Association, the representation of the student body, has been banned. No longer can
the Faculty look upon the student who sits on their committee as a representative of
the student body. No longer can that student feel justified as a representative of the

student body, even though he is representing them, because his actions may affect the

future of all the students.

President Collins cannot, ac

cording to the court’s decision, go to

Central Council, LAAC, or the Supreme Court itself to ascertain the
position of the student body on any issue. The president, or any other
administrative official,to obtain the opinion of the student body must
either ask Council to conduct a poll, present their own poll, or ignore

the interpretation of Supreme Court and consider Central Council the

representative student voice on campus. Of the alternatives, the
administration is likely to choose the latter.

Supreme Court has taken, in effect, its concept of representation and
applied it not only to-Chancellor Gould’s Student Fee Statement, but
glso to any future administrative directive that addresses itself to the

There will be an open meeting early
next week, probably Tuesday, to
consider the Calendars for the next
two years. Watch the ASP Tuesday for

further information.

The Department of Romance
languages is sponsoring a lecutre by
Professor Remy Saisselin from the
University of Rochester. He will
lecture in English on:'From Pascal to
Voltaire: The Transformation of
Aesthetics into Bourgeois Art’ at 4:00
p.m. in HU 354 on Wednesday
December 11.

Social and Political Concerns Board
(Speakers Board) meets Monday, 7:00
p.m. in the Campus Center Card room.
All recognized campus political groups
are entitled to one representative;
YSA, SDS, YAF, BSA, Young
Republicans, Young Democrats,
‘Committee to End the War.

YSA meets Sunday Dec. 8, at 7:30
p.m. In HU 113 to talk about how to
achieve student power at Albany.

Placement Notices: December
9--Central_High School District No. 1
(sign up in placement office), South
Huntington Schools, Hilton Central
Schools; December 10--Sachem Central
Schools, Aetna Insurance Company
Interviewing seniors in liberal arts,
business and science; December
11--Cooperative College Registry
Interviewing for college positions, Price

for staff

Waterhouse interviewing
acountants, Greece Central School
District No. 1.

The Reading Department in

conjunction with the | University
Counseling Center sponscrs a free,
non-credit reading improvement course
designed to accelerate your reading
ability. During the second semester
calass times are available: Mondays or
Wednesdays at 3:10 p.m. The classes
meet for 1 hour every week for 7
weeks and will begin on Monday, Feb.
10 and Wednesday Feb. 12. You may
enroll in one of these sessions by
contacting The University Councseling
Center by phone 457-8666 or by
stopping by Room BA 115 of the
Business Administration Building. The
REading Classes will be held in
Lecutrue Room 3.

Monthly Budget Reports due: all
Student Association budgeted
‘organizations: monthly budget reports
are due Tues. Dec. 10, Turn them in at
the Student Association Office 367
Campus Center. Any organization not
turning in a budget report will have its
budget frozen at the next regular
Finance Committee meeting Sun. Dec.
15.

Monthly budget report forms, new
voucher forms, and S.A. Finance
Policies are available at the S.A. Office.

Economics Club presents Professor
Morris A. Copeland on Fri. Dec. 6,
1968, 1:00 p.m. Assembly Hall
Campus Center to present “Economic
Outlook for 1969.”

Button’s Protest

‘To the Editor:

Congressman Button’s recent
attack on Mark Rudd’s
appearance at the State University
at Albany reveals a total lack of
comprehension of our
constitutional guarantees for free
speech.

Regardless of his viewpoint, Mr.
Rudd has a basic right to present
his ideas, as do all of us, in the
free exchange of ideas among
intelligent listeners. The New
York Legislature, like the State
University, is also a tax-supportea
institution, where many
unpopular statements are made
and defended by the legislators.
We doubt Mr. Button would deny
any legislator his right to speak,

even though his views are
vigorously opposed by all other
legislators.

We of the New York Civil
Liberties Union believe that Mr,

Button has a right to express his |

opinions opposing Mr. Rudd’s
statement, but we do not believe
that Mr. Button should use his
official position as congressman to
prevent Mr. Rudd from speaking.

Richard I. Nunez
Capitol District Chapter
New York Civil Liberties Union

Concert
we
Complaints
To the Editor:
I hope you will find:this letter
interesting if not important, as it
seems that a previous letter didn’t

quite meet YOUR approval, as it
was not printed in the Albany

representatives of the student body. According to Supreme Court, there are no such
representatives on campus. Supreme Court is not only interpreting the Student
Association’s Constitution, but it is also interpreting Chancellor Gould’s
which it has no legal authority to do.

statement,

Supreme Court seems to be obsessed with the idea that to be Tepresentative of the
student body, Central Council must be elected by all the students. A;
court has heardof actual representation, but h:
Not even our federal government excludes virtual representation. All the population of
this country can vote, except the people under 21, convicted felons, aliens, etc. Yet
these exceptions are in theory represented by Congress just as the non-tax payer is
represented by the governmental branches of Student Association.

‘pparently the

as never heard of virtual representation,

If the Supreme Court’s ruling is not to be ignored, then Student Association is only
a club that must concern itself with its own affairs. Only when all the students decide

to.pay the dues can the association ever expect to represent the student body—or so
the court thinks.

STUDENT Press,

But, the fact is at this time I
would like to criticize someone
else instead of the ASP. I have
two complaints, one which has
persisted since school started. I
am referring to those who set up
the gymnasium for concerts or
other gatherings. It seems now
that when you think of
entertainment at SUNYA, you
think of a faulty P.A. system. It’s
been seven weeks now! Hasn’t

anyone learned how to fix and
sr eesONE

Managing Editor
News Editor
Arts Editor
Sports Editor
Technical Editor

Co—Photography Editors

Business Manager
Advertising Manager

views. Funded by SA tax.

The Albany Student Press is published two times a week by the
Student Association of the State University of New York at
Albany. The ASP office, located in Room 382-of the Campus
Center at 1400 Washington Avenue, is open from 7-12 p.m.
Sunday thru Thursday night or may be reached by dialing
457-2190 or 457-2194. The ASP was established by the Class of
; 1918.

John Cromie
Editor-in-Chief

UPI Wire Editor °

Executive Editors Margaret Dunlap, Sara Kittsley, Linda Berdan

All communications must be addressed to the editor and must be
signed. Communications should be limited to 500 words and are
j subject to editing. The Albapy Student Press assumes no

Tesponsibility for opinions expressed in its columns and
communications as such expressions do not necessarily reflect its

operate the system, let alone
improve its woefully inefficient
quality? Someone better get with
it quick, because if we can’t
afford something like a football
team, we surely can’t afford a
specially trained team of
electronic brains to come and fix
a probably simple trouble.

It’s Somewhat embarrasing for
the University as well as
perturbing for the performers and

continued to page 5

Jill Paznik

Ira Wolfman

Carol Schour

Tom Nixon

David Scherer

Tim Keeley

Ed Potskowski Tom Peterson
Philip Franchini

Daniel Foxman

FRIDAY; DECEMBER 6, 1968

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

Sea

PAGE 5

The Ri

by Robert Iseman

ght Way

The Rothchild Account

By
Stu Rothchild

“But the university belongs to
the students!!” How often have
we heard this phrase used to
rationalize student unrest? It
appears that many students,
especially on state campuses such
as ours, have forgotten where the
money comes from to construct
the buildings, hire the faculty, and

generally keep the university.
operating.
No. Universities such as

SUNYA do not belong to the
students alone, but are the
property of the people of New
York State, the people who have
been taxed to pay for the
facilities. And, as owners of the
university, they have as much
right to decide the policies of the
school as we do. The only thing
that makes us different from them
is the fact that we have been given
the opportunity to attend the
school.

No one is bound to go to
college against his will, and
conversely, no one can claim that
a college education is one of his
“inalienable rights.” We cannot
say that we are being forced to
live or study under intolerable
conditions because no one is
forced to stay. However, the
privilege of remaining a student at
a given university could and
should be revoked when students
forcibly try to make policy that
they have no right to make.

Attending college is a privilege
that depends on the student
agreeing to abide by the rules of
the university; rules established
and enforced by the
representatives of the people, or
in other words the administration,
trustees etc.

Consequently we have two just

listeners to have to stop and wait

while someone poorly attempts to
fix the microphone, It’s true that
the gym is not the greatest place
to hold such events, but since it’s
the only place available, why not
make the best of what we have?

We have some good concerts
coming up soon. Are they fated to
be run in the typical University
tip-top manner or is someone
going to finally break down and
learn how to operate and possibly
improve our public address
system? The latter I hope!

Secondly, a question bothering
numerous students concerns the
sale of tickets to the
Collins—Union Gap concert. If
many students on campus weren’t
able to purchase tickets who had
the right, or rather the nerve, to
sell them off campus? Could it be
that more money can be made by
selling tickets at a higher price to
high school kids and other people
than to students on our own
campus? This is one of those
glorious benefits of paying
student tax; so you don’t have to
pay $4.00 for tickets to concerts,
ete.

No! But you might not get any
anyway. Shouldn’t students on
the campus get some preference in
buying tickets? If there weren’t
enough to go around then we
should get them first. Is it right
that some students had to pay
$8—$10 or more to purchase a
ticket to their own concert which
many helped to pay for? Someone
better come up with some quick
and good explanations. There are
a few people who don’t want to
miss the next good concert, I for
one.

Michael A. Stark °71

Editor’s note: Your letter was left
out through accident. Sorry. The P'A’
problems stem from rented equipment,
performer’s whims, and the fact that
the gym was built without a P.A.

alternatives if we disagree with
certain policies. We can leave and
go elsewhere, or we can work with
the administration to have the
undesirable rules changed. But we
cannot demand that they be
changed, claiming that the
university belongs to the students,
and that the students can thereby
demand alterations in policy.

One of the most controversial
areas of decision-making concerns
the hiring and firing of professors.
I agree that students should have
advisory roles in deciding such
things as tenure (as we do here)
but the ultimate power in this

area must rest with the
administration, unless it is
properly delegated to the
students.

Recent unrest at San Francisco
State College has revolved around
the suspension of a part-time
professor. Black Panther George
Mason Murray was temporarily
released for suggesting that
students carry guns to classes to
protect themselves from “racist
administrators.” Militant students,
black and white, clashed with
police and closed the school
because of the suspension. They
claim that the students must
decide who will teach them and
what they are to be taught; that
the university belongs to them.

Only when they pay for the
buildings and the professor’s
salaries can they justly claim this
power. Until that time, the right
to dismiss or suspend teachers is
held by all the people of
California, who are represented by
the administration. Furthermore,
once a student decides to voice his
opinions in a way contrary to the

Cum Loudly
To the Editor:

As the holder of the highest
cumulative average in last year’s
senior class, I request you to
discontinue publication in the
ASP of such radical and
irresponsible items as Mr, Lago’s
cartoon in the November 22nd
issue. The caption of that cartoon
read: “The high achiever is more
successful in his post college
career than the average student
when it comes to playing THE
GAME.”

I object to such statements
becuase they suggest something is
wrong with the current marking
system and open the door to S-U
(satisfactory-unsatisfactory )
grading, which I consider to be 1)
inconsiderate, 2) dangerous, and
3) short-sighted.

1) S-U grading is inconsiderate
to the student who has diligently
and responsibly learned the rules
of “The Game” throughout high
school, often at great person!
sacrifice to himself (e.g., he often
selflessly gives up such habits as
honesty, fair play, service, and the
willingness to object and/or
reason.— S-U grading is
tantamount to Skinner awarding
only those rats who realize
lever-pressing is a relatively foolish
and unproductive pastime.

It is even more inconsiderate to
the faculty. At best, the better
instructors will be forced to use
more thought, good judgment,
and common sense in making
their evaluations; they will have to
rise to this challenge and, in so
doing, may be force to abandon
“tried and true” notes and
question.

At worst, the worse instructors
will no longer be able to hide
behind huge “objective” tests and
curves and, when students learn
not to shovel back their class

rules of the university, he should
be expelled. Indeed, the

administration of San Francisco *

State or of any other school owes
it to the people they represent to
vigorously enforce regulations and
ensure that the university remains
open to serve its intended
purpose.

Lesis F. Powell, president of
the Virginia State Board of
Edueation and former president
of the American Bar Association,
expressed it this way, “Student
extremists, and the faculty
members who support them in
their lawlessness, have forfeited
any right to remain as members of
a university community. The
sooner they are expelled from
student bodies and dismissed from
faculties, the sooner our campuses
will resume their historic roles as
centers of reason and intellectual
pursuit.”

A bruising Democratic primary
battle in June is shaping up for
the 1969 Mayoral contest in New
York City, as Rep. James H.
Scheuer, the 48 year-old Reform
Democrat from the Bronx, openly
threw his hat into the ring.
Expected in the near future to
also declare their candidacies is a
long list of hopefuls, including
Paul O’Dwyer and Rep. liam F.
Ryan of Manhattan, unsuccessful
candidates for the Democratic
nomination for Mayor in 1964.

Others expected to fight it out
in a bitter Democratic primary in
June are Bronx Borough President
Herman Badillo; City Councilman
Robert Low of Manhattan; Rep.
Hugh Carey of Brooklyn; Rep.
John Murphey of Staten
Island-Brooklyn; Stephen Smith,
borther-in-law of the late Senator
Robert Kennedy; and labor

mediator Theodore H. Kheel,
Rep. Scheuer has criticized
‘Mayor Lindsay as being
“ineffective” and doing “a poor
job of governing the city,” citing
such areas as housing, health,

hospitals, crime, education and
sanitation.
Rep. Scheuer, was

overwhelmingly re-elected to a
third term in the House last
month by the voters of the 21st
C.D. in the South Bronx. The old
Humphrey-Muskie New York
headquarters has been taken over
by Rep. Scheuer and his 25
campaign aides are busy
researching urban problems.

He is an active member of the
Reform Democratic movement in
New York City and was the first
Eastern member of Congress to
support Senator Eugene McCarthy
for the Presidential nomination las
spring.

BACK

OFF !

By BUTCH McGUERTY

I bought a copy of Suppression
last week and found an open
letter to a Chi Sig pledge, or was
it? Seems strange that a
publication that supposedly deals

with moral questions should
disregard little morals; eg.,
personal letters, and yet be

righteous about big morals. Leads
one to believe that perhaps these
People are irresponsible toward
society and that this
irresponsibility carries over to the
morality with which they

notes in papers and essay tests,
the poor faculty member might be
upset by something new! Is this
fair?!

2) S-U grading is dangerous for
several reasons. First, it lessens
the “joy of competition” (or “lust
for the kill”, as Robert Ardrey
might describe it). Furthermore,
where it has been tried (such
radical hotbedsas Berkeley and
Columbia and Brown, Oberlin,
Lehigh, Mount Holyoke,
Princeton,
Michigan, Cal Tech, etc.), the
results have been disastrous!

The faculty at these selools
have noted that more students
read books (even unassigned and
unsuggested books!!!); the
drop-out rate, especially for the
better students, decreases (and
we're overcorwded now!!!);
conformity decreases!!!; and more
students either participate in
“honors” courses, independent
study or community service
projects or take courses just
because they might be interested
in them (with no though to
requirements or practical use to
their major!!!) This is definitely
carrying educational
irresponsibility too far!

3) My final objection to S-U
grading is that it is short-sighted.
What if our students do learn to
challenge the “final answers” and
“eternal verities” our faculty have
arrived at over the many years?
Do you think it will stop there?
No! If this sort of thing gets out
of hand, our new answers and
yerities may be challenged by the
next generation, or even the next
freshman class! Is this progress?!

It is also short-sighted in that it
weakens the ethos of the
successful player of ‘The
Game”--and how many of us or
the faculty are truly without sin
here?! Eventually we won’t know
whom to believe and may even

Stanford, Rutgers im,

supposedly deal. If this is so, then
they are truly what they seem,
psuedo.
eee
After noticing the glasses in the
racks at dinner last night, I think
it’s time they change the water in
the dishwasher.
eee
Now that Alpha Lambda Chi
has gotten new jackets, it seems
that they have taken the hint and
gone Greek. EEP gets new jackets
next week and we are hoping.

come to doubt
textbooks say!!
Finally, it is short-sighted in
terms of our vocations. What will
happen when deans of admission
and employers regard personal
interviews, proven performance in
Projects and good
recommendations more highly
than the impersonal transcript
bearing letter grades acquired
through gamesmanship,

what our

mediately came to mind--I’m

i;

For the above reasons (which

Some anthropology professor
has a class movie scheduled for
Friday night. I thought that
anthropologists were supposed to
know something about culture.

eee

Had to explain weight lifting to
about fifty girls last night. How to
develop nonexisting busts and
firm saggy well-worn ones, and
stuff like that. Looks like they’re
beginning to panic about
marriage, so watch out, the big
push seems to be on.

sure there are countless others), T
hope you will cease publishing
attacks on the venerable
A-though-E grading system. I
hope my arguments have silenced
all but the most fanatic supporters
of the S-U grading. The latter, I
suppose, will charge that the
present system is so intolerable
that last year’s winner of “The
Game” is intellectually unfit and
merely acquired the “largest cum
loudly”.

Dick Collier

CLASSIFIEDS

if

indecent nature.

Just write your ad in the box below, one word to
each small square, cut it out, and deposit it in a sealed
envelope in the ASP classified advertising box at the
Campus Center Information Desk, with 25 cents for

The minimum price for a classified ad will be $.15.
We will also accept no ads that are of a slanderous or

Please include name, address, and telephone number

EX9-3778

with the ad.
Classifieds will appear every Fri. ~ Deadline| Wed. noon.
i i 1
| ai i !
i
| b
1 4
| i if
4 i
| |
V For Sale i Pe
1965 Volkswagen || "
Squareback Good condition,
sacrifice $1100, phone Bookin Come Home, signed
732-2115 anytime Bees.
} 1961 Ply-auto; PS; $225; call Nathan, Jealou? Bathsheba

Ladies laced ski boots size 7.
Used twice with carrier. Cheap.
€all Sandy 457-7762.

Without
| Purpose.
Ht

love, life has no

PAGE 6

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

KALEIDOSCOPE CHORUS LINE rehearsing their major production number of the evening ‘Anything
Goes.’ The show will run tonight and tomorrow night. Tickets are free with student tax; $1 without.

Kaleidoscope
Page

At

Special Events Board will
present KALEIDOSCOPE, the
All-University Talent Show, at
Page Hall, on Friday, December 6,
and Saturday, December 7,
promptly at 8:15. Tickets, which
will be on sale at the door, are
free with student tax, and $1

without,

KALEIDOSCOPE, under the
direction of Gary Restifo and
Kathi O’Neil, will have something
for everyone: folk, dance,
Broadway, comedy, and chorus
production numbers. The program
will feature well-received
performers seen in the past, as
well as new faces.

Lia Petkanas will sing “What
Did I Have That I Don’t Have
Now;” Carla Pinelli will sing and
play the autoharp; Linda Sherry

and Barbara Dayer will also
perform, as will Gary Restifo
with “Golden Rainbow,” Gary

Aldrich with a medley of songs
from Rodgers and Hammerstein,
and Ellis Kaufman with a medley
of songs by Bachrach and David.

Hall

There will also be Bruce
Ralston and Rick Liese with
“Broken Glass;” Roberta Murphy;
Larry Brown “Away, Away;”
Roslyn Springer, and the First
Derivative. Included too will be a
trio from the opera “Carmen”
done by Gail Pantley, Trudy
Wrubel, and Janet Ward; a number
called “The Flowers” which
saterizes life at Albany State, by
Claudine Cassan, Mary Carney,
and Andrea Rattner; and an
interesting group performance of
the “Geographical Gugue.” ‘

Premieres

Tonight

Topping of all this will be a
dancing chorus of 15. They will
open the show with
“Kaleidoscope Tonight” and close
it with “Sweet Beginnings,” in
addition to their big production
number of the evening “Anything

The staff inchides Gary Restifo
and Marilyn Liberati, scenic
design; Kathi O’Neil,
choreographer; J. Michael Walsh,
business manager; Eileen Deming,
lighting; Phyllis Larsen, stage
manager; and Gail Pantley and
Dennis Buck, co-musical directors.

FILMS

by Dave Bordwell

“No one will be admitted
during the last twelve minutes!”
gasps the ad for Joseph Losey’s
“Seeret Ceremony” (Hellman). It
would be fairer to us if it added,
“And we discourage anyone from
seeing the preceding hundred and
eight.”

The very first shot is archetypal
Losey: Liz Taylor before a mirror
yanks off a wig and tosses it on a
statuette of Jesus while a picture
of her daughter glares out from
the mantle. From there on,
Losey’s sinuous camera has lots of
fun with baroque decor, mirrors,
windows, arches, staircases~all his
characteristic clap trap that looks
so good in “The Servant” and
“Accident” but in “Secret
Ceremony” resembles the
daydreams of the editors of
“House Beautiful.” Grierson said
that when a director dies he
becomes a photographer; when
Losey dies, he becomes an interior
decorator.

Yet, “Secret Ceremony” does
offer things to watch. We can look
at Liz Taylor, blowzier and
coarser than ever, wallowing
around in leather and ermine. For
once her acting resources aren't
overtaxed-mainly she has lines
like, “Aw, have a heart!”~ but
when she’s called upon to deliver
a full-throated burp, it’s pleasant
to see she pulls it off as if she'd
been practicing all her life.

Or you can look at Robert

‘Erica, Eros, Young’ Again
Capture Their Audience

by Alan Lasker

This week the University is
once again the host to the
delightfully entertaining “Erica,
Eros, and Young,” formerly
known as ‘‘The Sounds
Unlimited.” They will be agpearin

Arlo Guthrie Takes
Folk World By Storm

by Marshall Fine

(CPS)--Rarely does a performer
take the folk world with such a
storm as has Arlo Guthrie. He has
avoided the inevitable
comparisons with his father, the
late Woody Guthrie, and set up a
distinctive style of his own. And
not only is he a natural comedian,
but a good singer and a very good
guitarist.

He made “‘Alice’s Restaurant”
something of an anthem for the
draft-conscious, and people were
so taken by this hugely funny
effort that many overlooked the
fine vocals on the other side of
the album.

On his new album, “Arlo” (on
Reprise), he combines his vocals
with his monologues, throwing in
his latest kick~meditation.

It starts out with a new version
of his “Motorcycle Song” which
appeared in the first album.
There, it was just a little too pat,
too well-done, Here it is new and
includes a very funny monologue
about how he came to write the
song. ;

He was, he claims, gcing down
a road on his motorcyle at 150
mph playing his guitar when, he

went over a cliff. He knew it was
the end, so he decided to write
one last farewell song to the
world. “I put a new cartridge in
my pen, took out a piece of paper
and sat back and thought a
while.” And he wrote the song
that is this poetry.

Guthrie has been moving
toward transcendental meditation.
He makes good use of it in
“Meditation (Wave upon Wave).”
It’s a song flavored with modes of
India, sounding like a kind of
monotone chant with a
mysterious variety to it. The song
is enhanced by use of a tabla.
Also, his guitar work is laudable
on this song.

He finishes the album with a
very funny talk on why he
dedicates a song to the FBI. The
song--‘The Pause of Mr.
Claus”--asks “Why do police guys
pick on peace guys?” And it tells
why the FBI should investigate
Santa Claus (“Santa Claus wears a
red suit/He’s a communi st””)’

He seems to have hit it just
right once again. The only
question in my mind was there
after his first album, too: How
can he follow it?

tonight and tomorrow night in
the Campus Center cafeteria

Erica, Jon and Dick project a
somewhat different image in
comparison to last year; the trio
seems to be more conservative and
more proficient in their work.
Their selections are primarily
comprised of folk ballads rather
than rock. Their ballads are not
only meaningful but also catch
and hold the attention of the
audience.

The trio’s voices are succinct
and commanding. They
harmonize very well together and
their vicious nature only adds to
their successful performance.

“The End of a Beautiful Day”
concerns a young man who is

about to face a gloomy and empty _

world because his only love has
left him. “The Homecoming” is a
melancholy tune which concerns

an anxious father who is awaiting
the arrival of his two sons. He has
not seen them for a long time and
is disheartened to learn that they
have chosen to visit friends rather
than him. The father’s life, which
at first appeared to be so short,
suddenly seemed too long to him.

The trio’s rendition of “Love is
Blue,” displaying Erica’s charming
and enchanting voice, is
exquisitely done. A selection that
I particularly enjoyed was
“Nothing to Say:” another tune
in which Erica’s voice cxptivates
her audience. ‘This selection deals
with the cruelty of time: two
friends who have long been
separated finally meet, and
discover they have nothing to say
to each other. Time has ruined
their once treasured friendship.
Erica, Jon and Dick succeed in
thoroughly entertaining their
audience.

Mitchum, in a pert obviously
meant for Burfon but which he
fills like wet Kleenex: college
professor on the make. The old
pro drags through every scene
with his eyes open an eighth of an
inch, looking as if all the incest,
rape, and general pscyhopathic
melee were going to put him right
to sleep. His best line is
“Sometimes one has to choose
between good taste and being a
human being.” somehow, he
manages to reject both.

Then theres Mia Farrow, her
hair dyed black and her eyes
rolling loonily enough to convince
anybody that she’s got big
Problems. Mommy is an uneasy
melange of understatement,
obviousness, grotesquerie, cheap
thrills, and absurd Absurd, Some
of the color is nice,
though—muted greens and icy
blues--and there’s one tense
moment of cutting when Liz is
haranguing Mia at the end. It’s all
Losey, no doubt: a fastidious
sliminess oozes out of every fram.
But the man simply can’t choose a
script! He can integrate sparse,
hard-edged material a la Pinter
with his own contorted,
flamboyant visuals and make it all
fancily creepy, but he can’t seem
to smell the difference between
that and Tennessee Williams
turgidity (“Boom”) or 1930's
hack fietion (‘Secret
Ceremony”.) So we wind up with
a chic, Londonized Tobacco Road
that demonstrates that Losey can
make more vulgarly awful movies
than any other important
film-maker around. It’s too bad
that sometimes one has to choose
between bad taste and being a
good director =

Notice

The Harvard Glee Club and
Radeliffe Choral Society, with
Elliot Forbes conducting, will be
heard in concert Sunday evening,
December. 8, at 7:30, in the
Campus Center Ballroom at the
University.

The LIGHTHOUSE
Restaurant and
BAR

State Students
Welcome
67 Colvin Ave.
Phone 482-9759

ARTHUR R. KAPNER

Your State Insurance Man
Writes All Types Of Insurance
Phone 434-4687

Friday , Dec. 6
Saturday , Dec. 7

THE ENDLESS SUMMER

color

WINNING FILM ON SURFING!

Tower East Cinema
On State Quad Adm. 75¢

7:30 & 10:96
7:30 & (45

(457-4315) Coffee

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Dec. 6,7

PAGE HALL

8:15 P.M.

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

STUDENTS DIG AT archaeological sites in Europe. Volunteers first
join a three-week seminar for training in British Archaeology.

Phi Delta Sponsors
Talk On Sex Attitudes

Dr. Mary S. Calderone will
address students at the University
on “Sex Attitudes and Sex
Education” at a meeting
scheduled for the Campus Center
Ballroom on Tuesday, December
10th at 2:00 pm. Dr. Calderone is
Executive Director of the Sex
Information and Education
Council of the U.S. (SIECUS).

This meeting is part of a two
day Capital District Conference
which has been arranged by the
Schenectady Committee on

Coordination of this program
has been handled by Mrs. Lois H.
Gregg, Associate Dean of Students
and Chairman, Committee on Sex
and Drug Education. Student
coordinator is Miss Lois Freedman
assisted by members of the Phi
Delta Sorority.

At the meeting Miss Freedman
will introduce Rev. Louis E.
Douglass of Catholic Charities
Schenectady who in turn will
introduce Dr. Calderone.

San Francisco State Pres.

Refuses To Close Campus

By DONALD B. THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO  (UPI)—
Acting President S$. I. Hayaka-
wa Thursday stood firm against
demands for closure of embat-
tled San Francisco State College
and removal of police from the
campus.

As 600
alert for

officers remained on
any new disorders,
Hayakawa went before the
Academic Senate’s Executive
Committee in another effort to

Dig
A new and exciting
opportunity in England is now
offered to College students
‘wanting to spend next summer in
Europe in an interesting way.

You may help to reveal the
secrets of a Roman villa, an
iron-age hill fort or the structure
Of RK medieval town or
Anglo-Saxon cathedral before
they disappear, perhaps for ever.
Expanding housing programs, city
centre redevelopment and new
highway projects in Britain to-day
have opened up many new
Possibilities for archaeological
investigation.

You may help in this important
work, earn credits, make
international friends and receive
valuable training in archaeology,
by joining a program sponsored
by the Association for Cultural
Exchange, the British non-profit
organization.

Volunteers first join a
three-week seminar for training in
British archaeology and

M

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find solutions to the crisis on
the 18,000-student campus.
Hayakawa gave no indication
he would budge from his
primary goals of proceeding
with regular classes while
seeking improvements in minor-
ity study programs. He labaled
the 300 hardcore demonstrators
as “‘anarchists.”

Militant leaders _ threatened
new disruptions, and called a
mass rally Saturday at the Civ

¢ Center Plaza facing city hall.
Mayor Joseph Alioto and Gov.
Ronald Reagan have endorsed
Hayakawa’s get-tough policy for
the campus.

A group of Negro civie
leaders pledged to join the
demonstrations to show their
support for a campus strike
started Nov. 6 by the Black
Students Union. Their demand
for a shutdown of the school

ForRoman

and removal of police were
rebuffed by Hayakawa in a
stormy session Wednesday.
BSU members listed among
their “non-negotiable” demands
reinstatement of Black Panther
George Murray as a part-time
instructor and a graduate
student. Hayakawa charged
they were being duped by
Students for a Democratic
Society—one of the more
radical campus groups in the
nation.

In announcing the Saturday
rally, SDS spokesman John
Levin said “we consider the
strike 80 per cent effective in
terms of fulltime students,”

Summer:

Villa

excavation techniques at Merton
College, Oxford. They then split
up into small groups for three or
more weeks “digging” on an
archaeological site. Total cost of
the program is 725 dollars.
Write now for further details to
Professor Ian A. Lowson,
Associate for Cultural Exchange,
539 West 112th Street, New
York, New York 10025, Closing
application date is expected to be
beginning of February 1969.

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THE GLOBETROTTERS OL FERED a fantastic ae! of antics for the

pleasure of an audience of over 2,000 spectators.

Wrestlers Open With
Quadrangular Sat.

Albany’s wrestling team opens
its season this Saturday when they
host the fourth annual
Quadrangular at 1 p.m.
Participating in the meet with
Albany will be wrestling squads
from the University of Rochester,
Hartwick College and the
defending champion, Dartmouth
College.

The Quadrangular, which will
be held in the new athletic
building for the first time,
promises to be an exciting display
of wrestling skills.

Coach Joe Garcia, in his
fourteenth year as head coach, has
only two lettermen from last
year’s squad. Both of these
wrestlers, however, are expected
to contribute greatly to Albany’s
success in the coming season.

Craig Springer, a senior who
had a 6-4 record last year is one of
the two returning letter winners,
Springer will be competing at the
152 pound level this year. Fran
Weal is the second letterman
returning, and he will be
competing at the 145-pound level
this season.

Coach Garcia is also hoping
that three other wrestlers who
competed at the varsity 1 level
will be able to make important
contributions this year.

Included in this number are
Alex Domkowski at the
137-pound level, Frank Berry at
160 pounds and Marshall
Galdstone at 177.

Two wrestlers up from last
year’s freshman squad are Pete
Ranalli and Kevin Sheehan. Both
of these wrestlers are at the
180-pound level and should

supply a solid performance for the
squad,

Margison Expected To

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1968

Albany Loses In Opener;
Host To Stony Brook Sat.

The Albany State basketball squad opened its season on a losing note this past Wednesday as they were
defeated by Oneonta by a score of 71-59. Although they led at halftime by a score of 36-31, the Great
Danes were beset by foul troubles in the second half and were unable to stem the surging Red Dragons of

Oneonta.

Sophomore Jack Jordan led Albany in scoring as he totaled 16 points for the night. Rich Margison
registered 13 points and Scott Price 1°.

The Great Danes were hurt
tremendously by their starters
getting into foul trouble.
Margison, Price, and Caverly all
fouled out of the game, while

Jack Adams and Jack Jordan both
had four fouls on them.

As a result, the Great Danes
were forced to go with their subs
throughout much of the second
half and thus were unable to
withstand the surge made by
Oneonta.

The hoopsters open their home
season this Saturday night when
they host Stony Brook.

The freshmen game begins at
7:00 and will be followed by the
varsity game at 8:30.

Last year, Albany defeated
Stony Brook by a score of 64-52.
Following the disappointment of
their opening loss, the squad will
undoubtedly be set to win this
one.

Admission for the games is free
with a Student Tax Card and a
dollar without.

by Tom Peterson

THE GLOBETROTTERS DISPLAYED not only an ability for comedy,
but a propensity for outstanding playing as well.

Choppers Hold Lead
In League I Bowling

With only three weeks of
competition remaining before the
final position for the semester, the
standings in league 1 bowling
indicate that it will be a close race
for first place.

Following the completion of

Break Scoring Records the matches on November 23, the

This year’s basketball squad
will be placing the responsibility
of much of their success upon the
shoulders of Rich Margison.

In his third year of varsity
competition for the Great Danes,
it is expected that Margison will
not only be the leading scorer for
the team, but will also establish a
number of scoring records.

Going into this season Rich has
accumulated a total of 879 points
for a two-year average of 20.4
points a game. If he duplicates last
years’s average of 23.4, Margison
will end his career in third place
on the list of all-time scoring
leaders. It would seem likely
however, that Rich will improve
his average of last year and amass
enough points to break the
all-time scoring record of 1365
points held by Don Cohen.

It also seems likely that
Margison will break the
‘one-season average of twenty-five
points a game,

Rich, who is a member of
Alpha Pi Alpha, was a
three-letterman in high school as
he participated in cross-country,
basketball and tennis for Cortland
High School. In lettering for three

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Thurs. Nite -

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Dance Tc 2 Top Bands Nitely
Legal Alcoholic Bev. Served

Thurs. - Sat. 8:00 pm - 3 am
Admission $1.50

Ladies Free!

years, Rich was captain of his
team and was selected as the Most
Valuable Player and was elected
to the All-Syracuse team in his
senior year.

Choppers hold a slim lead over
Potter Club. The Choppers have a
19-5 record while Potter holds an
18-6 record.

In last week’s action, the Shafts
compiled the high team single
game and three-game series by

* Steinmetz

scoring a 951-2663 series, Royce
Van Evra rolled the high
three-game series of 606 on games
of 170, 211, 225.

‘The standings for the league
read as follows:

Choppers
EEP

Shafts

UFS

Bad News 5
KB

APA

19-5
18-6
16-8
16-8
13-11
10-14
10-14
10-14

Theta Zeroes 8-16

..alittle more exciting!

Metadata

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Periodical
Rights:
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CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
August 29, 2023

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