by Bruce R. Maggin
The Albany State basketball
team, like many young teams,
have been plagued by inconsis-
tent play, Last Friday was no
exception as ‘they. played a
lackluster game in beating
Stony Brook, 77-70.
Albany came out and looked
like they had finally put it
together. Led by the Johnson
boys, Ed and Harry, Albany
was able to takea 14 point lead
and just about blew Stony
Brook off the court. Ed John-
son was hitting his favorite
twenty-five footers with great
consistency and Harry Johnson
was passing and shooting like
the old Harry Johnson, The
Johnsons teamed up for one
beautiful play when Harry,
playing some tough defense,
forced a Stony Brook turnover
and dribbled downcourt, where
he fed Ed Johnson for an easy
layup,
But justas things looked rosy
for the Danes, the team went
flat and allowed Stony Brook
to close the gap. Albany's lead
diminished because they com-
mitted needless fouls and
numerous turnovers. The fouls
particularly hurt as Albany's
hig guns, Byron Miller and
Reggie Smith were in foul dil-
ficulty, The Danes went into
the lockerroom at half time
with a five point lead but they
could have led by twenty
The second half echoed that
of the first with the Danes
showing some good spurts of
basketball but they retreated
into some sloppy play and
spt
State University ol New York at Albany
Tuesday, January 22, 1973
and Johnson Spark Danes
Stony Brook was finally able to
take the lead by a single point.
‘That seemed enough toawaken
the Danes. Albany started play-
ing the type of ball they're
capable of playing with Gary
Trevett’s movement of the ball
being a prime factor. Quickly
scoring six straight points, the
Danes grabbed a narrow lead
They then showed how well
coached the team is, when with
seven minutes remaining in the
contest, Albany froze the ball.
They executed it almost to
perfection as the players weav-
ed around and moved the ball
from man to man. This forced
Stony Brook to foul and
Albany was able to sink eleven
baskets from the foul line in the
closing minutes to insure vic-
tory
Gary Trevett has had the
problem of adjusting to college
ball, but Friday he played
perhaps his best game as a
Dane. He rin the offense in the
closing minutes of the game.
Trevett chipped in with ten
points but his work in the
Dunes slowdown plus his ac-
curacy at the foulline con-
tributed substantially to. the
Danes’ vietory
Unfortunately while ‘Trevett
played a fine game, Mike
Supronowies was completely
off his game, shooting only one
of eight from the field
Harry Johnson after coming
olla very shaky beginning, has
really started to come around
Harry seems more relaxed out
on the court and is notafraid of
taking some shots, But more
importantly, those shots are go-
ing in.
Reggie Smith proved ineffec-
tive, spending most ofthe even-
ing on the bench and finally
fouling out. Byron Miller, who
also hampered by fouls,
scored 18 points, Pete Koola
made his Albany debut and saw
substantial action with both
Miller and Smith in foul trou-
ble, He will need time to work
himself into top shape
The lackluster performance
of the basketball team could be
partially attributed to. the
lackluster crowd. With a cold
gym, the crowd’s enthusiasm
seemed dampened and they
only came alive when Stony
Brook momentarily took the
lead
One would think that the
cold gym would have cooled off
the Danes, shooting wise, This
‘was not the ease as Albany shot
28 for 50 fora neat 56 per cent.
The Danes still have trouble
playing as a team. They lack a
Mion, Mims, Vito still undefeated
Matmen Face First Defeat ;
9
real leader out on the court
Sometimes it seems that the
forwards and the backcourt are
playing two different games at
the same time, Trevett may be
the one who can quarterback
the team. He'll have to show
that he can put two good games
back to back. The team will
need consistent’ play from
everyone.
Tonight the Danes take on
Marist College at the Gym,
starting at 8:30. It will bea good
test for the Danes before their
weekend roadtrip
Fail-to Pin Cortland
by Kenneth Arduino
The Albany wrestling team
took it on the chin for the first
time all year as the matmen lost
to Cortland 21-16.
The matmen showed a little
rust and got off to slow start
losing two out of the first three
and managing to draw in the
third. The matmen then picked
up victories in four of the next
seven matches along with a sc-
cond draw. Yet is was not
enough as they failed to win
matches via a pin.
y
Ih was the
first time this year that they
failed to have a least one pin
Walt Kat
with draws and Larry Mims,
Don Mion and Rudy Vido with
id tom Horn
decisions remained undeteated
for the year, Ethan Grossman
lost a tough 9-7 decision to
drop out of the undefeated
ranks
Again the inexperience at
126° Ibs. and 150. Ibs. cost
valuable points as Corthind
picked up eight points in those
weights. Albany came into the
last four matches nee
rosenberg
win them all to win the mateh.
Doug Bauer at 167 Ibs. keptthe
hopes alive with an impressive
9-4 vietory but Frank Herman's
loss put the mateh out of reach
for the now 4-1 Great Danes.
Phe deleat caused by the fact
that a pin was failed to be
scored by Albany coupled with
the weakness at 126 and 150
Ibsd. led to the Danes first
defeat
The matmen get back into
action Wednesday at
Platisburg
STUDENT Vol. LX, Mo, 1 State University of New York at Albany — ¢iDay. JANUARY 25, 1974
Reid Addresses Students Here;
Demands Impea
by Audrey Seidman and Jonathan
Levenson
Addressing a crowd estimated at
over 250, Democratic Con-
gressman and Gubernatorial can-
didate Ogden Reid of Westchester
warned that due to loopholes in the
State election law, a “substantial
portion” of the 473,000 full time
college students will be unable to
ste in. the upcoming June
primaries.
Reid spoke to the gathering on
Wednesday in Lecture Center One
The program was received by the
President of the Undergraduate
Political Seienee Association, He
was fifteen minutes late to his small
tally, being detained by the lox
press for questions
Rerd promised to sponsor elke
tion retoran legishation te put New
Voork on at ptt wath ather barge st
dent population states bhe Calton
nit. Hines, Michigan and
Maysitchussets, which already have
removed voting barriers te reyaent
allege students alter the 26th
Amendinent guaranteed 1-year
olds the night t vote. "New York is
one ob the very few kurge statey that
runes serious obstacles to college
students voting at their schools.”
he said
He explained that in New York
Ml
Congressman and Gubernatorial
hopeful, Ogden Reid.
to on-campus residents, due to
techmicalities in the kaw which re
quire sntormaation dealing with in:
come, marital status, business ad
dress, and residence lor tix pur
pases
Reid hayes much of his support
oy college students and the leyal
techmeality he knows. wall only
hurt fiy chances m the pamaries
His appeal te the college popula:
1 wits comtered much around the
for the smpeachment af Prest
dent Nixon, which drew him a
large found of apphuse trom the
generally sympathetic audience
He continued his student appeal
by urging the maintenance of the
present level of tuitionsat the State
Universities. ddition, he
pronused to keep the City Univer
sity system tuition free, 3 situation
that at the
best. He called foram increase in
day cate center funding, noung
that Governor Wilson had just cut
$10 mullion trom the wellare lunids,
believes, could come
sing tunds naw being
used for such things as highway
construction,
Citing. industry’s mass exodus
hom N.Y. St
said that he would reverse the trend
vernor’s Mansion in Alban:
omination, He is attemp!
¢ much of his suppor
anid thereby broaden N.Y "Stay
hase. Ihis would be achieved by
ay breaks and incentives for in
dustrial expansion,
Reid noted that there isan enor
mous housing shortage in the state
and that a trememdouy inerease a
housing units is needed, These
should, according to him, be eon
structed
economic areas and have leys focal
various differing
control than at present (where such
economically integrated housing iy
frequently eu),
Reid concentrated his political
attacks primarily on Nixon and his,
chment Of Nixon
Reid is running for the N.Y. State
ng to reduce barriers to college st
4 lies within the college
catastinphes nather th
Rowkeleller Administration and
the Wilson governorsp, He read
an Ait Buchwald
dealt with the exorersm of the Devil
slum which
Irom Nixon's fatetul tape recorder
{rom which the Haldeman conver
ation became obliterated
Reid is runni st Howard
Samuels for the Democrane
nomination tor Governor
Primaries are supposed to be held
this June though Wilson would like
to see them pushed bitch to
September, when the absentee
ballot situation would be in-etlect
Bursar‘s Office Plans
Efficiency Renovation
To Speed Payments
lord
© been completed for
the redesigning and renovating the
Bursar's office in the basement of
the Business Administration
building, The construction work,
to begin in early February, should
drastivally cut the waiting time for
students making payments at the
Bursar’s windows, due to a
reorganization of the Burstr’s ol-
fice’s tunctions into No separate
olfives instead of one
The present picture of the bur
sat'y otlive iy at lew small window s
in the Business Administration
Building: basement, wth all ty pes
of business conducted aerasy the
‘counter, and long fines of students
lacking the hall with no pice 10
want Hut this arrangement ry ane
students will not have to endure
tuch Jonger What feta
Huchhotl, digetur of the physical
plant, hats called the “lotisy setup
ty expected to he completely made
aver by the Lust week in Apu
The Ollive of Sponsored bunds.
which was adjacent tw the Bursar
was moved 40 Driper Hall in Oe
taber Commenemg the first week
tn February. thiyatrea will be ttken
aver by the Burstr’y tice. hs
om 1200
square feet to 3000 square feet
The new Bursir’s allie will he
divided into three areas. Ay you
‘walk sn, one side wall he the burst
the other side will be the new offie
of student accounts, and there will
He Waiting room between
the 10.
The Bursar’s office's Lunetions.
have been redistributed so that the
Council Considers Quad Cards, Budget
by Sue Leboff
The second semester may be just
getting underway, but the members
of Central Council already have
then minds an next year, because
Central Counell hi
ig ip) nent year’s Student Associa
to start draw
tion budget ina month. One ol the
preliminary steps of budgeting, the
approval of the lengthy set of
guidelines called “General Can:
comms.” took up the final three
hours of Wednesday's meeting
IL took so lang beeauise some of
the twenty-two concerns are tather
comitaversial, Fhe most controver
Stal matter ab all was the iste of
whi ean buy State Quad cards. As
1 itns out, the sume people whe
cond buy them this year, that
tesidents af State Quad (naturally)
plus commutersand students from
Mums Quad, wall be the ones who
can buy them neat yeat
Hetore Couneil arived at that
decision not to change anyth
there was a lot al debate, tensi0
snd tlaved tempers In the closest
Cential Council ever comes to a
party line” vote, all the State
Quad representatives supported
the principle of keeping things as
they are, while the Indian Quad
tepresentauves. voted to allow
anyone to buy any quad card.
(here a
available. State’s and Indian's.)
Item 5, as orginally presented by
only two quad cards
that each quad will be permitted to
charge quad dues unless otherwise
specitied hy a rider on that qusid’s
1974-75 budget and that any stu
dent be permitted to buy any quiad
caitd” Thuy recommendation had
the endorsement ol all quad
boards. except tor the State Quid
Program Council
At the heart of the
Lower Powerthe advantages State
ater Is
Quad derives trom Lower bast
which melude the ability to market
quad cards at $4.00 apiece, Many
commerL members tel it ry untae
that State Quadders have what
simounits tee a
lang (hast seat, Comment granted
State Quad only $200.00 in Stu
dent Assucution funds) Stite
Quad on the vther hand detends,
isell by chummy that each quad
allowed ats andiyidual
etenisties, such ay a lot ol
Fell Sherman (State) moved that
the words “any student be per
anitted to buy State Quad cards” be
deleted from Item 5. Ken Wurman,
Chairman of State Quad Program,
Council, argued that other qua
would be hurt if all students could
buy State Quad cards, since State
Quad might drain off students
money. Ht wasalso pointed out that
huge sales of Suite Quad cards
would devalue the cards, ay State
could not physically provide $4.00
worth of programming for every
the budget committee, read, “The
Budget Committee recommends
student
In a close vote, 1615, Stite
Quad won, Jett Sherman, w ho had
led il the discussion, stud (alter
the dust fad settled) that he felt the
decison way the best ane tor all
students. not just State Quatd, Jett
Sherman hay indicated an interest
mv being the neat vive-president af
the Student Association
Lew Fidler (Indian), who ay a
Senator and a Counerperson vy
one of those U.N.Y.A, oddities
continued on page 3
Bursar will handle the re
deposit of funds, and their dis-
persement to the appropriate state
agencies only. The bursar willserve
at strictly “cashier” function.
A newly planned office of stu-
dent accounts is to report to
Robert A. Stierer. assistant views
president for business management
and planning. This oflige will han=
dle the student billings, deterrals.
adjustments on bills, and accounts,
feeetsatble. Phew will be at small
separate office built wathan this of
live where students ean privately
discuss any problems. convernmy
there accounts
When all these plans ane carried
out the stuslents? waiting time ts
expected ty be Git down eons
sisfetarhly oan the suiteng area sill
ho muuch mare comtortable, People
svbiorsnis Ha eto pa a ball. can ger
uicetly fo thy: busesat’s wmdaw
inl people als ater business wall
be yall with at the student ae
eonunts altiee
The student aecaunits «ttice hits
ust tee ad approval an the
Governor's execute budget tor
four additional counselors, they
wll he the ones fo deal with student
problems an this anew, He the
Ieistature approves the budget
Students will be able Ww teeene
more andivitusl and personal
attention
Ty addition to these ime
provements, at separate agcount
collection unet hay been estblished
fon ah Temporary task forge basis. I
was erated ty clear up delinquent
aecuunts, sume al Which go back to
160, \nd a the interest al ine
creased elligieney, the aecounting
Jeli ities ol the Bursar’yotlice were
transtered to the university te
counting alee
Vie study tront whieh the new
urna organization wary derived
was formulated by the allice ob
nuinagement aialysiy, headed by
Tainund Klee My study wats
prepared tor tohn W. Hartley.
Sicg-presdeat lor manayament
snd planning
The Bursar wall remain open tor
husiness throughout the reneyat
tun petid
‘Marriede File Class Action Suit
Against SUNY at Stony Brook
by Gifdh LePatner
SASU Press Service
‘An injunction has been brought
against the Universi for
prohibiting married couples with
children from living in campus dor-
mitories. The suit was filed by
‘a group of married Stony Brook
students.
‘The suit isa class action and will
effect represent all married
students with and expecting
children,” according to Barry
Frutcher, a graduate English stu-
dent involved in the case. The suit
‘stems from an incident last July in
which six married. couples with
‘children were informed that they
were “living in violation of Univer-
sity regulations” and were finally
forced to evacuate their residences,
according to Elaine Frutcher.
Dr. Toll has said that children
cannot live in dormitories since
they were not designed to accom-
modate families.
Ms. Frutcher reported that after
an initial letter, which was con-
sidered an “official reprimand,” the
students requested a hearing to ai
their grievances and only received
another letter “reiterating” the
first.
She recalled that if the students
y other Jopic of interest.
Experience,
Length:
NA
$1000 PRIZE.FOR ESSAYS ON GRADUATE LIFE
‘The William James Center of The Wright Institutein Berkeley is sponsoring
‘4 contest for graduate and professional school students. Empahsis is on
autobiographical essays that focus on a specific aspect of graduate educa-
tion, whether it be teaching asa graduate student, writing a dissertation, or
First prize'is $1000, and there are five second prizes of $250 each. Winning
essays will be published as part of a book tentatively entitled The Graduate
To enter the contest formally, please send your name, department or school,
collexe address, home address, and the proposed topic of your essay.
he William Jamey Center
The Wright Institute
272K Durant Avenue
Berkeley, Calif
5-20 pages, typewritten, double spaced.
Deadline lor formal entry into the contest
Final deadline for submission of essays - March 31, 1974
94704
Jan. 3, 1974,
did not agree to move out or have
their child(ren) taken off campus,
they would be fined $5 per day per
person in a retroactive order. The
students were given two days in
which to make their decision.
Of the six families involved,
three agreed to send their children
to stay with relatives. In addition,
one other acquiesced, but as both
parents were foreign and the child
was an American citizen, they
needed a passport to send the child
to relatives, Two couples, in-
cluding the Frutchers, left thecam-
pus four days later.
‘A University spokesman said
that “in general our position is that
the University has sought married
student housing but has been un-
successful like the other SUNY
campuses, We must follow
regulations...should not have
children living in the dorms.”
The injunction was filed in the
Brooklyn Federal Court because,
according to Ms. Frutcher, it in-
volved a “grievance with a state in-
titution” so it should be taken to
the federal level.
The students feel that they are
entitled to live in the dormitories
and are now forced to find off eam-
pus housing where the rents are
higher than on campus, sometimes
fas great as $60 additional rent per
month plus driving expenses, Ihe
injunetion will try to stop the Un
iversity from taking action against
students involved in such eases un
Uil the ease ean be reviewed by a
adge and hopelully reversed
VOvE GINERG
GLEGLY ©
9:30
7:30, 8:30 and
LC 1 and LC 2
Sat, January 26
SIDDHARTHA, the celebrated novel by
Hermann Hesse, is the most widely-read
novel of today’s generation,
SIDDHARTHA/|
7:30 and 9:30
LC 18
Junded by student association
Tickets for each $.75 with tax card
please come early
$1.25 without
WS BRIE
MOSCOW (AP); The Communist party newspaper Pravda started prin-
ting letters today branding Alexander Solzhenitsyn a traitor and kept alive
the wave of denunciation of his book “Gulag Archipelago.”
“The leading letter was from Konstantin Simonov, the best known writer
to join the chorus condemning Solzhenitsyn. Although he was awarded six
prizes forhis plays, novels and poetry, Simonov later criticized the “per.
sonality cult” of the late dictator, Joseph Stalin.
Simonov's letter was mild compared to the rest of those published. He
said the Jan, 14 Pravda article that marked the real opening o the cam.
paign gave “a correct political estimation of the path covered by Sol/henit
syn in these years.”
WASHINGTON (AP) Egil Krogh Jr., repentant but asking no favor,
was sentenced Thursday 10 serve six months in prison for his part in the
Ellsberg case burglary. He said President Nixon did not authorize «
“directly or indirectly.”
Krogh, supervisor of the White House agents who carried out the wlfice
break-in, thus discounted reports that his marching orders had come “night
out of the Oval Offi
He said he had only one contact with President Nixon on the wih othe
special investigations unit known as the “plumbers” and in “that necting
Dr. Ellsberg’s name did not appear to be mentioned.”
But he said that John D. Ehrlichman, then the President's dom
Aiser and Krogh’s superior, gave the unit authority to engage in
ity to obtain inforr sion on Dr. Ellsberg.
NEW YORK (AP, Mobil Oil Corp.. the nation’s second lat
pany. said today its 1973 profits showed a 47 percent yan «
The company said it earned $842. million in the past sew
With $574.2 million the year before
Mobil wats the fourth major oil firm to report a substantia
profits for 972 Kather in the week, Exxon Corp., the nat
company, announeed it $9 percent increase and Cities Service 0
Oil of Calitornia reported gitins of close to 50 percent
Other major companies in the industry are expected to diss
sharp profit increases tor 1973 soon,
HOUSTON, fex(AP) The president of Gu
critiered the Senate mvestigations subcommittee’ ol heat
meat
subeummutiee “is not the ty pe of Forum to get at the truth”
Z. D. Bonner was one of seven oil company executives who apeared
belore the committee, chaired by Sen. Henry M. Jackson,4 in
Washington Monday
“They made me feel I was at a criminal trial,” Bonner said at a view
ference."! am angry. I left the Jackson hearing angry.”
Bonner saidWe've got politics mixed in this and it shouldn't h
WASHINGION(AP) The Senate voted $3 10 2
dividual income taxes $3 $ billion a year by raising the perso
from S750 to $850.
The proposal. sponsored by Sen, Edward M. Kennedy, 1 Mt
added te a minor House-passed revenue bill ay an amend
Thur
Kennedy said the mereased buying power resulting from
would help stave off a serious economic downturn this sew
“The biggest danger faving the nation today isan energy -id
sion in 1974,” he declared.
The provision would be retroactive to cover 1973 and thus
double rebel to taxpayers this year
ft would reduce the 1973 tax they would have to pay on the |
April 15 und lw would be reflected in lowered withholding
1974 income
WASHINGIONAP) President Nixon told Cong
fhe wall request an additional $180 million for federal au
secondary education next sehool year af certain cond
Ina specral education message preceding submission wt th
1975 budget. the President also proposed the first “lonsard
education aid to let school districts knowas year in adsance
can expect to receive
Ntvon said that ay soon ay he receives “acceptable aut
Hon.” he ty prepared to ask for a $2.45 billion supplemen
thiy spring to be spent during the 1974-75 school yeut
the Congress acts on this request swiltly
ary and secondary schools as well as vocational and adult
hhe sand, “the
Programs would for the first ime know how much federal
ave beture the school year begins, nat several monty.
has begun
WASHINGION(AP) Senate Democrats expressed stiony
"Thursday for a propasal to roll back the price of domestic tus!
Support was voiced at a closed party caucus, senators ep
however, action on the matter was delayed by the caucus pendliny
by the Senate Finance Committee. Meanwhile, the Democtat
force action next week on the emergency energy bill. It way block
Christmas by Republicans and ail-state senators oppo!
ed al limiting windfall profits by oil companies
, ALBANY.N.Y. (AP) Both Democrats and Republicans said |
delighted” that campaign-fraud charges against Assembly Sp
B. Duryea were dismissed Thursday.
; Legislative leaders of both parties also took up the presiding jwize ssl
for revisions in the state Election Law to prevent such problets « the
future
State Supreme Court Justice Burton B. Roberts dismissed the udi net!
inst Duryea, Assembly Majority Leader E. Kingston of Sas
Assemblyman Alfred A. Delli-Bovi and three Assembly aides because:
judge rules, the statute involved was unconstitutionally broad
PAGE TWO
Directors, which currently owns it,
Waverly Place: A Silent Testimony
by Alan D. Abbey
Isolated in the woods near the
g)m building and boarded up asa
inst the rampant
\undalism which has already cost
the breakage of all its windows,
Waverly Place sits in silent disuse
4s Various university organizations
remain undecided on how to dis-
pose of the structure and the land it
occupies,
Ownership of the house lies with:
thehSA at present, and although
currently vacated, Waverly Place
vince served ay a temporary hous-
ing facility Lor new faculty. There
hay not heen a permanent tenant
since last Christmay when Dean
Ruth Schaudt of
department moved out
Humanities
Waverly Phice ws
Norbert
Zahm, the Director ol baculty
Student
that, “Waverly Place costs us about
fren idle
costing ESA money, 1
Association, estimated
$1500 4 year Ww keep up, We hada
caretaker im there unui the begin:
ning of the summer Isbeen com
pletely empty since then.
Waverly
pertect lor school related
twins, and because af that, i wast
prime contender tor the Alumni
House. However, the house's loca~
tion yin McKownville, and the
land 1s soned for one-family hous-
ing only
Vice President for Management
and Plinning, John Hartley, sind
We've
MeKnownville. and they're op-
posing any soning change, They
gotten a leer from
want to keep the area residential
There hay been a struggle in
MeKownville to keep doctors an
dentists {rom having offices in that
area, and they don’t want to give
Waverly Place any concessions,
and set any precedents.
PSA and Student Assocuation
would both like to keep Waverly
Place within the University. “H’san
lovely ground,” said Barry Davis
ol SA,
like to keep it part af the school.”
Davis and SA President Steve
Gether have both worked to keep
Waverly Place
Vice Preside’ ‘and we'd
fullowing the
lead of then predecessor
SA president
wats instrumental in the lorming ot
ast ya's
Last year Lampert
Waverly Ine, a student
organization designed to keep
Waverly Place, which would
otherwise have been sold, under
Student ownership until a suitable
use fon at could be found. egal
-—- =a
Waverly Place is costing FSA $1500 a yearasit sits unused. Its future lies in ‘the hands of the F.S.A. Board of
complications developed, ‘There
were problems with incorporation
and ning, and the organization
never got off the ground, Gerber
put a quiet end to Waverly Inc, this
September. and ownership went to
the BSA.
Waverly Place’s tuture is now in
the handy of Zahm and the Boa
of Directors of FSA, They have
given Zahm no authorization to
conduct any actiony ay of yet
Zahm expressed a desire to sell
Waverly Place, saying . “I would
rather sell it to a faculty member or
someone else in the school first
The Board would like to keep it.”
Waverly Place iy a barge brown
and green two-level house with a
double garage and brick chimney
Iwas Known for ity beauty and ity
feat natural setting in the woods.
The location alse altordy a view of
Chapel House and the gym, when
the leaves ate down, Decity of this
lovely house hay alteady. begun,
nd Gun only worsen ats it remains
neglected
All the interested parties seem
unten on keeping Waser a part ol
the school, yet_nathing 1. being
dome now, and A continites to sit
unused sind closed up. in hack
the Gyn
by Al Senia
SASU Press Service
In a decision that could have
wide-ranging repurcussions on
Third World students throughout
the State University system
New York State Board of Regents
s called upon Education Com-
missioner Ewald Nyquist to stop
mall number” of
colleges and universities from
segregating minority group
students in dormitories, as well as
in any other “facilities or
programs.”
The New York Times, quoting
from a confidential State Educa
tion Department document, subse~
quently named the State University
College at New Paltz as one of the
educational institutions ound
guilty of allowing segregated
facilities to exist, Neither Nyquist
or the Regents would name any of
the specific colleges involved. The
Times also named Cornell Univer=
sity, Sarah Lawrence College in
Bronxville und Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy
ay campuses where spat visits by
Department stall in early fall hay
¢stublished the existence of
segregated dormivory housing in
Regenty policy state
ment culling for fun desegregation
of all educational tucilities,
Officials in the State Education
Department -
curacy ol the Times account and
added that i iy “conceivable” that
more spot visits might be made to
other university and college eam-
solution of
contirmed the
pusey sometime in the near future
The Regent stitement on
desegregation, m he Bourd’s
December meeting, did not specity
Precisely what actions, Nyquist
imight tke against the four
colleges. The statement si only
that Nyquist would order the in
situtions 1 compl witht
ited to
we Commissioner would
Regents order and il they
due.
recommend to the Regents any ae
tion deemed “appropriate to insure
Hull compliance
Oltiuals an the State Ldueation
suid that the depart
ment has “a wade ninge of aptions®
Deparime
Io rmplement against any
educational inyntulion, public ot
Gerber Explains Financial Aid At Council Session
mannued from page t
bicameral legislator, was incensed
at the decison, “We're tired and
we're outragedthat State Quad gets
preferential — treatment, State
Quad hay four times as many pat
Controller Bob Kanarck, who
was formerly director ot Lower
Hast. feels that with continued
lamuted access to quad cards, other
quads will have an incentive to
+ flew
compete dorm p
Then sand only
develop hing system ul
ramming
J quad cad
then, his epanon, should anyone
fe allowed to huy any tied cate
Also within the framework of
genetal concerns, Council ap
proved the policy of attempting 60
keep the student tay at sts present
level of $04.00 a year, Mr Gerber
pointed out that between 8.4.5.1
S-Quad Ant
bulance Corps, an expected dip in
enrollment, and the
skyrocketing price of everything,
membership ees.
heshman
keeping the present tax trom Hsing
1s going to be a challenge
Not all the concerns at the
meeting were “General Concerns’
Steve Gerber and Barry Davis were
Jery concerned about the manner
in which the course they had phan:
ed to teach, MAL 2361
Governance, had been cancelled
hey were consideringa very angry
hill. introduced by brie
was past
Longschein, The
poned for two weeks. at which time
itis hoped. ad mumistrators trom the
Allen Center will discuss the
cancellation vath the Central
Couneil
The S\ President wasalercon
crmed wath the tmanexal and
hemes that ate emg hatched
down atthe capitol by the Costigan
Select Committee an Higher
I ducation
The proposed legistation
help private universities
than it will help 5. N.Y. and the
City University. Scrutiny of the
Costigan Comumitices hgures
which were passed out at the
meeting reveals that under the new
proposals, a student whose family
has a net taxable income of $12,000
a would receive only $100. in
aid to go to $.ULN.Y., but SL1,600
iu and to go to say, Columba
Novae can say for sure what the
elleet_ on SUNY
whieh ts part of a broad
wall be at this
1. national an scope and
Republican an ehay to and
private schools with public tunds,
ryadopted. Mr Gi
tend publichearings on the propos:
ed legislation next month
The bill
recommends that when 4 course ty
olticnally cancelled. the students
waill he automatically withdrawn
froiy that couse without the grade
Course Cancellations’
oF W appeaiing an those students
tranycripts” Italo requests that
students who in such cases: lose
their full ame statuy
automatic rebate on there tution
liom the Ollice of the Bursar atter
Lastly. betore adjourning.
Counc passed a bill entitled
the fast day ta add courses
s__¥§
Walkin
dredging list
sumimet tha
lake «only shout one and one-half
feet deep Asa result, at will be
possible to use heayy matchinery to
clear the we without potential
danger to Plant Department
employees
The Plant Depi
extremely cooperative and Mr
Buckholl, Plant Director, has re-
On Water
quested that the Supervisor ol
Grounds leat the snow font the
wathiwiny atound the take and the
1b hall al the bike yell tor
purposes
The Physical | ducation Depart
micut will make we skates available
Jor check-out at the Men's and
Women’s cages during the tallow
ing hours.
Monday
1oo0 pm
Sututd,
10,00 pam.
Friday. 8:00 aan
jad Sunday, 1.00 po
private, that allowed Facial
ion to exist. “We would
first try to work by persuasion with
the institution,” one official said,
“trying to get them to voluntarily
comply.” If that failed, he added,
the Regents could withhold state
aid to the college or order the
removal of its Trustees, ifit were a
private institution. In the case of a
public college, like New Paltz, the
state education department could
adyise the Bureau of the Budget to
withhold operating funds, or could
opt to suspend the registration of
the institution's curricula. The
spokesman said it would be “highly
unlikely” such lormataction would
be taken
New Paltz Denies Charges,
A New Palts public
spokesman, Charley
denied the Regents charges.
Pepper said. "we dom't
operate segregated facilities at all.”
He said the Regents report citing
New Palle apparently made
relerence wa so-called “third
world dormitory” on the campus
Pepper sand the dormitory had
some white students living: in itand
wats Voluntary, notesclusionatry.”
The New Paltz dormitory house
ing paliey 1st Hesible one, Pepper
std, that encourages student ins
terest groupy to “band together in
Voluntary fivng arrangements, He
satid similar dorms exist for toreige
interest
our view."
students and other spect
ros
H New Paltz offieuilly: disputes
the State Education Deparment
findings. a new hearing on the
charge would have to beardered, I
the alleqattions proved correct, the
Department would attempt te set
tle the issue by persuatsion. Ay it htst
resort, formal action would be
taken
The Regent
troduced to the Board by Harold
Statement, an
£ Newcomb at Oswege, way pity
ed unanimously tt sad that the
Regents felt segregated practices
eit ont only “a few institutions’
nnd that the majority af calleges
have complied with earlier Regents
requests to desegregate theit
acilnies, “Nevertheless.” eon:
cluded, “the educatonatand moat
ipetitives denuand that segrega
tion be qlrmnnated and thie tll an
teptation he achieved a evens
stitution «ah the state
Clark Nyquist of
Necused
Capitulation”
The Regentsaction comes an the
heels af a serbal attack by Kenneth
Chath, the only black member of
accusing Ny
‘capatulating” to ragisny
the Board, pubhely
qquist ol
The Cammussioner had several
monty ago telused to order the
New York Cty Board of Educa
tion 10 desegtegate the pubby
selioobs any the Canattsie schol dh:
Wiet
In other business at ats
December mecung, the Bowed ap:
proved at ariendment to the 1972
Master Plan af SUNY College at
{cr Rime
isata a Bachelor ob Ants
Ihe actuon allows the
Gallet
legice Hat the fist ume, but at
inited the number of students
cnitatled sn the prognim to 15 and
Jnmitedl the new degree to the socal
seienves held
The Regents also accepted
$20,000 grant om the bord Foun:
Uatuon that wall be used Lor a study
of parental meome, and of recent
Scholt Incentive Award winners,
4» well as the east of their college
attendance and the
available for financing the east
resourees
ALBANY STU . mane
PENERESS FRIDAY, JANUARY Zar FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE THREE
by Dan Gaines
In Tuesday's ASP wasa letter to
the editor from a Thomas Robin
son, who complained of being be-
ing harrassed with a billing error
from a semester six year ago. He
wrote the letter in the midst of an
exchange of telephone calls,
records and other letters between
himself, the Bursar’s office, the
New York Department of Law, the
‘Alunini Association and other par-
ties, The semester in question is
Fall, 1967; Robinson was a Grad
student at the time, The amount of
money in dispute is $60.
There were three major par-
ticipants in theextended exercise in
writing. First, Mr. Thomas F
Robinson, the SUNYA alumnus
Whose account is in question,
Robinson, who sports a bright red
heurd and jogsregularly (he wason
the trick c ys
Hiculate and speaks convincingly
With sincerity. He is presently do=
ing heart research at RPL Miss
Barbara Hielby is the head of the
Bursar’y office Special Task Force
to clean up delinquent account.
Biclhy iy a recent griduate of
SUNYA herself, She is an attrac:
tive. overworked but pleasant
Kenneth E, Page iy a
Assistant Attumey General work=
ingin the N.Y, Department of Law
under Letkowitz, Page's telephone
\oice ty reayoned. logical and
honest. The story in briet
woman
The Bursur’s office im routine ae~
count elewring processes sent Lom
Robinson at least two notices since
1971 asking him to clear his dehn
quent account with the Universt-
ty. They telt unable to collect. and
Alumnus Billed: Six Years Later
Thomas Robinson
80 the we count way sent to the At.
I's office (Depart-
ment ol Law). In the middle of this
past November Kenneth Page
notihed Robinyon that it he didn’t
Pay in twenty daysan action would
torney Gener
have to he commenced against him
to collect the total amount pli 1m:
terest, costy and disbursements
Robinson way stunned by thy
letter, He wrote back expressing
iy shock about being
about $60 that should have been
taken care of yearyago.and that he
surely could not remember it now
The Assistant Attorney General
handed the ease back to Bielby
jeatened
She sent an itemization of the
All University Party
Saturday, Jan. 26
CC Ballroom 9-1
music by
SUNTOUR
$.25 J.S.C. members
$.50 non/members
Beer & Other
Refreshments
THE TOUGH GUYS ARE BACK...
Tower East Cinema presents
original bill to Mr. Robinson; a
copy was sent to Page.
Meanwhile, Robinson wrote
Page thanking him for acting ef-
ficiently and promptly to his phone
call and adding more information
to the pile. Miss Bielby then wrote
Mr. Page (sending a coy to Robin-
son) with further explanations.
Robinson was unsatisfied with the
itemization Bielby sent before; he
asked for a copy of the original bill
Unhappy about the entire situa-
tion, Mr, Robinson wrote the ASP
and the Alumni office; the Alumni
office wrote back expressing its
sympathy, ASP began this in-
vestigation. Miss Bielby complied
with Robinson's request for an
original bill, and checked with Mr.
Saimond of the Office of Graduate
Studies and the College of St. Rose
to Lind information on Robinson's
Graduate Assistantship at St. Rose
(which hethoughtcould explain the
father had some reason for paying
360 less, that it must have been
‘what was owed according to the
bill that was sent at that time. As
the exchange of letters went on,
Robinson suggested possible ex-
planations for the $60.
He wrote Miss Bielby and told
her that the problem might result
from the fact that he was “farmed
out” asa Grad Student Assistant to
the College of St. Rose. This
reporter called the College of St.
Rose; they paid Robinson by
check,
At another point, in late
November, Mr. Robinson wrote
toMr. Page again, suggesting that
the N.Y. State Scholar Incentive
Award may account for the $60 in
question, Miss Bielby the same day
sent an itemization of Robinson's
account of that semester to him
and Mr. Page. Mr. Robinson
spoke to Page after receiving this
fetter_and_observed:_"'m_an
out in fate ‘71. Robinvon askeg
Page whether there was
tive statute of limitations tor mis
take making” and pnt
“Thomas F. Robinson. (
Tax Payer, SUNYA alumnus, ang
Poor unfortunate caught in
another bungled cog the State
machine.”
According to Miss Riclby and
Mr. Robert Stierer. the Assntant
Vice President for Management
and Planning, Thomas Robinson's
case is very unusual, at least os lar
as the amount and kind of «
respondence involved. Othe el
quent accounts have ollered the
Bursar's office varyi 0
fesistanee, but none have seabed
the complications and
ted With Robuaissn
assoc
In Spring
delinquent accounts an
2 the deta
Feceivable in the Bus
two million, This lieu
cut_by more than on
SOD I cle
levers
this flow chat indicates the communications Tnvolved in the billing of thomay Robinson and his effurts 1 clan
the mistake. The events are numbered in_sequence. heginning with the Bursar's first letter (0 Rubinsun
SOU Uiscrepeney.) She sent a capy
of this information to Mr Page
tho, Robinson
letter tthe
sugyesting
unto where the $60 should. could or
Would have come trom
Abruptly, Assistant
General
wrote another
Bursary ottice
Attorney
age closed the entite
matter. instructing Bielby te close
her tiles The statute of bmitation
had expired That way Ji
1974. levy than KWo munthy since
uatry 9,
Page's List letter
Robinson does not remember
the detatly of his payments tot Fall
1967 He had hiy HA tor sey years
When he tirst way told that there
Waly a sum out anding and a MA
for three He aysumed: that his
amateur. one out of the threat us
getting paid for thiy
wverblown exchange of informa
In carly December Miss Melby
wrote Mr Page expla that
since Mr. Robinyon wits nor at Lull
fumes student (registered lacanty 9
ctedity) in ball ’67 he was not ehige
ble lor Scholar Incentive
assistance She sent Mr. Robinson
a copy ob they letter
The original letter trom Page up:
n. he found it rather
old, and yo responded with some
set Robin
cay, He wrate Page
that he received ian
etroncous bill trom SUNYA the
Seat belute, this was the notiie
ton that the Bursar’ utlice sent
SAA REM CREEL
Task Pores
Walter persistant
Hursar’s. an acon
paid up it ysentte the Dy
of Law thar as, the
General's wits 4
Kenneth Page 1s han
hinds ob citses Out
General can take oh
counts to Gut ot
the Bursar has toter
ADO accounts
G44. OK) te the
Attest
since 1971, hut tally
ve been telertea sn
fash bore started
hall ago Qnty anc
have to go to count ty
Problem, Une Mt
sends out aa letter
Jormet oe present stint
thay heen sequester
awed Hiya whit fi
Fecenved Ht savy that at
fheat teem the detany
will be necessary
action to reonver th
‘owed pluy mtetest
Dangerous Toys Studied By NYPIRG
by Dennis Esposit
It is indeed ironic that thousands
of American children whose eyes
glowed with joy and delight at
Christmas time, will soon aftersuf-
fer permanent vision impairment
from those very Christmas toys.
Almost ineredible is the fact that in
1972 almost 30,000 innocent
children’s eyes were scarred by
“playful” toy instruments such as
Six Years Later
continued from page four
ting accounts like Robunyon’s
Collecting dehinguent accounts
Inno longer serious problem, with,
the help of the computer, Now an
tmmedute stupas pat on
and. even
Heansenpts . diplomas
fegistiatina dh you are wot pand up,
Al the vsidence suggests that
Rebun really owed the $60, but
Roobvnisen may be npht an saving
ut Me
that thes es ayally not the
way primarily concerned yath the
was the fille way handled, he
handled rather font
sisatnse Why was,
Stormer General destibed witht
Mie Rostanisent
Hikity at ot ats mupheatiens
Why th
AW Rubin
aye told of thistn-
Heaton tone at that
snd enthuse stinlent when he
wats here. ant Hts been a heyaland
Indeed, he
to SUNVAL TE
kl wt have been
has arsenate
ditlicult to send an apologetic letter
We know
i hay been at kanye tune, but we have
Haat snap read an pant
had dithenlnes wath our
recondy te” Robinson: summed
suceuntly a
1 vet hear
tp this point
postscript ter ane letter
ob dtiplomaes for dear ole Albany
Suate?
and pea shooters. It wasin an effort
to halt these senseless tragedies
that NYPIRG at SUNYA under-
took its first research project.
In three weeks following a
successfu] 5000 name petition drive
NYPIRG students completed their
irst Public Interest Research Pro-
ject - an extensive survey of hazar-
dous toys in the Capital District
depart ment stores. The project, un-
questionably successful and
finalized last month,
strumental in affecting immediate
action against violators of illegal
toys through publication of their
results and indirect legal pressure.
The Al
piled by 25 student researchers
from Albany State University and
Siena College, covered 20 different
ment stores, and took
ny Loy survey was.com-
name dep.
only one week, 1 complete. Ce
dinated by Linda Kabootian of
SUNYA and Kathy Pragnol of
Siena, the gioup’s purpose was to
compare department store toy in
entorys with a list af banned and
dangerous toys published by the
newly lormed United Stites Con
Product Satety Commis
findings
1 illegalities by
sion The studenty’
demonstrated bl
store owners, since many outlawed
toys still remained on store shelves.
Despite the results having been
published in at least one major
Capital Newspaper
impact is sull largely unrealized in
its significant
the Albany community
When NYPIRG at SUNYA
students took the initiative, they
soluntanly assumed an in
ive fale collaborating with
the Consumer Protection Ageney
Heard
Distiict stores. expla
students. entered Capital
ved the sur
Jey's purpaye, and attempted to
ne the
Most
swctire permission (0 €Xa
owner's merchandise
Albany Stores, both large and
small, cooperated (Macy's in
Colonie Center did not). When the
surveyors completed their inspec-
tion they notified each manager of
his specific violation and told each
that they would return in a few
days to recheck the shelves. Any
violations found were to be
reported to the Attorney General.
In all, the students located 34
types of banned toys and 74 hinds
listed dangerous, but not banned
MACY'S
department.
by the C.PS.A. Illegal toys of
many shapes and sizes were un:
covered. “Attractive” dolly with
easily removable straight piny and
glass components (eyes). easily
shattered baby rattles, ammabte
toy clothing. taxie dyes
harmless” gun powder
struments and many others tilled
the consumer's Christmas shelves,
Other dangerous, but not yet bann.
ed toys included toys with fiver
toys (kurt
punst.aand muiny toy smiskubled for
ihe edges, projectile
age geups too soung to handle
them salels Some mianulactures
guilty of prntucing allegit toys
were the popular Matell, Hasbraw
and Kelner Corpenationsand ane
of the bugest viokttary = ENO.
Schwantz
Merchants Complied,
Hasardouy Lays
Removed
The most remarkuble and
successful aypect of the project
came when the shidents returned
(by themselves) to determine the
stores complience with the kaw. tn
every store all banned toys were
removed by owners or manage:
ment, Lhus, hundreds uf toys were
removed, that might otherwise
have been hought tor ehildsen
Many managers, when first
notified of their violations, ad-
mitted that they were aware of the
violations before the students had
told them so.
The reason NYPIRGat SUNYA
chose this project reflects the im-
portance of it as not only a serious
metropolitan problem but a widely
unrealized national one as well. As
tated in NYPIRG's final report:
“The United States Public Health
Service has estimated that each
“Macy's was the one store which did not allow students to Inspect Its toy
year 700,000 children are injured
by toys. Approximately 132,000 of
these injuries require treatment ina
hospital emergency room
range trom common lacerations to
nore severe sprains or fractures.”
The “Pro il Hoy Satety
Act of 1969" along with the 197%
United Statey Consumer Produet
Salety Comm
4 response to this problem. But
injuries
clon i
sion Way created ity
vely new and
hs sulficient
APOLLO®
MOON -+
financial resources, the problem is,
still imminent, The personnel to
adequately oversee and legatly halt
the sale of dingerous. toys hay
simply not been appropriated to
the Commpsion. Even a recent
New York statue whieh permits the
Attorney General to impose fines
‘on violators oF illegal toys. biaty pos=
cd little threat to either manulie-
This is
of course, the Safety
turers and store owners
heeiuse,
Commission lacks at suff
loreement
these groups
Hus. the initial project for
SUNY A'S PERG, demonstrates
that merchants will indeed volun
tunity act to serve the public in=
terest, at the prompting of students
srmed with the backing of the state
Attorney General, NYPIRG plans
several other interest-
onvnted projects this semester and
expects eyuially productive resulty
from them
public
lickets are now in sale for
State University Theatre’s production of
Antigone
$1.00 with Student Tax Card
Performing Arts Center Box Office is open Mon-
day through Friday
Iam-4pm
Call 457-8606 for further information.
| Attention All New Scuba
Diver Trainees
Scuba Instruction Starts
CONFERENCE ASSISTANT POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Position:
SUMMER PLANNING CONFERENCE 1974
Conference Assistant
Summer Planning Conference
1974 Orientation Program
Qualifications:
Time Commitment:
Salary:
Requirements:
Undergraduates Only
June 3 - August 5, 1974
$860.00 plus room and board
Must attend one of two mandatory in-
terest meetings either Wed. Jan. 23,
1974 at 7:30 in C.C. Assembly HallOR
Tues. Jan. 29, 1974 at 6:30 in C.C.
Assembly Hall.
Office of Student Life, CC. 137, between
Jan, 14 and Jan, 31, 1974,
ou There or Call Glenn . ‘i
reballing See You : Application Deadline: Thursday, Jan. 31, 1974 at 5:00 pm.
sts sal, records made 7-7793 For Further Details For additional information, stop by C.C. 137.
the entire ulfice not eltucwnt Hh —
ty why there wer R
cematianeed nn int pee
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2!
Since 97L ain eth
cue \ PUBLIC ENEMY
feature
time
tens thas beet 4
sts. Helore then
with James Cagney
“N° LITTLE CAESAR
with Edward G. Robinson = ted
setually payable adel
cumbersome, cach snd
Friday, Jan. 25
ts at 6:00 P.M.
Funtion aud bow
had ty he reviewed ait
Pussthle tu present
ibe linpree: Here in the pool
dattgcaelty beep
fice was havin Where to Apply:
up wal cach semester ay to
there wits not time for 99s!
This Friday and Saturday at 7:30 and 10:00 in LC 7
$.50 with state quad card $1.00 without
Until recently st
uoup1208sp 1uaphis Aq papun{
delays us cutl
PAGE FOUR ALBANY STUDENT PRESS FRIDAY. JANUARY 25, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
~Itoras an important week for the
NewYork State legislature. On
T Governor. Malcolm
‘Wilsot unveiled bie proposed $9.3
biltion badget, a fairly conservative
venture not likely to arouse the ire
of any interest: group; save those
-who want the state government to
do more toward curing society's
ills, (See story next page:) The
budget provides money to keep the
subway fares down, as well as in-
creased financing for the City Un-
iversity and necessary increases in
welfare payments due to inflation.
‘Also on Tuesday attention was
focused on two separate lobbying
groups who had come to Albany to
plead their cases, Tenants
associations from New York City
and the Capital District held a rally
at the Capitol and then lobbied
with legislators individually, press-
ing for an end to “vacancy decon-
trol.” Vacancy decontrol means
that when a tenant moves out, the
landlord can raise the rent to any
level he desires. The tenants wants
return to rent control, which would
prohibit all rent incréases unless
specifically approved by a govern-
ment agency.
Also present in Albany were
seve hundred anti-abortionists.
They were protesting in
Washington and Albany
simultaneously, demanding repe
of the liberal abortion law. Tues-
day was the first anniversary of the
Supreme Court's controversial rul-
ing.
A brief scuffle broke out on the
Capitol steps around noon time
when an anti-abortionist harrassed
and grabbed from # pro-
abortionist the sign she was carry-
ing. Police arrested the seemingly
ovetzealous “Right-to-Lifer.”
Nixon Impeachment Asked
A group of New York State
legislators announced today that
they will introduce a joint resolu-
tion next week calling on the Un-
ited Stated House of Represen-
tatives to proceed with the im-
peachment of President Nixon,
Initiated by Senator Sidney A.
von Luther and Assmeblyman
Leonard P. Stavisky, the call for
impeachment is also being sup-
ported by many members of the
Senate undAssembly, including
‘Assemblymen Franz Leichter, G.
Oliver Koppell, Stephen Solarz,
Edward Meyer, Arthur Eve, Irwin
Landes, Daniel Haley, Richard
Gottfried, and Senators Mary
‘Anne Krupsak, Carol Bellamy,
Karen Burstein
Formal introduction of the
resolution is expected on Tuesday,
ufter its initial supporters have had
time to circulate the document and
JSC
Calendar of Events
Sun. March 3
Kosher Deli Dinner
§Sat. March 16
sSat. March 30
Film
Mixer
WATCH FOR FURTHER DETAILS
develop broad-based support for
it
Outlines Allegations
Specifically, the resolution out-
lines numerous allegations and dis-
closures surrounding the conduct
of the President and members of
his staff, including
-Burglary, illegal wiretapping,
and military surveilance of
civilians.
-The attempted perversion of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
the Central Intelligence Agency,
and the Internal Revenue Service
The creation of the “plumbers,”
it private secret police force
-Presidential refusal to comply
with requests, subpoenas, and
court orders for information which
could shed light on the events of
Watergate.
-The possibility that Presidential
tapes relating to Watergate have
been tampered with
-Vhe fact that the President
directed the dismissal or caused the
resignation of Special Prost
Archibald Cox, Attomey Gi
Elliot Richardson, and his Deputy,
William Ruckelshaus,
Calls on Colleagues
Calling on his colleagues to wet
on behall of their constituents,
Senator von Luther said that "It's
time that we act in the interest of
the people of New York State by
urging Congress to impeach Presi
dent Nixon, Filty percent of the
American people now feel that
there should be a new election in
1974. A plurality of the American
People feel that President Nixon
should resign.
Welfare Reforms Proposed
The Temporary State Commis-
sion to Revise the Social Services
Law has recommended sweeping
changes to untangle and streamline
social services and welfare
programs. Estimates that welfare
and social services will cost tax-
payers more than $4 billion an-
ually by 1974, prompted the
Commission's proposals for
remedial measures.
Senator William ‘T. Smith, I
stated that: “The
dations of the Commission are not
put forth for the sake of change
alone, but in the sincere conviction
that the State has now reached a
point where it must resume its role
as pacemaker for the nation-
innovating at a time when innova-
tion is a necessity, and raising its
creative insights to point the way
toward a newer and more effective
system of d
recommen-
\vering social services,
The Commission recommends
an end to our present welfare
system which commingles financial
atid programs, medical assistance
Programs, and various social ser
Viees activities: and further divides
administrative and supervisory
functions between local and state
authorities,
Legislation will be introduced
next week which would place full
responsibility for the administra
tion of public assistance and
Medicaid on the State level under
and Medical
Assistance within the Executive
Department
Senator Smith said that
“By placing {ull responsibility on
the State, the present County ad-
Division of Finan
LARGE SELECTION OF POPULAR ARTISTS
LP’
2 for $3.00
8 TRACK TAPES
for $3.00
Stuyvesant Plaza Only
ministrated, state-supers ned
welfare system, which allows
buckpassing and provides « com
fortable means of evading icon
tability when things go sing
would be eliminated
It is further proposed that w thin
this Division two separate and di
tinet departments be created tur
Financial Assistance Administra
tion und Medical Assistance Ad
ministration. The former would
have responsibility for the ad
ministration of Aid to Hanley
with Dependent Children, Home
and State supplimentation
for Federal Supplimental Securn
Income for the aged, blind. snd dhs
abled
The Medical Assistance Ad
ministration would be charged
with the operation of the State’,
Medicaid Program
This would ensure constant and
meticulous
Programs that individually a
count for annual expenditures
two billion dollars each
supervision
The Commission proposes that
public assistance payments and
medicaid vendor pay ments be
ministrated centrally under tu!
State operations rather th
handled individually by Ss
districts.
Wis proposed that local y
ment co
eligibility
Commission strongly
nue to be respenissh
more earnest, energel
judicious el
would be made by empl
bility determina
county government who ha
sake in ty operations
There’s a difterent
world at the other
end of the bus line.
It all happens at
Che
Outside
Hin
334 WASHINGTON AVE.
Truck on down any
time you feel lonely,
thirsty or hassled.
We may not be able
to solve all your}
problems, but we'll
make you forget
Wilson Sends
Cautious Budget
by Glenn von Nostitz
Governor Wilson sent the
legislature a record $9.38 billion
budget Tuesday that contained no
major spending initiatives or tax
relief. Most of the budget was
devoted to maintaining programs
begun by his towering predecessor,
Nelson Rockefeller
In the field of education, the
budget proposed an increase of
$126 million in aid to secondary
and clementary schools, but this
represents no real increase, reflec-
ting only rises in the costs of educa-
tion, The budget calls for a $587.9
million allocation to the State Un-
iversity of New York. This would
allow operations to continue
basically at the present level with
some additional tunding included
for developing
College and the emerging colleges
bury and Herkimer:
There is no provision
in the budget for growth of alt
Empire State
existing University Centers a
lour year colleges. with the excep
tion of new funding for Stony
Brook's Health Seiences Center
The Governor's budget pleased
New York Mayor Abe Beame
because it contained an increase in
nding for the City University of
New York
CUNY has often heen the target of
funding cuthacks, but this year the
Mayor's (ull request was granted.
im addition to new monies to lund
the university's SEEK (Seareh tor
Uyaluation and
In presious. years
Fdueation
Knowledge) program
The new hudget alo called tor
continued funding. but ata sightly
mereased level, of support of
private collegesand universities in
the state. This program was not
kely to receive a major boost
hecause state funding of private in-
Mtitutions implies state control over
how the money is spent. This is
anathema to the independent
minded private schools ad-
nunestrators,
No Offense
The budy
Beame be
ight $70
nase transit in New York City
wits the Hurst tame the state had ever
proposed subsidization of mass
ting costs and holds
mise that the 35 cent
fare may be kept a little longer
transit ope
out the p
All in all, the budget from
vatious Republican leaders was
very positive, and indicates that the
Governor should have little
problem getting the Republican
Committee called the budget a
“sincere, thoughtful and altogether
commendable plan for meeting the
most essential needs of our
citizens” and Assemblyman Joseph
D. Margiotta said the budget is "a
good one in its moderate and
responsible approach to
governmental spending.”
There was, of course, deep
criticism from the Democrats,
They charged that the budget is
overoptimistic in its proposed
revenue estimates, and “unnaccep-
lable in its. proposed expel
ditures
Most of the budget was inherited
from Nelson Rockeleller. Wilson
xd out yesterday th
's own initiatives
count for only 3 percent of the tota
budget cost
Allin all, the budget offended no
one, except those who have urged
that the state spend more to help
solve social ills, Reactions to the
budget from various Republican
leaders was very positive, and in-
dicates that the Governor should
have Wtle problem getting the
Republican gubernatorial nomi
tion,
Ihe New York State Republican
Sincere. thoughttul and altogether
commendable plin lor meeting the
most essential needs of our
eatizens”and Assemblyman Joseph
1. Margwotta said the budget is “a
good one in ily moderate and
responsible to
governmental spe
LOCKERS
Duryea, Anderson Urge Aid Changes
by Robert Decherd
The two most important men in
the New York State legislature told
a gathering of educators last week
that more government attention
must be focused on the problems of
private colleges and universities in
the state.
Senate Majority Leader Warren
Anderson and Assembly Speaker
Perry Duryea were two promi-
nent panelists at a symposium on
the “Future of the American
College” sponsored by Colgate Un-
iversity January {7th at the
yea proposed the develop-
eaningful
partnership” between state and
private schools, while Anderson
asked for a restructuring of the
higher education financing for-
mula so that private schools and
public schools would compete
more fairly for students. Private
schools, he pointed out, are facing
a deetine in enrollments
cause of competition from the
grt State and City University
systems
Specilically, Anderson said that
a revised student atid program,
id directly to
ther student rather than the in sutu
which would give
tion, appeats to be the best alter~
native, Presently, about $50
ni A Year ay given dureetly to
private schools by the suite govern
ment. and Anderson sity that they
figure cannot climb much higher
- LOCKERS
Effective Feb. 1, 1974 student
lockers will be available through
the Student Activities / Campus
Center Office, CC 130.
Rental fee: $3.00 per semester
Increased direct aid to private in-
stitutions would necessitate
greater state control over private
operating procedures, which
anathema to private school
ministrators. The State, Anderson
said, “must prevent a school from
juggling its figures so that it can ‘rip
off’ the taxpayers.”
According to the State Senaitor.
the advantages of giving aid to
private schools through direct stu-
dent aid include freedom of choice
for the student, a stress of quatlity,
and the fuct that such aid can be
directly geared to astudent’s need
Student Association of the
State University has taken a strong
stand against such a restructuring
of the aid program, since it would
in all likelihood be coupled with
grgatly increased tuition at SUNY
schools, SASU officials have ex-
pressed fear that the proposed aid
Wy SUNY students Would not be
able to cover the greatly inerensed
tuition costs, and that many pre=
sent SUNY students Would not be
able to atlord either a public or a
¢ college education
Duryea said that there are strong
indications that college enrollment
will contract in the late 1970's, ad~
ding: “It is expected that the
college going rate will stabitize in
conjunction with an absolute
decline in: the number of high
school graduates.” All sectors of
higher education, he said, should
{all short of their enrollment goals,
with an absolute decline en-
countered by the private colleges
and universities in the state.
Duryea Says
Speaker Duryea also called fora
restructuring of the student aid
program, although he introduced
ho specific recommendations.
However, the Assembly Speaker
did call tor
review and
Scholar Incentive award schedule
so that i hetter reflects tuition and
cont diflerentualy
coordination of
federal and state programs,
work study
pustranteed loan programs and the
administration and coordination
‘oF student financial aid packages
revision of the
Reform an
UCB PRESENTS
CHIC
Tickets:
First come,
JAZZ
RETURN TO FOREVER WITH
COREA ©
Thursday, Jan. 31 8 pm
CC Ballroom
$2.00 with student tax
$3.50 without student tax
Tickets will be sold at the door only
st served seating
fund
600D
60D
ed by’ student associ
SUN LOVERS!
This is your last chance!
gu Annual MIAMI Bus Trip
Tickets go on sale Monday at 9 A.M., CC Lobby, and will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis.
Roundtrip Ticket prices (with SUNYA |.D.)
Dues paying members, Classes of '74 & °75: $37.00 round trip
Other studen
Limit 3 tickets per person on line
Tickets will bear passenger's name and will not be transferrable.
Make checks payable to Student Association-Class of '74.
Should demand be great, a third bus will be contemplated, price yet uncertain
Names will be taken for a waiting list.
$57.00 round trip
Buses depart Friday,
Feb. 15 at 10 A.M.
Questions? call Bob 457-5260
Allen 457-5238
PAGE SEVEN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SIX | FRIDAY, JANUARY 2
os
by Robin Berger
More than 1,000 people attend-
ed the New York State Conference
on Marriage and Divorce held at
the Commodore Hotel in New
York City this past weekend.
‘Sponsored by the New York State
Chapters of the National
Organization of Women (NOW),
the conference sought to
“challenge the existing order
through consciousness-raising,
education and legislative change.”
Congresswoman Bella Abzug
opened the session. Hoping to
counter the’ charge that the
women’s liberation movement is
not concerned with housewives she
asserted that “it's time their work
be given dignity and their con-
tributions legal protection.” Citing
statistics from a Chase Manhattan
Bank pamphlet, “What a Woman
is Worth,” she criticized the es-
timated figure of $159.00 a week as
being insufficient to live on. She is
sponsoring a bill in the State
Legislature calling for social
security benefits for wives, widows
and divorcees.
‘A group of unidentified women
in white masks and robes held a
public hearing to demonstrate
Divorce, Abortion
Reform: NOW
against the divorce dilemma.
Speaking about their own ¢x-
periences, they told the conference
of well paid ex-husbands eluding
child-support, court delays, red
tape, callous or bribed judges and
hustling lawyers.
Divorce reforms were called for,
‘as were reforms dealing with
marriage contracts, “the legal
model of the married woman.” As
one participant remarked, the
definition of “model” is a “small
copy of the real thing.”
Thirteen workshops began
Saturday afternoon and continued
through Sunday. Some evolved
into gripe sessions and a series of
unburdened confessions, others
became informative dialogues
between panelists and an audience
Approaches varied from ineffec~
tive gestures of pacification to legal
debates.
The workshops unfolded a mul-
titude of problems, as well as a
search for their alleviation. High
on the list of complaints were the
“ubismal ignorance” of women in
general, the entrapment of the
model, married life-style, and the
inefficiency of the system in trying
divorce cases and enforcing
divorce decisions. Innovations
such as alternative lifestyles,
homemaker compensation and in-
surance benefits, pre-marital legal
education, and ante-nuptial con-
tracts, divorce centers, job train-
ing, flexible and staggered work
hours, and children’s representa-
tion in court aroused the most in-
terest and enthusiasm.
Suggestions were made to
representatives of State and Coun-
ty Bar Associations and courts 10
FIVE QUAD
VOLUNTEER AMBULANCE SERVICE, INC.
ANNUAL FUND DRIVE
"GET YOUR
TWO CENTS IN"
funded by:weei@imsawwelation and the Friends of Five Quad!
—
|
amend_ present divorce practices
‘and. procedures. Feedback. from
the workshop - data” will be
‘channeled to develop guidelines for
future NOW sponsored marriage
and divorce programs.
Specific bills proposed before
the state legislature deal with
property holdings, forced financial
disclosure, legal use of a woman's
maiden name, separation
agreements includit the
educational support of
dependents and the rights of par-
ties in an action for divorce.
Closing speeches by State
Senator Mary Anne Krupsak and
feminist Betty Friedan urged
women to face up to realities and
responsibilities. Senator Krupsak
spoke of the crime of public
difference” to a legislative com-
mittee system in which “the power
of the committee chairman is un-
ilateral.” Friedan encouraged
everyone concemed to band
together and to set up divorce
clinies similar to the existing abor-
tion clinies that were fought for in
previous years
As to the renewed abortion c
troversy. announcements were
made about future protests in
Albany and in New York City
specifically, at Senator Buckley's
residence, and in front of St
Meanwhile, on Tuesday of this
week 10,000 protesters gathered in
Washington in support of a con:
stitutional amendment banning
abortion. A similar rally was held
the Albany Capitol Building
sponsored by such groups as Birth
Right and Right to Late, An exe
timated 1500 men and women
came to Albany ts “encourage the
“Lepislature 1 know where we
stand
Louise Cousday, the Director of
Birth Right. Wasa guest on the L
Donovan radi program (WABY)
Tuesday morning. She criticized
supporters. of abortion saying.
most people have had abortions
hecuuse they could not be
hothered” Mrs. Coosday then
noted repercussions such as legisla
thon condoning euthanutsia and mn
fanticule, anal long-tecin prablems
uch as unbsekinged seal
sem Whet asked liter
tie believed that banning a
Uisequibibriany between those
working sunt those not working
she sud that other methods were
Friday nite, Jan. 25
Exhibition Night
No Clothes No Cover Charge
(Bathing Suits Acceptable)
Saturday nite, Jan 26
DICE is back for another
grand performance
(request your favorites)
Boor on the house for all the gals!
Sanders Upset
(ZNS) Colonel Harland Sanders
of fried chicken fame is in a finger
licking bad mood
‘The 83-year-old colonel is very
upset with the Heublein Company.
so upset, in fact, that he has filed «
$122 million (dollar) lw sun
against Heublein.
The Heublein Company recent
bought up the colone!’s Kentuck
Fried Chicken outlets around th;
world, and begin doing thing
their own way. The Colonel ap.
parently is not impressed with the
changes at alt
In his multi-million dollar sui
the Colonel contends that the com
pany is using his name and image
to market all kinds of newlangled
things from pastries to da
products. The Colonel insists that
all he ever sold to Heublein was he
knowledge of fried chicken and 1h
right to use
such as (quote) “It’s Finger Licks
Good.”
Asa result of all of this my
Tew catchy phrase
tune, the Colonel wants a few hig
buckets of cash...to go.
In addition to protest rallies
Right to Life cause “will show
movies and slides of abort
wherever we are invited. We h
been to schools and commun
organizations
So kar, the following
stitutional Amendments have by
introdsiced i Congress concent
abortion
Buckley
abortion Irom the moment ol
Amendment
plantanon
Huckley
Security Act: bans Medicand 1
Amendment. >
tor abortion
Hogan Amendment bans
tion from the moment ut ¢
ton,
Whitehurts Amend:
returns to the statey the
te legisktte abortion
Tegal Services Act
right to be represented
by attorneys Lunded
Danestic t
Charch — \mendmctt
Act public and
hospataly that rvtuse t
ive Nh
Auditions
for
Coffee
House
Tues., Jan. 29
8:00-12:00 PM
ALL WELCOME
Call 457-3382
or 457-7854
I
arts & leisure
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
Twisted Psyche Strikes Again
eve Klein
With the holiday seasonal movie
rush out of the way and 1974 upon
us. it's time to look for bright
celluloid prospects for the new
year. One of 1973's latest and
Perhaps the funniest Nicks of the
year was Woody Allen’s Sleeper
Sleeper, written and directed by
the contemporary master of film
comedy, is Woody's fifth full
Iength) motion picture and it
overflows with some of the Zamiest
slapstick shenanigans since the
Mary Brothers, Woody. who goes
unto the hospital an 1973 tor a san
ple uleet, wakes up 200 vats hater
alter a deep tieere wrapped in
booties of aluminum tol What
follows could only have emanated
from the twisted psyche of a
Woody Alten
Finding himself in a strange
dystopie society where humans are
reduced 10 seattered-brained
uhuts. Woody isasked to find out
shout a secret underground
political plot to overthro
leader, while all that re
hum as his nose, Woody meets up
with) his old sidekick Diane
Keaton, whe has starred with him
hetore, and) who portrays a
Wanstormed revolutionist
Lupether. they work their way into
the tuling organization and make
thcan believe that they are the doc
+ that ae pooing to resurrect the
Great Leader's entire body trom
fist Ins nase In the meantime it
sects that Woody 4s talling un love
with Dianeand since this Luturisti
society ty muide up ol tlmost entire
mupotent males, execpt the ontey
of Talian descent, the feeling
becomes mutual.
Within a fantasy world of
robots. orgasm machinesand giant
lables. Woody finds ample
insult our present day social
tions, mores and the leaders
1 our time, It seems that the state
of allairy in the new world was a
result of gr jortunate-
I). much history of our nation was
forgotten or destroyed. Woody's
digyat people hke Nixon, de Gaulle
and Howard Casell make for some
af the wackiest comments in the
risa movie
which anything w likely to happen,
wid it ustially does. What else
would sou expect from a guy who
Hasn't had anny sex in 200 years, 204
1 youl count hiy marrage! ho
Hyovable mht at the cinema
eheck th out
Fantasies & Loose Eccentrics
J wo new exhibitions opened the
spring semester schedule at the nt
Gallery at StateUniversity at New
York at Albany Monday, Jan 14
continuing through thursday
Veh. 14
“Fight and Loose” is am exhibit
structured to bring out the obvious
pleasure attisty take in various
deaweng medat “Drawing has not
tecenved proper attention tor
11s.” according to Donald Cole
4 New York artist who organized
the extibine and yet, a good
many serous artists are deeply
committed to drawing.”
tepresented in" Fgh
und, although distinctions between
Higurative and abstract work can be
made in yaewng the show, the ex:
‘cutiont of the work and the inten:
tonsal theartisty seem ity most im:
portant aspects
The second) exhibition, also
organived by Me Cole, ay titled:
Tantastics and kecentnes.” Cole,
Who has seen art movements come
and go wih rapidity in the past
several years. hay become in:
ereasingly interested in “a number
of relatively isolated artists: who
have deep emotional eammutments
to the development ol a personal
vision.” Fhe coming exhibit focuses,
on it group ol those artists who
ion by the
11 establishment to concentrate on.
and neglected idea
ot yision™ in contemporary
Amenean att, According 10 Mr
Cole. the strtists were drawn to hy
the ascanat
tile, “Lantastes and Becentnes,
because they fel way Man ap:
proprate desenptive ‘epithet’ for
thei Work ay Well aya comment on
thei relation ta the art workd
Four picees by cach of 10 artists
are shown an order to give an idea
their tanges and umgueness The
works ane paunting diane ints. an
stetehed wall
»
The gallons ss open tothe pubhe
trai Yaa te Spe Munday
thigh Deahay ated Hone 1p am tee
Spam on Saturday sind Sunday
ae
Relaxation Through
Meditation
Mantra meditation hay long
played am important part in many
Hastern religions, but in a farm too
comples 10 be compatible with a
Western way of tile, Western
swcietiey have been made more
aware ul the dilterent roads
available leading tw Huxley's
‘doors of petveption™ by the im=
pact of pyyehedele drugs such as
FSD and also be the realization
that the physical basis of nature
depended on the observer's views
point
Over the past decade simpler
mind-expanding methods such as
that ul the Maharishi Mahesh Yoxi
thnown aly transcendental medita:
tion) have
widespread. Hhese have the advan-
beeome fairly
tage of being simple to learn they
can be taught in ysosand-at-hall
minutes and ned be practiced
for only 20: mmutes, morning and
night, exch day During these
penods the meditator sits with eyes
closed anuitocusestus attention an
uy wnternally repeated sound. the
anti anti the mun becomes
till Hay claimed that, an this state
Mf stullness Ghe “Hanscendental
hate") the achvity at the nersaus
ory atltered a such a wary that
tresses ol daily Hangs at
Halized and the ereanve energy
the mdivntual as eetiarged
bs peaple chun benetaal
yes ay at result of meditation
« mclude smproved eftiewenes
and a sense of well-being in tact,
111 mereased ability 10 cope with
the stress of twentieth-century life.
Several seientihe groups in
Fnghind, Ameren and Germany
set out to tind if there were
phystoloyacil eortetites of the sub>
jective elect deveribed. In 1968,
some colleagues and 1 at the
Maudsley Hoypitil in London ine
Jestigited the electrical activity of
the brain ina group ot subjects who
had been meditating lor more than
1 year, The brun-wave recordings
delinite. changes
during mveditaon The patterns
sppetied 6 be unique to the
meditative state and ndicated that
although the subject was still alert
sume changes in electrical activity
usually associated with hight sleep
Were occurring at the same time,
There was also some evidence
that during meditation the kvel of
excitabihly ob the gortey way a
Cloased. as tly happens in the
lhter stiges at sleep We
predicted from this that reduction
iotiity would be lownd a other
Phssiolapical systems during
hvittation This way contirmed an
HW when Herbert Benson and
Kobo Keath Wallace of Harvard
Medial Schou! published thei
Hantings showin thait during,
heditationt the osygen sonsumpe
nobthe hody tell to at level well
cont. on pg. 4a
Rising Smile
SATURDAY _
SUNDAY
Laurence Olivier film of
William Shakespeare's
ichard Ill
(from New York City)
Doors Open At 8 PM
$1.00 admission
cogenegae
DUTCH QUAD P ; sev tatnevace Na
BOARD Sir Laurance Ciliveras Richard {it \
funded by Chine Bloonas Lay Anne
Doors Open 8 PM
$1.00 admission i
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25.
Si Codie Hardwicke as King Edward IV
Si Ralph Richardson Buc kinghany
7& 9:30 LC 7 $1.00
PAGE EIGHT ALBANY STUDENT PRESS’
s/preview/arts/preview/arts/preview
Chess
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preview/arts/preview/arts/preview/a
Contest Rules
Puzzle solutions must be submitted to the Albany Student
Press office (CC 334) by Monday; 12 noon following the Friday
that the puzzle appears.
WSUA 640
Weekend
of Sports-
IName, address, phone number and social security number
must appear on your solution,
[Puzzle solutions will be drawn at random until three corre
solutions have been chosen.
R-Ka!
R-K8ch
Q-K7ch
Jack Uppal Brian Green
.
All University Party: Music is by Suntour, xs by Jack Uppal B ! g
with beer and goodies in the CC Ballroom
from 9-1. Sponsored by the Jewish Stu-
dent Coalition. Price is 25¢ for members
and 50¢ for non-members.
Friday, Jan. 25
Each of the three winners will be entitled to a $10 gift cer.
ificate to the campus bookstore. Certificates must be claimed
ithin two weeks of notification.
P-K4
N-KB3
P-Q3
NxP
P-Q4
‘The Petroff's Defense (1
K4 P-K4 2.N-KB3 N-KB3)
often leads to very tactical
No one working on or for the Albany Student Press is eliyzible games where each side has
to win. considerable chances for at-
tuck. Two very good ex
amples are provided.
In the first game, white
weakens his pawns early in
the game and black. after
winning @ pawn, uses tac
tucal threats to win the game:
Henways: Exhibition Night. Come, no
clothes-no cover charge. “Dice” from
iG will be playing, 8 pm. Admission is
00
Basketball
Sunday, Jan. 27
Only one solution per person accepted.
Just the Blues: Spencer Livingston,
Vocals and Bottleneck Guitar, with Joe
Boher on harmonica will be performing in
the CC Rathskeller tonight. Festivities
begin at 7:30 and go till closing,
tonight-
Mandala Folk Dance Ensemble: Costumes
and dances from around the world will be
shown.The place is the Darrow School, Rt.
20, New Lebannon and admission is $2.50,
gis
Danes vs. Geneseo
Brian Green Jack Uppal Notes - (a) Not NxP? 4, Q.
Kz Q-K2 5, QXN P-Q3 6, P-Q4
and) white pawn
PKA (b)K.1CK1 0-0 9. P-B4 P-QB3
N-KB3 10. Q-N3 PXBP 11, Bx? N-Q3
P-Q3(a) 12, B-BI N-Q2 13. B-KB4 P-
NxP QNs leads to a more equal
P-Q4 position. (C) 9. NxZBP!?
B-K2 KXxN 10 Q-B3 K-N3 11, N-B3
B-KH4 N/2-13and white's attack
N-Q2 should not work. (d) This
NxN weakens white's pawns too
B-N3 much. (e) Not QxP?? 16, B:
NxN RS! and white will win at
Saturday, Jan. 26
Rafters: Great Coffee House entertain-
ment by Michael O'Dunne, country singer
and songwriter, with guitar and blues
harp. It opens at8:00 in the Chapel House.
on hill across from gym
1 PKA
2. N-KB3
3. NXP
4. N-KB3
» P-Q4
6. B-Q3
7.R/1 Q7 (g)
8. N-K59(b)
9. Q-B3(c)
10. PxN
LN
12, PXN
Henways: "Dice" is back again! Beer is on
the house for all women, 8 pm itall starts
and the cover is $1.00.
Saturday-
Nows- (by Brian Green) (a)
The queen is misplaced here
700
P-QBS
On Campus
lia
‘Shadow of a Doubt
Fri: 7:15, 9:45
L.C. 18
The Birds
fri, and Sat.: Midnight
LC, 18
Albany State Cinema
Getaway
Fri.: 7:30, 8:30 4:30
ILC. 1 & 2
Siddhartha
Sat.: 7:30, 9: 30
L.C. 18
Tower East
Public Enemy
Sat. and Sun. 7:30
LOZ
Little Caesar
Sat. and Sun.
LOZ
10:00
Movie Timetable
Rising Smile
The Virgin and the Gypsy
Fri.: 8:00, 10:00
L.C. 24
Richard 111
Sun.: 7:00, 9:30
L.C.7
The Big Sleep
Sat.: 7:30, 10:00
L.C, 24
Off Campus
Hellman (459-5300)
Papillion
Fri. and Sat.: 7: 00, 10:00
Sun.: 2:30, 5: 30, 8:30
Madison (489-5431)
Towne (785-1515)
The Sting
Fri: 7:00, 9:45
Sat.: 5:00, 7:15, 9:50
Sun.: 2:00, 4:15, 6:30, 8:50
Colonie (459-1020)
Sleeper
Fri. and
10:00
Sun
Sat.: 6:00, 8:00,
2:00, 4:15, 6:30, 8:50
Delaware (462-47] 4)
OA TAY
Black Belt Jones
Pris 7:15, 9:15
Sat. and Sun.
6:15, 8:00, 9:40
2:30, 4:30,
Cine 1234 (459-8300)
A Matter of Winning
Pri. Sat. Sun.: 7:15, 9:30
Cinema 7
The Way We Were
Fri, 7:30, 9:40
Sat. and Sun
9:40
2:00, 7:30
The Laughing Policeman
Fri. and Sat: 7:10, 9:30
Walking Tall
Fri. and Sat: 7:10, 9:30
The Seven Ups
Fri. and Sat: 7:00, 9:00
A Matter of Winning
Fri. and Sat.: 7:30, 9:15
ACROSS
1 Hetal support in
fireplace
8 Soctal outcasts
© Edward Julius, 19
44 Chemical suffix
45 Soncalted
49 Danage
50 Creole fried cake
52 Prophets
15 Bloody slaughter
16 Feeble-mindedness
17 Produces
18 Beginning to
develop
19 Ephrain's
20 Group character-
istics
22 Actor — Ray
23 Subject of “South
Pacific"
24 Sheet rus
notations
25 Part of t
Sp.
26 French se
2°
"
Daddy...
28 Gad's’ son
29 Feudal 1,
31 Dwarf of
33 Formerly
34 Inscriptions
37 George £1
character
40 Consuming
56 Bull fight cry
57 College subject
58 Watergate —
60 — and —(early
dwellers)
62 Italian dish
63 Calner
song 64 Above water
fc 65 Infinite
DOWN
1 Agrees to
2 Tell a story
3 Vistonary
4 Fooltsh
ave 5 Stool ‘pigeon
folklore & Potnted arches
(arcnate) 7 Young bira
8 View in all
fot directions
9 Gather together
10 Musteal note (p1.)
yrandson
he head
ason
19 Dong
‘argue CW73-17
11 Victims of the
Spantsh Conque:
12 Artist's studi
13 Holds back
14 Delayed act fon
something
21 Contcal ity
30 Swamp
31 "The Harvey —
(movie)
32 Fencing swords
33 Superlative suf
35 — soup
36 Possessed
37 Grim and horr't
38 Rearranged word
39 Free from pain
41 — Coca
42 Indigenous inna’
ftants
43 Food vendors
46 Sovtet polit
47 Snakelibe 130
48 Broadway show
51 One's entities 1
— trial
53 Russian city
55 Boxing term (p
57 Fat
59 — de France
61 Lair
Solution to Previous Puzzle
PIATRTA]
uf AC
ny
D
ny
fy
Sascgagn oo
PAGE 2A
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
1, R-QL
14. P-BAII(d)
15. BxP
16, B-B4
17-R-Q7
18, B-KBI
19. Q-N4
20. QH-QL
+. QxB
22, Q-K2
23. WxNP
24, Q-B2
5. PNB
46, WEN
27 WAL-Q7U)
28 Q-N3(h)
20. NB
W. -RI
M1. ixReh
#2. Q-Q1
Qa
Pxp
0-OK(e)
BxP
Q-N5
B-QB4
B-KN3(D)
BRE
QxB
QR-K1
RxP
RRA
Q-B6
Q-N5
ReKA
R-B4
BxPch
Q-k7
Qxlt
1eNSUD
east a pivee. (I) The threat
Q-N7 and
trading bishops with B-R4
(ig) 27, P-KR3 may have been
slightly better. (h) 28. RxBP
H- Kitch 29, B-B1 Q-R6 30. Rx
NPch K-RI 31. RxitPeh!?
Rxi 32. Q-B3ch K-N1 and
white's attack is stopped, (Q
Nich Q-K3!) (1) Also possible
was R-Q4. (4) This loses to a
forced mate in 6, but white is
hard pressed to meet the
threats of winning the queen
or winning the bishop. () 38.
K-BE R-B7eh with mate next
winning
move
The next game is another
em, but with slycht
emphasis on
tactical
ly more
positional play
(the QBP is hanging). better
is 8. 0-O and. R-K1. (b) This
is not necessarily best
Sound was 9..N-Q3 10. R-Kt
0-0-0 (10, BxN or NxN is
met with QxQ 11, BxQ BxP)
(e) 12... B-K2 12. RK is good
lor white, Also possible is 13.
1-BA P-KINA 14, B-NS PAK RA
15, PAKS P-RE 16, B-R2P-NS
leading to an unclear posi
ton, (d) 17, BXB Px and
the Nis stuck. From now on
the specter of a mobile K side
majority looms. (€) This also
wins but better was BxN! 19)
PxB Q-RG 20, P-B4 PxP 21. 1
151 (AXIO? P-B6!) Q-R5 22. Q.
133 Q-N4ch 23. K-HLK-KS 24.
Q-N2 NxP wins crushingly
Tricks and Trumps
by Henry Jacobson
NORTH
S98
HAKQI
DAKQI
C Aly
WEST EAST
sx SKxxx
Ba HIUxxxx
Dxxxxx Dx
C7xxxx Ga
SOUTH
SAQi10xx
Hxx
Dxx
CKQI
OP LD:
7 spades
7 clubs
Naturally, overwhelmed
the combined wealth of
South wall cer
hy
high cards,
hainly not settle for any thing.
less than a grand slam
Seven NooTrump isetcourse
the easiest but then there 1s
ho story to tell, So7 Spades it
Phe Ace of clubs captures
West's apemmg lead The 9 ot
spades ts led and tinessed
while South holds bis breath
It wins and South momen
Larily rejaces, until he leads:
the 4 tora second Linesse and
West shows out South's elit
turns to) mekincholy
ain only momentary
ton
(bat ay
iy) because appears that it
spade must be lost to East's
King. But lurther play dis
closes « revelation
Phe A.W ol hearts arec
ed followed by the Queen.
which 1s ruffed in the closed
hand! A diamond ts led to
dummy’s Aceand the Jack of
hearts us led which as also
ruled At this poimt the
renmuning Cards are
N
s
H
DKAI
cs
w
Lnmatersat
s
SAQ
H
Dx
cKQ
catch live coverage from
i
i Geneseo and Buffalo
this weekend on WSUA
‘
i
Albany vs. Buffalo !
i
i
it
i
i
i
i
i
4
een
South now leads a diamond
King, Bast
the QJ of
diamonds are led and Bast
the
to dummy’s
immediately
slupal be ruliseither So Bast
wives up
diseardsa club and heartand
South, two clubs Now aclub
is Jed romdummy and South
makes his remaining trumps
by covering Whatever truntp
Bast plays.
Hus play of maicing an op:
ponent’s trump tick
vanish tte thin air is known
and Coup. Its success
South
same
asaG
Is contingent upon
haymg exactly the
number of wumps as East.
the reason lor ruffing two of
dumniy’s heart winners, And
of course there must be
enough winners (the
diamonds and clubs in the se:
cond sHustration) to bring oft
the coup
Thesis why bridge players
ute Sometimes known as
astounding the
feats ot
malig
contracts and
winning
hnagienins,
vudience wath
presdigatation by
mmakable
succeeding, in
tnwinnable tricks:
‘Contest |
| Contest \
Winners
Stuart Zausner
Hollie Jaffe
|_____Cindy Allen |
ANUARY
Poetry
Absolute Blackness
Brother, with your head im your ass,
Do you think about your royal past?
Sister, with your ass on your head,
Are you jaat allowing where you're lead?
Get off the gray train;
Get drenched in the black rain.
Desert the white batallion,
Jump on a bad black stallion.
Brother in the corner, guzzlin’ dive,
You can keep your bottle but, blackness has arrived,
Sister in the corner, tokin’ tough,
I just want to know if you're black enough.
Tove you all, and all the time.
For we are but
products of a deranged situation.
Iv’s just that up until the going gets rough,
We don't love each other quite enough
morgan
virgo
a ee
I'M GONNA MAKE His
below that of sleep, asdid the heart
rate. They also found that the
blood flow through the fore
creased and that the amount of lae-
tie acid in the blood fell, Both of
these suggest a reduction in the
level of arousal of the autonomic
nervous system, which controls the
involuntary activities of the body
mine
A high level of auton
and serum laeti¢ acid are normally
aysociated with a high Jevel of anx-
ely
UCB Presents: JAZZ
RETURN TO FOREVER
“CHIC COREA
AND
GOOD GOD
Ticket Prices:
$2.00 with
student tax
$3.50 without
Thurs.,
Jan. 31
CC Ballroom
8 pm
funded by student associa} tion
The findings of Benson and
Wallace again showed the elicie
ey of the technique in producing
physiological changes within the
nervous system and, more impor-
‘antly, its ability wo reduce the level
of anxiety. They also highlighted
the difference hetween meditation
and autosuggestion and hypnosis,
in which there are — only slight
changes in central nervous system
function
{Class of 77
TICKETS WILL BE SOLD AT THE DOOR ONLY
FIRST COME FIRST SERVED SEATING
General Meeting
i
Will Vote On Amendment
Regarding Expenditures
Sunday, Jan. 27
7:30 p.m. CC 315
TA
/
Relax With Meditation
cont. from pg. la
Although the findings in many by conventional therapy
meditation studies need to be e
firmed (mainly
failure to use
use of the
proper control
techniques), there is evidence that
meditation does profoundly affect
tirewmerl@hycot ihececunsl ters 570 meditators, found 49 opiate
system und produces measurable USFS. 38 Of bom gave It up after
improvement in meatal wid — “* months’ rmait@ion
physical performance.
eh project sampling
who are able to perse
meditation techniques would also
be able to give up theiraddiction to
drugs. But if the
firmed by other workers, med
tion will become an import
method in the treatment of drug
abuse. It is this aspect of medita
tion that has already persuaded the
U.S.Army, Public Health Service
Department of Health to
provide funds tor the study of
transcendental meditation
expect such
rophysiological changes to
ides and behavior, and
does seem to happen. At an
anecdotal flevel, meditators claim
to be happier and more relaxed
than they before
Benson and Wallace
in a questionnaire study of 1,862
subjects, measured the drop in the
use of hard and soft drugs and
‘alehohol and tobacco alter the sub-
jects had teamed meditation. All
categories, including opiate users,
showed a drama
so than could have been achieved "
One would
gures are con:
fall, much more
the present subst
evidence is confirmed, meditatios
should be able to mal
siderable contribution to
particularly in the treatment of
stress diseases, and itl tw psy
chology, by emphasizing the in:
attention in dire
ting the Lunetion of the cent
Vous system and the mind, Some
opportunity is now needed tor
Profeysianal workers such ay doe
tors, soci workers and psy
chiatnsts to Jean the techniques ot
without the
of Eastern Philosophy, so
1
1
1
1
1
'
1
$ meditation,
H
H that they
1
'
1
1
i
H
‘
Js
heavy
A study ity ellects more
precisely and assess its uyefialtiess.as
4 therapeutic technique
ae
im group \Y_
funded by sivdent association:
the other film group
The Cinema of Alfred Hitchcock
. Fri., Jan. 25-
Fr
Shadow of a Doubt
7:15 & 9:45 -
i, & Sat. Midnight-
$.50 with tax
$1.00 without
Next Week: NORTH BY NORTHWEST
state university of new
york at albany
Week 2
A
LC 18
The Birds
LC 18
fronded by
student association
Service Academies Facing
Complex New Problems
by Curt Koehler
(CPS) Not only is the volunteer army having trouble attracting
volunteers, but now it seems the nation’s serviccacademiesare having trou-
ble keeping them after they've volunteered. Asif high dropout rates weren't
enough, charges of excessive costs, student drug abuse, und sex diserimina-
tion have also surfaced to needle the nation’s three military schools.
The Air Force Academy (AFA) in Colorado Springs, Colo. has taken the
brunt of recent criticism. On November 26 the House AppropriationsCom-
mittee reported the AFA class of 1975 had an estimated dropout rate of 41
and the school's costs per graduate were “about” $80,000.
The committee also suggested all thr ‘ademies “are not repor-
ting the full costs of operating the academies...” Last June Air Force of-
ficers referred to figures suggesting the cost per graduate at the AFA was
$56,000, i
The Accounting Office (GAO) hi
high dropout rate (which Air Force spokesmen preter tw call
and alleged widespread drug abuse at tlte AFA, Such charges wei
t the Academy in a letter from Capt. Lewis Moore. a 1966 graduate of
the school and a member until recently of theschoot’s faculty, to Sen. Bireh
Bayh (D-Ind. )
Both the Airand Naval Academies are subjects of separate suits filed by
two pairs of Congressmen in an effort to open the schools to women.
California Democrats Don Edwards, Leo Ryan,
Fortney Stark had all nominated women to the schools,butl
ed admission solely because of sex. Legislation to open the
toenter all the service academies had heen proposed hy Rep. PierteduPont
(R-Del).
Ina discussion of the attrition ratex of the academics. the House com-
mittee said the rates “are much higher than the attrition rates at comparable
civilian colleges and universities,” The report suid an estimated 9 percent
service
Jerome Waldie,
6 entering freshmen at the Ivy League schools actually graduate while at 4X
‘other schools described as “highly competitive in admission standards” an
estimated 71 perce
Ihe committee reported an estimated tint
West Point cless of 1975 and M percent tor Am
dat $59,000, while figures tor the Naval
graduate
1 of 29 pereent tor the
poli, West Point costs
per graduate were estim:
weren't available.
report noted that while some students leave civilian schools tor
reasons, this couldn't be a cause lor attrivon at the service
academies where the students are paid military salaries
Asked abou
think it’s that high
said."Nobody knows why.”
grades, others because they decwle the
“It’s up to the individual
an said the underestimation of costs far th
We don't
" But ay to the reason tor the kage ligure he
high dropout sate. an AV spokesman sand,
He siid ome cadets drop out because of
just don't want to be military ol
he added
The spokes I resulted
rom Air Force offieers not taking ity account vertain “overhead” figures
The House committee report said the Au Pore “hay an estimated input ot
100 olticers into
academy.” These tr
aduate schools for tounge as anstiuctery tar the
yg costy.aand simular hut lower ones tor the ather ser
sice schouls weren't included asin operating cost lor the schools. the House
report charged.
WA O00 ter erect a foute
pend “1h
In a related ineident fast June the quested S
building prisoner of war caum ast-things we teed
Rep Les Aspan (D-Wase y sind then 1
the ¢
sliaday maunntnans where ¢ ric hsent each
thier” Request Lar the new ¢ Lawns
The Ae Lane Me NO wy
pokeseuuses
vestygation amit the tinal Superintendent
Chath, however. saul
wed Mi ‘
Hay ES Tostenet €
Oats
damaging tu the \e
xtuntled member of the bieult ec recently te
suit aver his transfer anal isan on duty ar Gilat Mit bore Base
Nebraska
en
Fri., Jan. 25
“SUaT
TRE
BLUES’
Spencer Livingston
Vocals & Bottleneck Guitar
Joe Baker
Harmonica
CC Rathskeller
7:30 pm to closing
VOPPPPSPPPPOPPP PPPS P®.
‘G
EREEEEEEEE EEE LEEL EME ELE A
‘ ™ rratpre
52585
Mr. Wilson's proposed state
budget has been viewed as an
attempt to “please everyone”, This
is supposed to get him elected to a
BY. AS
V3
Ay IS
roe
Bs
pinay
full term. He will then finally pass
these forbidding gs
, and enter
the governor's mansion for good,
shapiro
WLPLPSPPSSSSSSS SSH HH HS
MAJOR BUDGET
EDUCATION: Would ap-
Propriate $2.59 billion for elemen-
lary and secondary schools, an in-
crease of $126 mi The State
University would get $590 million,
4 slight inerease to pay for in-
creased costs and: Empire Suute
College. he City University would
receise $151 million, which meets
Mayor Abe
WELFARE: The budget calls
for an merease of $31 million in the
6" request.
state wellare program, toa total of
SLA bilhon, this would include
1n LEN percent nerease in benetity,
but woukl knock about 100,000
mchyibles” oll the wellare rolls,
TRANSPORTATION: | The
budget proposes the first direet
state subsidy toy mays Urensit, $100
million 1s included Jor operating
costs, Which also proposes that
localities add another $100 million,
Announcing
PROVISIONS:
COR
FACH
would go
Another
ART
This goes
yeur
ISRAEL
PROGRAMS
EXPO
Sunday, January 27th, 2:00-4:00 P.M.
aT
STATE UNIVERSITY of NEW YORK
$30 million of the total would go to
upstate communities,
RECTIONAL
TES: An increase of $19
million is urged, bringing the total
to $145 million
DRUG
Abuse Control Commission would
get $156 million if the budget is
Passed intact, $20 million of this
ABUSE: The Drug
» 10 methadone programs.
$40 million goes 10 pay
judges and court costs mandated
by the new, stiffer drug laws,
The State would ins
creases its arts aid $15.5 million to
$M million = at
st at doubling
10 museums, orchestra,
danee, theatre and film groups
TOTAL BUDGET:
budget amounts to $9.38 billion,
of $772 million over, last
Dems Condemn
Wilson Budget
The Democratic leadership in
the State Legislature today
described the Exccutive Budget of
1974-75 as “unrealistic in its
revenue. estimates and unaccep-
table in its proposed expen-
ditures.”
In a joint statement by Senate
Minority Leader Joseph Zaretzki,
Assembly Minority Leader Stanley
Steingut, and the ranking Minority
members of the legislative fiscal
committees, Senator Jeremiah
Bloom and Assemblyman Burton
G. Hecht, the leaders, said
“This budget cites an eight per
cent state economy growth rate for
fiscal year 1973-74 but projects a
mere 4,5 per cent increase in
revenues over the previous year
“This budget offers no tax relief
and provides no substantial: in-
creases for education, for housing,
to combat crime, for the aging, for
environmental conservation, for
the division of youth, for construc-
tion of community mental retarda-
tion centers or for public nursing
home construction,
raund the issue of tax relief
is confined to permanentizing what
the legislature did a year ago in
temporarily eliminating the 2.5 per
cent sureharge on state income tax
ny status quo” budget is un=
ceeptiable. It icky the initiative
and the responsibility of
Jeadership. It ignores virtually
every major issue facing the people
of the State of New York in 1974,
ym aN
at ALBANY at: Campus Center Assembly Hall
THERE |S A PLACE FOR YOU IN ISRAEL
EXPERTS & DISPLAY DESKS WILL OFFER YOU INFORMATION ABOUT;
* College Programs
%* Kibbutz Life
x%Employment
Opportunities
Financial Aid
to Students
% Adjusting to Life in Israel
Learn About Opportunities In Israel
© JEWISH STUDENTS COALITION
* HEBREW CLUB
Sponsored by:
* JUDAIC STUDIES DEPARTMENT
* DEPT. OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Israel Allyah Center, State of New York
(212) 459-5600
ALBANY
STUDENT PRE!
FRIDAY, JANUARY .
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NINE
Credibility:
Hear Today, Gone Tomorrow?
Hugh Scott, and after himGerald Ford, have stated that they know of evidence
President Nixon has in his possession that would prove his innocence in Watergate
and its subsequent cover-up. Mr. Scott has claimed that he actually has seen this
evidence, while Mr. Ford has stated that he has not had time to review it. They con-
tend that while this material would completely exonerate the President, they do not
feel it proper to release it to the public. Yet the large amount of material released thus
far hds tended to prove to to be damaging to the President's cause, thus it is very dif-
ficult to accept the idea that Mr, Nixon would refuse to release more material,
material which, if his spokesmen are to be believed, would save his Presidency. The
simple statement by the Vice-President that he has “not had the time” to look at the
material is also incredible. The fact that the Nixon Administration is in trouble can-
not be disputed; could Mr. Ford possibly consider such documents so unimportant
‘as to leave them for when he can make time for them?
An aide to the President stated yesterday that Mr, Nixon intends to “fight like hell”
against impeachment, To release testimony which supposedly would contradict what
John Dean has said and which would remove doubts as to the President’s innocence
(as they have been removed from Mr. Scott and Mr, Ford) could very well destroy
any impeachment attempts. Indeed, Mr. Nixon might not have to “fight like hell” at
all, as his opponents might be forced to completely acquiesce in the face of such new
evidence, But that evidence is not forthcoming; the President seems to have chosen a
strange manner of fighting.
But perhaps the President is simply considering the other material on Watergate
that he has released. First, the disclosure that two tapes were missing; more recently,
athird has been shown to have been, in part, deliberately erased. These were also ap-
parently meant to exonerate the President; the consequences of releasing even more
tapes, when considering the fate of the others, may be grave. Perhaps portions of new
tapes have been doctored to prove the President's innocence, and the Adminis
is worried that tape experts will detect that also. Perhaps no material exists at all, and
the President is attempting one last defense while the Judiciary Committee considers
his impeachment.
The willfull destruction of the eighteen minutes of tape, plus Mr. Nixon's lack of
evidence, or unwillingness to release such evidence to prove his innocence
appear even more likely that he is involved in Watergate or its cover-up. Without a
full airing of the facts, the public can now never be convinced of the President's
professed jquiltlessness. Such a disclosure would occur only if the President is im-
peached, If impeached, there can be little doubt that the President will release all
papers that might prive his innocence, or else that the public will know that he cannot
do so, Until then, the Nixon Administration's conduct of the entire affair makes it in-
creasingly difficult to grant the customary status of innocent until proven guilty
1 Sr
Eprror 1s. CuleF
AssisTANT TO THE Enron
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Dun ornicis ans LocaTep tw CAMPUS CineH 326 AND 334 AND OUR PHONES AKB457-2190 AND 457-
2194, We ARB PARTIALLY FUNDER BY THE STUDENT ASSnr1ATION
Quote of the Day
“One year ago today my earthly possessions consisted of two pair of
frayed pajamas, a pair of Ho Chi Minh sandals and a tin drinking
cup.’
President Nixon:
-Former POW
Rear Admiral James B. Stockdale
Moving The Inexorable To The Inevitable
sbsoasnossocanenaattee
By almost all informed accounts here,
events are moving the President inexorably
totheinevitable announcement of his own
resignation
the latest Harris poll, conducted before
technical experts revealed theit findings of at
leust five and possibly nine separate erasures
ona subpoenaed White House tape, showed
that 47 percent deemed the now abandoned
“Operation Candor” a failure.
nnouncement of the tape erasures
one of the most serious blows yet
to the White House, is certain to diminish
even further the President's standing both
with Congress and with the voters
The experts’ report did not come as a sur
prise, however, 10 either the prosecutors or
the White House lawyersboth groups had
been kept apprised through interim reports
nvestigation of the erased
conversation between the President and his
uf the six-week
former chiel of staff HAR. Haldeman
Yet. the White sd for View
President Ford to attack the President's
ermuesindeed, even drafted his speechon the
very day the technical experts’ report was
presented in court
that Mr. Ford knew beforehand the damay
ing contents of the report
House
There is no indication
It was the Vice President's lorst serious
blunder. He was set up by the White
House, just as many observers predicted he
would be, in an effort to remforce the
diwindiing buffer zone between the Presid:
and resignation or impeachment
Mr. Nixon's fight, ax reported in this
column on several occasions, isan in-
creasingly desperate one, and he docs not
SESE IEEE
a by Ron Hendren sssssenees
seem to care haw many people he takes down
with him. Unlike Mr. Nixon and his
associates, past and present, however, Mr
Ford does not have a record of spurning
good advice or of being burned more than
once by the same fire. He is not likely to be
duped again.
am here on un the tempo of the im
gation is likely toaecelerate, Further in-
dictments, possibly ol the President himself,
will probably come before long. Although
many questions remain unanswered.
fone of the biggest at this juneture involves
not the yesor-no of the President’s likely
complicity in the erime, but whether or not
he can be indicted betore being impeached.
That nsue may be partly resolved through
ve eller between the spectal
and the House Judiciary Con:
mittee charged with investigating the um:
a coope
prosec
peuchment question. Orit may be rendered
moot, ay this writer has believed lor some
months, by the President's resignation
or Mr
voluntarily, and soon, an already seriously
Nixon does not step down
crippled government and econom
lyzed observers in the
hment
could
beeon
tragic deama of impe
¢ virtually pa
Mr. Nixon, as desperate ay he is, ts not
likely to take that course. Indeed, he himslet
set the stage for stepping down when he said
he would not resign so long as his health
remained good. The repeated postponement
of his regular medical checkup hehas yet to
take a physical since his
hospitalization for viral pneumonia may be
significant factor in keeping his resignation-
because-ol-health option open
complete
~ letters
Benezet to the Rescue
To the Editor:
I would like to express my thanks to Presi-
dent Benezet for the prompt action and deep
interest in the fate of Donald Van Cleve and
Frederick Munro, the sons of Prof. Donald
Van Cleve, Foundations of Education, and
Prof. Edwin Munro, Hispanic Studies. His
action showed deep concern for the welfare
of both of these individuals in a time of dire
need. His concern was comforting and
refreshing to both Fred and Don's parents
and friends, Dr. Benezet’s prompt and
responsible action shows the need, and the
existence of, each individual's concern for
his fellow man in our academic community
Don and Fred were adrift ina Ha
fishing vessel for almost two months after
experiencing engine failure. Recently they
were found after drifting about (wo thou-
sand miles south-west of Honolulu, their
point of departure. Dr
strumental in obtaining the services of
Governor Rockefeller’s office which helped
in obtaining a search for the missing vessel.
theforty -seven foot Kamokila. It was part
ly through his efforts that the appropriate
agencies performed lengthy searches, which,
although unsuccessful, were the most we
could hope for here in Albany
J respectfully thank him for his prompt
and most valued action in this matter
David Hemenway
Benevet was in-
The Devil
Made Me Do It
To the Editor:
4s there a devil in your lile? Most would
But if taken into consideration
the problems confre
begin to wonder ifn
thinks heis. In attempting to provea deviant
believe not
ting us toady y
1s as perleet ay he
power reigns on earth, man must be viewed
imternally to find what motivates his selt
destruction,
From looking at man at a Sociolog
View, we see him asa product of society. Ml
the traits characterising the individual ay he
responds to his environment, make up his
personality, Man uses others te ebicunt iy
sell conception ne acquires an sage ot
himself by contact with others Ina word
society ultimately telly us what we
In psychology, Jean Piaget
developinental psychologist on intelligenice)
states, “From it’s beginnings. due to heredity
adaptations of the organisms, antellizence
finds itself entangled ma network ol
relutions between the organism and the en
Mironment, Intelligence docs not theretare
appear ast power of reflectionmndependent ot
rticular position which the organist
occupies in the universe buts linked trom
the very outset by biological apriorities. Wis
not at all an independant absolute, but a
relationship among others, between the
organism and things.” (Piaget, 1982)
Panorama of Psychology.p. 0.
From this itis safely stated that man isnot
aan individual but ultimatley a product ot
society and culture. The nly factor
separating men
different drives associated with separate
ichgrounds
from one another are
cultural
Why all the problems in our society then
Because man believes his personality 1s
supremely unapproached in comparison
with his fellow man. This “uadividuality
has caused the disruption harm
among our social system. Individuals not
wishing toe
unter cultures acting aya
the main culture. Such examples of conllie
ling cultures ate: Homwsextulity, Womens
Lib, Black Panthers, and mn a sense. Attic
{These conflicting cultures result in causing
mo with sueiety. setup
the values ot
culturat deviancy (any behavior in violation
of a social norm). This offsets the “Ideal
Norm vs. the Cultural Norm” controversy,
where some tolerence of deviancy from the
ideal norm is allowed,
From this, we derive a simple syllogism
that proves deviancy is violation of law. If
you use: ArB and BrC, therefore ATC, the
logical proof is noted. Deviance from law T
disorder. All disorder is illogical, Therefore,
nce is illogical, There it is! Deviance is
because it produces disorder. There
es that define deviance:
1. Sell destruction
2. Anti-Social behavior
Deviance is not a drive because drives. are
unversal. Therefore not all people convert
their drives into deviant behavior. There has
tw be a readiness to deviate,
Some might consider that man’s laws are
imperfect, and it’s questionable as to
whether man’s laws cannot be broken
without disorder, (Laws such as running a
Mop sign or traffic light with no oncoming
traflic). In such cases, this is not deviance but
When deviance is replaced with sin, then sin is
dealt with accordingly by God's Law
The devil is nor some ficticious beast
created by idle imaginations back in the dark
ages. He 1s alive and functioning among
those who lack the knowledge of Christ. He
makes cowards out of those who wish to do
good And his philosophy is ultimately it
logical because it destroys the order that
governs our society asa unit. It all be
with the destruction of the harmony betw
mind and body, Evil rots the soul causing in-
ternal conllict, and depression. Self pride is
corrupting and evil holds no exception for
are two.
‘Our Irgedom as a Nation is destroyed
hecause our unity is destroyed, Once this
happens. our behavior can inevitably be con-
trolled by evil. I weaya society are to fune-
hon ay a unit, individuality must be
destroyed and replaced with the
brotherhood of Christ, For ourselves, we
must make a new freedom without chains of
controversy, A freedom that has just one
meaning among one people, And to break
tram these evil chains iy to see Truth as at is
Only then wil brotherhood ceign supreme in
governing mankind
Paul Macaluso
Where There’s
Smoke...
An open letter
\ month ago 1 would have never guessed
what lay an store for me. L was a recent
Athany State graduate beginning a career
snd as tainly You coukd hardly call me a
radial ay | possessed citer bourgeosie
valuesand hitle bent toward activism, foday
Lan considered a criminal felon and Hive
4 convict aan atmosphere of threats and
valence Why? Possession of manquana,
Hor years Faccepted the rationalizations
that people who smoked occasionally, dis:
cieetly . the privacy of their own homes
nd neset did dealing were never busted. 1
inean really, the courtsare too crowded. the
police tow apathetic or busy and the judges
joo enlightened for such a thing to happen
Aud alter alll isn't the new drug law just
attempt to crack down on smack and make
Kockeleller more popular with conser
Aatives? [hey couldn't possibly be interested
Th: cruel fact, though, 1
yrance and
tepression and none ol you ts safes long as
the present laws stand. Itcan happen to you.
in the hittle guy
that we ave bving wna time of
can see now that I should have become
involved much earlier and wonder how
many of you are going to find this out the
hard way. There are untold numbers of peo-
ple who have been convicted and are now
secing bars or on probation. And how many
others have accepted the police offers to
“play ball” to preserve their freedom at the
cost of someone else's? Isn't it time that ig- §
norance, hypocrisy, and police blackmail
were replaced with reason?
‘The point is that it will take a lot of in-
volvement to do this. Talk to your families
and their friends, your congressmen and
other officials about this. T
proach to dispell the 1930°s FBI fear mentali-
ty still surrounding the subject. Many people
still equate heads with junkies, social losses,
violent criminals, Next time you're feelin,
like copping a nickel or dime bug send the
money to NORML. or Amorphia or th
ACLU instead (or besides), Read Mr,
Natural goes to Washington in the January
Ard Rolling Stone and similar articles to find
tout What tacties have worked in other states
Thear that a statewide student organization
has been formed to combat the present laws;
join it, support it — row can make it work, §
Don't speak dreamily of “when le
comes” as il this coukl be a self-generating
phenomenon do something about it. You,
the present and future educators, doctors, 3
lawyers, engineers musicians, 3
writers, librarians, civic leaders,
mministrators, computer programmers, social &
workers, pharmacists and so on would do #
well to let people know what might happen if
the likes of vou decide that the grass is
artists,
SATO
Sco
greener and saterelewhere! All this goes for
sympathizers ay well ay for smokers,
When | get out hope to meet a lot of you
Fy of the law, notin here
ay victims of tL
Steve Ashland
The Invisible Man
8
fo the Editor
Frecently read your front-patestory about
the member of the Council on Promotions
and Continuing Appomiments who released
confidental information to your newspaper
The wetion of thiy member willaccomplish
ery little ma constructive way. Ut should be
serumusly questions Whether or not his
revelations” will advange the cause of the
ese in question, In addinon, this viekition
of ethiey could hinder frank and open dis.
cussionin future Couned: meetings, whieh
would not he beneheu! Kwhether tudents or
faculty
Thope that the cause of student participation
making process will not be
irrepatably harmed by the action of this in
dividual, The single act of this individual ean
considerably hinder those al us who for
several yeary have indicated the noteworthy
contribution made by student on theC yunett
Continuing Ap-
Third, and perhaps most important
in the deerst
on Promotions and
pomntments
U the member of the Council who released
this information felt so strongly about it, 1
sum surprised th:
used m your story
as “disgusted” 1s no evid
the part of the mdividual or the newspaper
itsell, especially on a point apparently both
parties consider to be vital
the person's naine was not
Lo deseribe the member
ice ol courage on
Most of all, asa former member and eb
man of the Couneil in question, I regret the
lack of mmtegtity evwenced by this member
and by the student newspaper in publishing
such a story,
Harold L. Cannon
Assoc. Professor of Accounting
# lor weeks
Almost Like You
Never Left
by Mitchel Zoler
Contrary to what might appeared to have
taken place, last semester did not end, It
simply dehydrated under the intense freeze-
drying vacuum of a three week winter vaca-
tion in order to survive the hybernating spell.
All one had to do in early January was addift
snow and before your very eyes a semester!
‘was reconstituted, seemingly circa late Oc~
tober of, perhaps. carly November,
As opposed to the fifteen weeks of
summer, which tend to wash some of
SUNYA out of you, this vacation is never
given that chance, The typical September
sensition, when the second week of classes
ins like the second day, becomes
reversed so that by the second day of
January classes, it (eels like you've been back fi
tig: Th tata ening Wa ta
Saturday's fiasco of Spring Activities Day. f
The environment of the rapidly aging con-
expt of Wild Wild Weekend (disguised as
Winter Weekend) way no help, but it was
decidedly Activitiey Day that was the
albatross around the neck, not the other way
around, Cramming the normally weekend- f
morning Campus Center were the represen- |}
tatives virtually all S.A. funded groups. who t
then hud the pustime of staring pleasantly at
ach other to doncume the remainder of the
day. The number of students wandering
about who weren't forced to be there (S.A.
froze the budgets of groups not present) way
miniscule, and for those that did come, it was
merely to exercise the ritual of picking up the
est movie schedule, The omnipresent in-
terest sheely remained pristine and blank
strides this year to de
xovernment away trom the oligarchy of the
Lampert regime and to encourage increased §
participation in S.A. funded activities. But
there ty a point reached where one is merely
stulling the activities down the students’
throats, and no net gains in involvement are
achieved, Although I grant S.A, the chance
to make a mistake (this way the first year a
Spring Activities Day was attempted), 1
hope they will consider the possible redun:
daney involved, which only wastes money
nd mathenat lot of people get up unnecessatr
Jy carly ona Saturday morning
South of the Border
Hu the Fditor
Please tell all my tends and aequaine
tances Mat Lam dive and: well in South
Amerieit
Tne F Shapiro
ex-student
PS WS 4S" here
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE ELEVEN
by Professor Edward Cowley
hard to say whether it was the wind or
maybe the same time of the year. I woke up
thinking of Aschaffenburg and: wondering,
why?
It was back in 1945, I was on the way home
and on my way out of the infantry. I had 66
points,point for each month in service, two
points for each month overseas, five points.
for each battle star and decoration, and they
all came to 66. Like hundreds of others with
about the same number of points, we had|
just arrived at’ this staging area, and we wer
collegium
standing in wavy lines in front of a captain
‘who was talking about the routine we were to
follow each day. We were at the Aschaffen-
burg military airfield and it had been heavily)
bombed. It was cold and desolate and windy, |
and inside the nearby tents it was just as cold]
he Way We Were...
and only slightly less windy.
I wasn't really listening to the Captain, but
ttien suddenly his face was in front of mine
Times have changed so much, it probably has
no relevance at all to what we do today
He seemed very intense in the early dawn,
land he said, "Where is your hat soldier?" At
first 1 thought he was concerned about the
cold, and | reached to my head to see if my}
woolen hat was there; then he shouted,
“Don't_move!” However, 1 had already)
touched my hat, and so I knew it was there
He repeated, “Where is your hat soldier?"
and in a {airly courteous military manner L
replied, "My hat ison my head, Sir.” [had no!
idea why we were doing this, the war wa
over, and we had won,aand really wanted to)
zo back to Buffalo to see my friends. But
then alter a pause and a pattern of frown, he}
sereamed, “That is not a hat!" Now, we had
never met belore, and | thought it waya rude
way of talking about someone's hat. and |
didn't know what he wanted or why. Le was
my turn to speak, so Istid ina less courteous
way, “My hat isa hat, Sir,” Then he shouted,
Like hundreds of others with
about the same number of points,
lwe had just arrived at this staging area
But it iy not a helmet!” and ol course he was
right, it wasn'ta helmet, As the war way end-
ed, and the field hadn't been bombed in eight
monthy, it seemed safe not to wear a helmet,
but he made me promise never to show up at
4 formation without my proper helmet, and
agreed he was right, and with one final tert.
ble glance he moved on down the line to see!
what else he could do ay Captain
We returned to the cold damp tents, and
sat_on a cot and said, “Jesus Christ, where
did they find that son of a bitch?” We had
been assigned at random to tents, so those 1
came with from the 94th Division were!
scattered all over, and we wereall now a part
of the 40th Division, There were guys in ny
tent from Georgia and Alabama, and we
talked about the Okelenokee swamps and a
delightiul ethic that this one tellow kept
repeating. “It doesn't count if you're drunk!"
We drank some schnapps or something that
was warm, and then the whistle blew, and we]
went out to another formation and another
session with our leader
This time he had a plan, and 1, of course
had my helmet, He was going to keep us|
busy, and we were not to go into town and}
were ordered (o stay on the bombed-out air-
field. 1 was on the squad chosen tyo improve
the sump holes. We got shovels, and after
breakfast headed to a far end of the airstrip}
where garbage was dumped. Actually, we
had more holes for dumping than you ever
saw. There were $00-pound holes and 100-
pound holes and assorted holes of many
other bomb sizes. However, a bomb makesia
round hole, and the army says that sump
holey should be square. It way our job to
make the round holes square, and this we did
day after day. It took a long time because
there were only twoworked. It was difficult
to amass 66 points and not be a Sergeant, 0
almost everyone way at Sergeant except
another fellow and me. Sergeants did not
work on menial tasks, so the two ol us Wark
ed and the rest watched and smoked and now
and then talked about the Captain
It doesn't embarrass me to not haye been a
military leader. There are many com:
plications, but 1 the simplest terms, L was just
the ght age to be in many of the wrong
places, and a way bad in those places tor
hoth the leaders and the led. Actually, this is
part of what at times has been a bigger
problem, | have discovered that | am even
less of a follower thana leader. ‘This has been
personal dilemma with which Ihave had to
contend
Back at Aschaffenburg, time passed and |
somehow it got to be pay day. We were all in
a single line leading to the Captain's table,
and when it came our turn, each of us would
shout his name, and a couple other people
would write down some things, and then we |
Be a
would leave. The Captain said, “Name
soldier said quietly but firmly, “Cowley
he said, “Full name": 1 said “hd wad
Cowley". he stood up and glared and sie, “I
your full name.” Here we were again, the
ian wath the hat trick was at it onee more. t
added my middle name and even threw in a
contirmation name of my Unele Ralph wh.
had been a math teach and who had died at
32. He finally said, “What ts your rank,
soldier?” [told him PVT or PECar whatever
added that at he
wanted twknow the rank, whieh he already
Anew, why didn’t he say so. Phearmy had
expression called red lined, and that's what
he did tw me. It didn’t really make much
from the tents. The Captain then announced
that from that time on there would be a
twenty-four -hour guard on the latrine.
Another thing about Sergeants is that they
did not do guard duty, so the responsibility
for protecting the toilet tissue fell on the few
of us who werestill quaslified for that kind of
work. That evening a Sergeant came into our
tent and told me that I was latrine guard
from 2a,m, to 4a.m. Later that night, it was
probably 2a.m.,an armed soldier shook my
sleeping bag and said it was time. Now, | was
warm and sound asleep and dreaming about
art or girls or other good things. The
Aschaffenburg latrine was not on my mind
at all, The soldier had a Mashlight and the
beam jumped all over the dark green
pyramiid walls.He flashed it in my ¢
“You awake?" I assured him I was and told
him not worry, | would watch the tissue, He
left and | pulled up the zipper and went back
to Buffalo or wherever | had been.
The next morning the Captain was frantic,
aand at the first formation he raged up and
down saying over and over again, “The
ward was broken, the guard was broken
Who did this? Who was responsible? What
kind of soldiers are you?” The thought
quickly occurred to me, and probably to
‘others, that i he kept pressing he might learn
how deadly and elficient we could be, but
ing home was the wnly gos, snd at this po
we could endure almostany thing. He saad
had one hour to think itaver and taeome ap
with the name of the person whe brake the
guard. We returned to our tents, and when
the hour was up, the whistle sounded. and we
lined up once more
He asked questions of everyone invalsed
he Sergeant in charge had lost the list, and
the men who had been
remember who followed them or who
guard couldn't
preceded them or what tent they were in, No
one could recall anything or identify anyone
The Privates and Sergeants who had helped
Win the war realized they had won another
small but important skirmish. The Capt
fuysed and ranted about his toilet tissue. Ae
tually. ay it turned out, the tissue hada't been
stolen that night, but that fact did not ease
tis pain, No one had been there to watel
not be stolen, That was the crime!
Preyer se the Captain again, Later that
day trucks © me and tok uy to crgarette
camps. [can't even remember which ane |
went to, We waited a couple more weekson
the coast of brance and then came home an
liberty or victory ships.
Th was strange to wake up thinking about
Asehationbury. Uhat was 29 years ago, and
things like that are now only at bret moment
ta passing history and as times have ebang
J so much. it probably has no relevance at
lta what we do today
It was our job to make the round holes
square, and this we did day after day.
difference, however, ay there way nothing
one could do with money in the tenty and
ficldy at Aschaltenburg anyhow
Later that day we had another lormation
and ay the holes were getting squared away
we felt t was probably time for the Captain
to start something else. He walked up and
down the ranks and looked very serious and
then gravely announced that the toilet tissue
was missing from the latrine. This seemed in
hocent enough, but he went on to say that he
suspected either the Germans or some
liberated Poles who had been seen in the
vicinity. The latrine, incidentally, w
impressive asyou might think. It was 1
only a slit trench, and it was located
woods the required military distance away
... or Are?
PAGE TWELVE
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
OORT OO TOTES SOOC IIA
sngjor rs & minors
Public Lecture. Dr. Mary R.
Lefkowitz, Professor of Greek and
Latin ot Wellesley College and Presi
dent of the Classical Association of
New England, will gi
ture on Monday, January 28, of
PM in Hu 354. Her topic will be
Classical Mythology and the Rol
of Women in Modern Literature.The
lecture will be sponsored by the
Department of Classics.
Pre-Med, Pre - Dent Information
Clinic offered by the Department of
Biological Sciences once each
semester will be held in 81248 ot 7:20
Tuesday evening, January 29.
Department of Classics presents
Professor Mary R. Lefkowitz
Wellesley College, "“Clossicol
Mythology ond the Role of Women in
Modern literature, Monday, Jonuory
28 4:10 PM HU 354,
Attention Seniors: If you ove in
terested in other longuages, other
cultures, linguistics, and educotion,
‘ond in putting it all together to teach
English os @ second language here or
ebrood or to teach in bilinguol
piogroms, see Ruth Blackburn, ED
112 or Richard Light ED 316 about the
TESL Bilingual Education Masters
program,
clubs ze meetings
3OSODDIDIOOOOOCOO00S000
There will be on important
meeting of SIPH Students for Im:
provement of programs for the
Handicapped Sunday, Jonuory 27
‘01 6:30 in Stote Quod Flagroom
The Protect Your Environment
Club (PYE) meeting. Monday Jan 28
BPM FA 126
Sponish Club will hold its first
meeting of the new semester on Mon
doy, Jon. 28 ot 7:30 PM in Hu 354
Upcoming activitieswill be discussed
Vengan todos!
‘Munchkin Club 1st big meeting of
the yeor. Wednesday night, Jon 30,
7 Pm CC 370. New officers to be
selected. Pleose
You ore all wekome to share with
ws every Monday 6:30 PM CC 370 at
the Christian Science Organization
Meeting
Class of 77 C
vole on amendment regarding ex
penditures Sundoy Jon 27 730. CC
ais
ral meeting Will
interested folk
On Thursday. Jon. 31, 017: 30PMa
seminor_ on medical -
questions will moet. The topic will be
“Death by Chonce, Death by
Choice.” it will be held ot Chapel
Houre, All students ond faculty
members invited
moral
4 part Class - discussion series on
Chinese Revolution starts Mondoy
evening, Jon. 28 ot @ PM, ot 727
Madison Avenue. Sponsored by US
China Peoples Friendship Assoc. For
‘more into call Tom at 457-5064
Peace Project is onything you wont
it to be. H you ore interested in get-
ting any sort of program going, come
to Room 375 SS 3 PM Monday.
Cancelled The play
Blood Wedding pertormed by the
Spanish Repetory Company to be
seen today a! the Moin Theoterof the
PAC has been concelled.
Attention: Students interested in
Nanyang Program 1974 - 75,
deodiine for application is February
1
Tickets for Stote University
Theotre’s production of Antigone,
February 6 - 10, are now on sale at
the PAC Box Office (457-8606)
Tickets for Shakespeare's Comedy of
Errors, March 13 17, goon sale to SA
members only on Monday, February
4. Public sole begins on Monday
February 11, Funded through
Theatre Council by Student Associa
Telethon 74 auditions
opplications with dates ond times ore
evailable of the CC information desk
Attention! People needed to work
the night of Telethon 74 Meoting
soon Watch for details
There will be 0 Women’s
Triangulor Gymnastics Meet with
the University of Vermont ond Ithaca
College in the Main Gym on Sotura
day, Feb. 2:11 a.m. Come and bring
© twend. There is no odmission
LaSalle School, 0 residentiol
treatment center foradolescent boys,
located across the street from St
Rose, still needs mole college
volunteers who will act os Big
Brothers to some of the boys ot
LoSolle. Volunteers are osked 10 give
one afternoon @ week trom 230
5.00 PM Interested please call Betyy
Osborn ot 489-4731
Your Ambulance Service provides
free, 24 hour service to all. Con-
tribute to Five Quod volunteer am-
bulance service's annual fund Drive
todoy.
Attention Class of 74. Meeting to
discuss selection of commencement
speaker, other details of commence:
ment (date, format, etc.), and senior
week. Tuesday nite, January 29 ot
8:30 PM, CC 37:
SUNYA based New York En-
vironmental News needs workers.
‘Academic credit under Env. 250 B
ovoilable, See Rosemary Nichols, BA,
348 oF inquire SS 382. Just bring in-
forest, we'll train!
Need 0 friend? A friendly ear? A
ploce to rop? Call the 5300 Middle
Earth Switchboard with ony
problem, If we can'thelp, we'llrefer
fo someone who con. Give o call
anytime
Volunteers to assist han-
dicopped students on regulor and
os needed basis. Readers for visvally
impoired, ossistonts for wheelchair
students: typists; et ol. It you are in-
terested, call | Lorry Railey, Office of
Student tile, CC 137, at 457-1296.
Ray Brodbury will be the subject
of the first meeting of the Seience
Fiction Radio Workshop which meets
Tuesday evenings at 7 PM in HUB-39.
Adaptations of “There will Come Soft
Rains” ond “And the Moon be Stillas
Bright” will be featured. The
workshop condicted by Lester
Heverling and is open to the public
without chorge
Attention all JSC Holiday Sing
members and all other interested
parties. Sunday evening, February 3
01 6 PM in the Fireside Lounge, there
will be © meeting in reference to 0
future pertormance in the communi
ty, 8 well os © surprise for alll old
members. For information call Lynn
Rove 457-4087, or Andi Noah 457
7897 W you like surprises ond or
aeli singing ond doncing, con
Phoenix needs you! All con
tibutions and new staff members are
welcome. Meetings are every Mon
day, 8 PM the CC cateteria,
Attention Students
Save $$ Save GAS!
SEND
DO-IT-YOURSELF
FOR TUNE-UP MANUAI.
# Increase mi
ge by 40%
*Save BIG MONEY on repair bills
# Increase Performance!!!
© Laster starting, Faster pickup
¢ Satisfaction of Do-It-Yourself
#k-Z steps
Illustrations
Rep. $3.00
Speen! Student Price
ONLY $2
The Spring 74 Phoenix will
oppecr in April. The Fall73 Phoenix
is now being distributed in the CC
main lobby. Get your copy now.
Jewish Student's Coalition
welcomes you fo attend our Friday
evening services this and every Fri-
doy night at 7:30 PM in chapet house,
behind the gym. Take a good helathy
walk and worship with us. Sat. mor-
ning services begin at 9:30 and lunch
follows. Help make the chopel house
«a better place to be.
official notice
The Office of Financial Aids is
‘accepting additional applications for
‘ossistonts for the 1974 spring term
Since additional funds are avoilable
jn loon, gront, ond employment
programs. Applications will continue
to be accepted os long as funds per
mit. Persons wishing to apply should
come to the office, BA 110.03 soon as
possible
Elections for the NYPIRG tocol
Board of Directors will be held on
Thursday, Jonvory 31 in Assembly
Holl, Students moy come and vole
enytime between 6:30 ond 10 PM
Candidates will be there to answer
questions. Absentee ballots will be
‘evailoble in CC lobby on Jon 30 and
31 for students who cannot come. All
SUNYA students are eligable to vote
Students expecting to graduate
in May 1974 must file 0 degree
application by Fridey February |,
1974, Applications ond worksheets
may be obtomed of the Registear’s
Olfice, Degree Clearance, AD B 3
Completed applications should be
returned to that some office
Information Services: Compus
Center Information Desk for general
informotion ond student events 457
6923. Infone: for questions on univer
sity policies ond procedures 457.
4630. SUNYA Line for daily campus
events of genrol interest 457 8692
Got @ Gripe? Bring «to Grievance
Committee Otfice. Hours wm CC 308
‘ore Mon. 1:30-3, Tues.1 2and Fri 10.
12. Come in, or lill tout ond drop inin
the gripe box in’ the ‘lobby of the
Campus Center (across from info
desk). :
what to do.
Chinese New Year Nite
presented by Chinese Club will be
held on Jan 26 Sot. Brubacher Lower
Lounge 5:30 PM. Programs will have
exhibitions, dinner and perfor-
mances, Tickets available $2 with tox,
$2.50 without. At CC info desk ond
with most Chinese Club_ members
The men of Gomma Delta Chi
Fraternity cordially invite all universi-
ty women to come to free beerand
punch partly in the GDX section,
Zenger Hall, Colonial, Tonite at 9.
Sat_Jon 26 All University Party
sponsored by JSC in CC Ballroom 9-1
‘Music by Suntour. For JSC members
50 cents, Non members $1. Beer and
other retveshments
Don forget the Israel Programs
Expo Sunday Jon 27 2. 4 PM CC
Assembly Hall
All Girls
with the girls of Chi Sig at a slumber
porty Monday, Jan, 28 of Ten Eyck
Hall. Hear a soon to be world famous
Come over and relax
bed tune story
International Folk Dancing trom
+ 4.30 PM Thursdays Std floor of the
ym come onylime, @ great study
bivok Beginners welcome
fiw inal to pick the men’s ond
“omens Table Tennis Teams 10
Jupresent SUNYA in the ACU Region I
Small Gomes Tournament will be
wld on Sunday, Jon, 27 of 12.00
the 2d gym All mterested players
should wigan up with Mr, Dennis Elkin
C356 by Wed Jon 23
Student Association Photogroph lor
Yeorbook will be token February 13
w the Arena Theatre. All SA gioup|
“A worthy buy
for its benefits”
Keep your car
in LOP SHAPE
Send to
DOH YOURSELE MANUALS:
Boy #992 1G
SUNY at Albany, Albany, N.Y. 12222
Enclosed $ «Please send me
of the DOLL YOURSELE
1UND-UP MANUAL
2 ——
Make Checks ot
Money Orders
payable to Cash
Name___$________
Address
——
'
You'll love Harvey Wallbanger!
Would you like to have
a Harvey Wallbanger party?
Where and When?
Write: P.O. Box 387
Hamburg, N.Y. 14075
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE THIRTEEN
FOR SALE
ANTIQUE GUN AUCTION: Sat. Jan. 26,7
PM at Hyatt House Matel, Albany, NY Exit
24 NY Thruway. Esto!e Collection of
Collectors Rifles, Muskets, Swords and Ac-
cutrements,
with cable binding. Good for
8, 87. Glorio 7-5284,
‘and H, Snow tres, good running
conditin, $150. Call Mare after 7 PM at
371.9642,
Steree Components: Panasonic. AM.FM.
Stereo receiver, turntable, speakers. Ex
cellent condition. Brand new, Sacrifice
Was $500, now $250. 489.6661 anytime,
Stereo, Realistic Koss Garrard. with 80
LP's, $295, 465-4696 after 6:00,
HELP WANTED
Couples needed for babysitting. It's not
‘os hot as you think. Will work around your
schedule. (deal for the married couple-cor
needed. University Family Services. 456
0998,
Musicians Needed-commercial rock, local
gigs: lead guitar, keyboard (both must
sing and have equipment). Call 439-5233,
cofter 8 PM,
Delivering newspapers. Between $5 and
515 overage. Sundays. Call 482-3409
‘and atk for John
SERVICES
Folk ond Bluegrass guitar lessons, Coll
nzy 465-8610,
Typing Service-Exporienced, 50 cents
page. 439-5765
Stereo for Sale. Panasonic, AM FM\Phono,
call 482-1470 after 4,
‘Aria Classical Guitar with case. Excellent
condition, Poul 438-7521
the squeeze on your
tps in mint condition
{66 percent on retoil prices,
ood selection to choose from. 438-3048,
WANTED
WANTED: Samurai swords, War
souvenirs, Ovoling Prosentation
Telephone: Shelley Braverman (518-73)
8800,
FRESH TO YOUR ROOM
NYC BAGELS
VERY SUNDAY MORNIN
Available in 7 delicious
varieties
Also: Lox, cream cheese,
donuts and bialys
TO ORDER CALL
457-4683, SAT 3-5
For free Sunday delivery
= ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee
I There will be a special interest
meeting of the
UNIVERSITY CONCERT
|
| at its regular Tuesday night
| meeting- January 29 at 8 pm in the
Patroon Lounge
funded by}
Typing done in my home 999.2474,
Typing servico-my home, 271-7726,
Typing done in my home 482-8432,
RIDE/RIDERS
Ride needed: Long island to SUNYA Sun:
doy Jan 27. Call Helene 7-4980.
Schenectady Ride Neaded, MW to SUNYA
ro 1:00 dais, T TH to Schenectady alter
11:00, Denna 393-1865,
Ride needed » SUNY 10 Lotham every
Wod. 6 p.m, (Lost bus leaves ot 5) HELP!
B,J, 783:1017 oF 7:2190.
Apartmentmate needed 547 Hamilton
‘Stop by anytime,
Female Roommate Wanted. 482-0895.
Roommate needed to com
townhouse api, in lothom. Near
Nowthway. $65 mo. ond utiliies. For
details.call Gary 783-1003,
Female roommate
Albany. Own mm.
Call Molly 434-2522 or 438-3368.
Two female roommates for beoutiful
partment on busline . Own room.
Reosonable. Coll Joanne 457-7891
PERSONALS
Dear Ellen,
Hope you get better soon
From the women in your lounge
Deor Doug,
Bost wishes fo my favorite Chink on | +
birthday. Also, Hoppy New Yeor.
The Chimp
The “Flushing Connection” is coming,
Esto Schusta is heret
Gromps,
Hoppy Birthday Poochie
nother greot year together
Here's 10
Door Steven,
How does it feel fe be an accountantin
the big world and sill eoding this gor:
bage?
Love,
21 Kent
Admiral
You're Code B11 UTS.
tke you've gets thumbe,
well giveyou a eee”
aa
double width paper.
BOARD
ee A A es Se ee mee es mel
student association
1/25/55- A momentous day in
American history, Population of
Niskayuna increases by one. Con-
gratulations to B.D. from PJP DAD and
KRL.
Ken and Marsho,
= Congratulations on your engagement.
Love and happiness always
love,
Suson
My Friends:
You ore the reason my 21st birthday
‘wos s0 special. Thanks
With love
Aileen
When you clog the toilet next, coll Roto
Rooter.
The Suite
Bob,
Hoppy Birthday My Love!
Decor Jey
We miss you here, Get well soon
Love and Kisses
The Staph
Dear Mudge,
Happy 19th Birthday to ze boby. love
your insane suities, Boopsie, Binyo, the
Wethead, and Borty Morton.
Opportunity
Albany location. Ideal
a college bar. Ask-
ing $5,000, 732-2361
My Beoutitul Gilly Rogamuffin-
You're the best
All University Wom
with the Johnion Holl INDEPENDENTS this
Friday ot 9:00, Beer, Bosh and Food!
‘Get Your Two Cents int
Two Cents!”
SEIDENBERG
JEWELRY
HOME OF THOUSANDS &
THOUSANDS OF EARRINGS
Come down ond see the
LARGEST selection of earnings
you'll EVER see!
ALSO
A carton of CIGARETTES tor
ONLY $3.99, tax included.
264 Cental Ave
(21, No. Loke Ave
Albany
GRAD STUDENTS AND PROFESSORS (All FIELDS!
torn professional fee
tro money ox o consultont
1 port-lime work, using your specialied knowledge 10
‘Annow contultont exchange program, designed lo match pomntialclien's with poten:
iol consultants, will process your application tree of charge.
3. A description of the kind of consultant work you'd be most interested in doing,
TO. PO Box 299
Dobbs Ferry
oller of free application processing
922
being made lor a limited time only
—
Levis
7785 Sunset Bivd.
Get your Volkswagen
painted FREE!
LN —~
money. every month during schoo!
ly nothing. Beetleboards of Amorica will
paint your car FREE, in incredible fashvon, a
for driving it around as usual, That’s practically all there
Iso it, For the tull story, wnte immediately fo
Beetleboards of America, Inc
Los Angeles, California 90046
—},
= Or call (213) 76-7517 Collect
aes
Ontario St.
Thurs., Fri., Sat.
ZAP
Happy Hours: 7:30 - 9:00
PAGE FOURTEEN
ALBANY SI!'UDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
by Eddy Trink
Despite a lack of any advance
publicity whatsoever, the Albany
State Tigers, our women's basket-
ball team, opened their 1974 season
to an enthusiastic crowd of about
200 in University Gym on Wednes-
day night. Playing against a tough
Hartwick team, Albany bowed 43-
¥6.
According to Coach B.J. Palm,
this year’s edition of the Tigers, ts
loaded with individual talent as the
team points itself towant the end of
season tournament sponsored by
the New York State Assacution af
Intercollegiate Athletics lor
Women. Similar to the NCAA
tourney that UCLA wins every
year, Albany hay nside this tourna
ment twice in the past Ive ye
Coach Palm teely she hay put
together one of her strongestieamy
and believes that we re ane of the
The squad sell hay npr
jwite a bit over bast year lth
Gon to funn Captain Ollie Santen
and Senior Maureen Mathews who
provide the experience. the stuirting
' eludes thie Hestmen
Veromies Stvetls, Vicki Gu he. and
Hizabeth Gillham: Many of Coach
Womens
Basketball
Schedule
Taauat
YN Atannwnt
St bart
Ponts
S Paatls
Palm's hopes lie in the expected
play of Gilliam for she is the sister
of the highly touted Gilliam
brothers of Brockport State who
impressed Albany fans last year
Danes beat them in
4 big conference game. Watching
her practice on Tuesday. 1 could
tell she has many of her brothers’
ab
when the Gre
Wich all of dhs individual tatent,
Coach Palm feels that getting her
players to work together as.a team
will be her hardest job, More
height on this year’s team has got to
help im the rebounding depart
ment, but the seusens hrst tour
games. sll against some tough op
Ponenty, wall tell the Fygers can
play ap te ther potential
The game aginst Martivick
Poanted aut many ab the Lager’s
weahuesyes Mbany jumped stl ter
IN
yiutrter betel ont the
r su as she pumped
1-10 pennty an this quarter alone
Galan completely dominated
plas at hott endsal the courtats she
hot. tebuunided, and duibbled as
Well as mui at her male counter
parts Hartwick eame hak to te
game hate im the first hal
Jind the play ot Kney and
eSeur ay) Mbany committed
humerous tinavers, But Gallia
Put se He quick huckets to put
i 2 aC a 2 a 2c I 2k 2 2 2 2 a KE
¥ Chay | A Mug is at the corner ot
¥ Viy Ka. and Watervliet Shaker
F id. (Rt, 115) in Colonie
SRA A AE A A I A ACR AC OR CO a 2 I A
Music Every
Albany on top by three at the half.
The Tigers ran into problems
early in the third quarter as both
Gillam and Simon got into foul
trouble, Wendy Gath put in some
clutch points and Vicki Girko
pulled down some important
rebounds at this point but
wick forged ahead 34-31 at the
five point Hartwick lead, However
4 great number al Albany ture
hovers thwarted any attempt they
made to get hack inte the game
The winners were bed by Kney's 13
pounts white Gallium hdl 18 (14 an
the fst hall), Gath 2, and Girked
Personally. Cenjayed the game
sy mivch ay Lemay watching the
Great Danes he game way es
cating, hand bought. and well
played These girls deserve the sup
portal the student body aymueh ay
any other team an campus male ot
female, Why aot come snd see tor
Yoursell Hhen next game ty thy
attenmoan at four o'clock an the
Gyan MIL whe attend are im for an
ce sertine alterna at basketball ay
the Hipers try te hreath ater the wan
BEEBE ECARD IORI AAC I
CHUG-A-MUG
Good Food
Good Fun
Live Folk
a 2c a 2 2 2 2K 2k a 2 IK 2 a 2c 2k ake a.
Weekend
Bax
Prrrrrrrrrrririe ry
SUNYA Women’s
Liberation Group
Important Organizational Meeting for
Pecccccccccccccccscces
he SUNYA Women’s Liberation Group:
Monday, Jan. 28
7:30 PM CC 315
New Chairwomen Will Be Elected
Student asso
eorrrry
funded hy
A New Dimension in Cinema Luxury
FOUR EXCITING THEATRES UNDER ONE ROOF!
EVER FILMED!”
~-Paul D, Zimmerman, Newsweek
qULIE GONALO Rey;
CHRISTIE SUTHERLAND
“DONT LOOK ow
“THE THRILLER OF
THE YEAR”
Wilder than anything
7:30,9:15 on wheels!
[GG] Ontrack sand or snow ity stl
HELD OVER!
7:10, 9:30
FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1974
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE FIFTEEN
SHEGENT ‘State University of New York at Albany,
a sports
Wot LX No. tt
FRIDAY, IANUARY 25, 1974
Defense Leads Danes to Victory Over Marist
by Harvey Kojan
Displaying what one
observer coined a. “Jeckyll-
Hyde” pattern of basketball,
the Albany Great Danes sur-
pressed the latter style suf-
ficiently to defeat visiting
Marist College, 70-52, Tuesday
evening at: University Gym.
However, the final margin of
eighteen points should not
obscure the fact that for a
significant five minute period in
the first half, the Danes looked
sluggish and unorganized, and
actually were tied with Marist
when the first twenty minute
had elapsed
Couch Doc Sauers was
generally pleased with the
team's performance, stating
that it was especially satisfying
that the offense worked well
“even though the shots weren't
going in.” However, he could
come up with no expkination
for the quick turn of events
Which enabled Marist to out-
score the Danes (1-2 during
one stretch, a stretch which has
become too familiar ay far as
this year is concerned.
The Danes began slowly,
dropping behind 14-7 before
they finally regrouped behind
some excellent team play, led
by Byron Miller, who topped
all scorers with twenty points
Urged on by the crowd, which
was far less than capacity,
Albany State tightened up on
defense and moved in front, 18-
16, In the next five minutes the
Danes extended their lead to
nine points at 29-20 and gave
indications of a possible rout
However, “Mr, Hyde" took
over at this stage and sudden ly
it was tied at 31, the Danes in-
explicably unable to move the
ball and slackening a bit on
defense. Ron Glackin of Marist
scored all six of his points in
this period, coming off the
bench to spark the team. Fora
period of approximately three
minutes the Albany State
players seemed completely
mesmerized, particularly Ed
Johnson, who scored just six
points in the game and “forced
the play” according to Sauers.
Whatever Doc Sauers ex-
pounded to his players during
halftime obviously brought
them out of their hypnosis, as
they quickly jumped out to a
six-point lead and were never
headed. Significantly, Ed John-
son did not start the second
half, as Gary Trevett and Mike
Suprunowiez worked the
backcourt,
Marist began forcing shots as
the Dane defense continually
pressured the visiters into mis-
takes, Albany's jumping ability
also. reappeared, as they out
rebounded their opponents 29-
20 in the sevond hall, for a 52-
49 edge overall, Harry John-
son, although off from the field,
grabbed off twelve rebounds,
high for the Danes, Forward
Joe Cirasella of Marist took
game rebound honors with
seventeen,
As the second hal progres
ed the Danes slowly built up
their Jead, not on superior
oftensive prowess (the shooting
being poor), but by virtue of the
delense, which limited the
equally poor-shooting Marist
team to just 21 points in the
final 20 minutes. With just over
five minutes to go, what is
generally known as “garbage
time” became a reality, where
everyone ts given a chance to
play and things usually get pret=
ty sloppy. Even freshman Mel
Brown got into the act, and
although he failed to seore, the
crowd went wild as a driving
shot by Brown rolled around
the rim dramatically before un-
fortunately spinning out
Pete Koola saw limited ae-
tion once again and was
basically ineffective, hitting tor
one field goal and snaring four
rebounds, Mast feel that tt ts
simply a matter of fitting in
with the team, which will re
quire more time, Meanwhile
Reggie Smith scored just 10
points, but was praised in his
selection of shots by Saucers.
who said that “Reggie played
his best all-around game in a
while,
Much of the crowd was
baffled when a familiar figure
entered the contest lite in the
second hall: Kelton Hyche, The
senior guard, who wasinvolved
in the controversy in which he
and three other tormer
ballplayers decided to end their
assocnition with the team
belore the season began list
Lull, iy needed heeause Ronnie
Edmonds ts no longer with the
team. Hyche met with Sauers
lier in the week, and ‘in
about 10 minutes.” as Doe put
it, “everything was taken care
ol
fhe Great Danes, now with a
record of 7-4,
play Geneseo and SUNY Bul-
falo on consecutive nights. I
travel west to
You can’t get to the games, they
Will be carried live on WSUA
(640 A.M.) both nights,
Geneseo on Friday at 8:10 and
Buttle on Saturday at 6:55
J.V. Impressive Victors
by Harvey Kojan
id season high
AN pomty by Led bets. the Atbany
Pups whipped an abyiwusly
Led by a guine 4
Ie
Ferior Marist squad Tuesday eve
ing by the seore ol 92 to M4 Coach
Bab | ewis' team was never headed,
at worst leading by hive, stn at best
by twentyslive
The most intryuing event of the
contest, which was mutsred by an
overabundance of touly (bath
my over the hii early an each
hall) and overall sloppy play (32
Marist tur
appearance at Jose
vvets), way the
Alicea, it
former Pup last season who
graduated to the varsity but receiv
ed no playing time. So it came aya
bit of surprise to the sparse crowd
who attended the game to see
Jose, who was something ata
favorite the previous year caning,
uit on the court mitidwwaty an the first
hall. Ile seored points and
looked a bit unsure af humsell an
seeing his first action wath the JV
Other than that, the
bayieally dull, wath Alba
panning the carly advantage a
Fea ving httle question as to the out
come. The foul situation was the
a spec:
ered
mayor detriment as far a
fator standpoint ts. 60
innumerable one-and-ones
brought the game te a virtu
standstill
Hob Audi, who connected on his
tust thige attempts and finished
with 24 paints, led the reboundery
wih 12m another solid elfort
Warten Miller used his @
ter sink sh around junipers,
netting the Hist seven paunty af the
game and closing with 17 ay welliay
6 tehounds. Mast observers felt
that the only quality Maller may be
lacking ts stamina, winch he should
develop ay the season pray
The real stat however was bert,
Whe now has put together lwo
superlative ballgames na taw an
leading the Danes to a record to 7
A rather undiseyplined
er at the begmning at the
season, bertis hay obviously
benetated tron
with Coach Lewis. He now ntrely
forees a shot as he wats given ace:
won te de earlier and in becoming
team playet bay actually greatly
improved fis individual statistics
is. association
The next JV. game will be brn
day at Union
TUESDAY
t Al LY
ay
State University of New York at Albany
Vol. LX! No, 4 'January 29, 1974
NYPIRG Compiles Albany-Wide Gas Prices
by Dan Gaines
‘A group of SUNYA NYPIRG
students went to more than two-
thirds of Albany's gas stations this
past weekend checking prices and
conformity to the Cost of Living
Council's Phase IV posting re-
quirements. They found
differences of ax much as 13 ¢ per
gallon between gs stations selling
the same grades of gasoline.
The purpose of this NYPIRG
project was to make sure that con-
sumers weren't being overcharged,
to make sure gas stations had their
stickers out, and to make it possi-
ble for consumers to know where
they can get the best gas at the best
pete NYPIRG people went to 65
stations altogether. virtually all of
them within Albany's city limits
29 stations were oul of gas or clos-
Station und Address
Fine's Exxon 45290
107 Lark
Brown Sve Sta 459 90
740 Central
Delaware Exxon aa
472 Delaware
Use 409 90
Fscrett & Central
Rosanno’s Lexa Manes
Athwn & Delaware
Mohil
M7 New Scotland
Matanity Gas
Broadway & Columns
German Gull
2S Western
Chalmer's Gull
$81 Centiat
Delaware Garage
Vrotaware & 1m
Guanetta’s Mobil
Washington & Cols
Corty’s Matil
HINT Western
Vehanac Exxon
1170 Western
Nela’s fexaen
N75 New Seutland
OManton’s Mobil
1284 Western
Joh’ Shel
HSE Central
Madison Mobil
Madison & W Lawrence
Hevace
Onuavi & Central
Mask: Man Mobil
Delaware
Med naney Ont
Lanis’s Mol
Det Cat Watt
Dretawate & Carroll
Chaponan’s Nut
Jasons & Lath
Watershet & Contd
Roth's Caine
Noveticsis & Lasanpston
Makes Mott
Jomtarns & ¢
Woahine
SP Fuller Kewl
Cate he
Wy Mesa
Westen ban
SENOCO
Wally, Cental
sth Cental
George & 1
REGULAR
Price Octane
OTHER |
Price Octane
PREMIUM
Price Octane
su2 985
499 985
302 955
sus 9S
499%
ao
|
Giade Grade 4 Grade §
nT
Nene The
means the statin does not sell thar grade
SUNOCO stations are hsted separately since
Neste alse that the octane levels of regular and
pice per gallon of regular
ther have five grades of yas
umn labeted “other” refers tw leaded or special fucls. An“
Stations are in order of their
premuan at hoopsie’s and Chalmers are hugh.
ed; the ones that were only tem-
porarily so were included in the
final results. 5 stations did not have
the Economic Stabilization
Program stickers at all; 2 had the
sticker up but not filled in. No one
was charging more than the sticker
permitted
the NYPIRG group was not
checking more than the for the ac-
curacy of the stickers; that isa com-
plicated procedure that the Inter-
nal Revenue service must do.
The group was led by Arthur
Malkin and included Jeff Weber,
Rich Haas and Paula Warmbrand.
They spent more than six hours
Suturday to
sation, Io
cling [rom station to
‘ir surprise, station
urs were very coperative:
By law all gas stations had to
have a sticker on cach pump on
November 21st, The sticker is
by Patti Maslinoff and David
Harrienger
Accusations and charges flew as
# conilict erupted yesterday mot-
ng. in the Campus Center lobby
among students waiting to buy
Lickets for the Miami bus trip. A
large group of students, some of
whom had waited since 1:00 a.m.
outside the Campus Center, found
on entering the C,C.that about 10
students were already inside, even
though those outside had been
ejeeted earlier trom the building by
security personnel
\ heated debate ensued ay the
wo groups argued over which hited
the rypht tw be first on ine bor the
chets. Ht was then found that Mol
the 9S us seats then variable had
eon reserved hy the officers of the
clases al 7 and "75 who.
organized the (up. lor themselves
sid thet Hens. This fact added
to the anger of the group and diy
cussion continued until about
oan, while a score of students
continued to want ait bite
The problem was nat fully
fesulvedd until atter meeting oF all
Concerned was held an the Student
Ags nation ultice yesterday atttet
Among those who wuted out
ile the Campus Center was Steve
Meyer He expressed the sen
Lumenty of many of the group whet
he said) he Seay outtaged that 41
tickets had previously been reser
ed fy the afters at the chissey
although supposedly the tickets
were to be sold on at finstecome
hustscrve busty to those in tine
Another of the group, Wayne
Halper, was especially concerned
that those who wanted inside the
Center had unfanly gotten on ine
shead of the test
He also said those who waited
inside had been uncooperative 1
working out an agreement o
actually should be first an tn
An ad (or the tap appearing hast
Priday announced that tickets for
the Miami trip would be sold on a
lirst-come, Lnst-served basis,
fumited to three tickets per person
labeled “Economic Stabilization
Program” and has four boxes for
amounts are allowed some months. “|
The octane of the gasoline is listed
on the sticker also, When the
NYPIRG group (ound a station}
Without a sticker, of one with the
sticker not filled out they would
explain to the operator that the
{RS was monitoringprices and that
they should make sure they con
form to regulations as soon as
Possible, Many operators were ap-
parently thanktul that the
NYPIRG people had pointed their
inlraction out
SUNYA NYPIRG checked with”
the IRS before they began this
The IRS approved, and
gave them assistance, explaining
the. legalities and telling the
NYPIRGers what to look for.
survey.
Madison Ave, was selling regular
gas (89 octane) at 56 ¢ a gallon
while Brown Service Station 740
Central Avenue was welling it (at
90 octane) for 45.9¢. Boopsie's Ser-
vice Station at 247 New Scotland
St. way selling 100.2 octane
preminum at 59.9¢ a gallon; Getty
stations like the one at Ontario
street
95 octane fuel for 46.9
The longest line for fuel, es-
timated by Malkin tobe about
twenty catrs, way at Workingman’s
Friend, an independent station on
Fuller road, Some station bad long
lines, other were devoid of
the NYPIRG group
was only at cach stution once dure
ing the diy, but they were still sur-
prised to find long lines at some
customers,
Mation and no etry at other » only
Cox's AMOCO at 437
jon tine, to begin at 9:00 Monday in
the Campus Center, No mention
way made of where the line would
form tor the tickets, inside or oul-
side the CC, or what would
happen it seats were reserved
helurehand or how many reserved
seats would be unavailable to the
ppetsons waiting tn hne
The tollowis
account of the conthet whieh oe
curred yesterday morning
A group of students began to
su chronologi
ther outside the Campuy Center
Wt ahout 12:30 a.m, to await the
eopenme of the burlding at 7:30e
Later an the morning severtl
reonbery af this group decided thitt
to thstre Lairness ti everyine at list
‘61 peuple waiting on line should be
made. Pieces ol paper were hinded
sub ay well with consecutive
numbers mndicatinge the order that
people arnised an the line, Hey ex:
pected these mumbers would die
fate the wider nm which tickety
would be distabuted
Ihe group way allowed inte the
Campus Center at about 7.00
ny entering the burkling thes
net about mine persons whe had
oem miside the building all nyght
These mine people chamed tbe
hist an kine
According to Wayne Halper
they angued that “save they were
smart enough to get ato the
building they deserved to be first.”
He suid one af those aniside the
Huntding altered ty get him tiekets
he would keep quuet. His seemed
untan to these who waited outside
especially since they had ted to
enter the CC
Sunday night and had been told to
ter it had closed on
teave by the might secunty per
sonnel The students who waited
outside charged tha
group” had been given special
favor by the C.C. security. per=
sonnel in that they had heen allow=
ed to vemamn, in the C.C.anstead of
in the cold “hke everyone else.
‘One of those who had remained
tn the burlding was Erie Lonschein,
Chairperson of the Central Coun:
cal. who said he had entered the
the “inside
blocks away [rom the lirst
Miami Ticket Sales Cause
Outrage Among Students
Waiting in Campus Center
building Sunday to work in the
S.A. olfice, He hud decided he
“night ay well stay inside to wait”,
Lonsehen alo noted that he had
seen some people roaming the
huilding during the nigh
When the two groups came
together im the center lobby, it
became apparent that of the nine
peuple who had waited imyide the
building. tour had spent the night
in the SA altice The remaining five
had managed w escape detection
thy Security during the night
AL 7.00 a.m. call Was made to
Alan Altman, treasurer ol the
“74 and one ol the
organizers of the tp, He was told
tarcomie to the Campus Center and
resolve the conthiety between the
two groups as there tad been
Ahieaty af suoleave, Altman and the
other organiety relused ty make
the decision ay to which group
should be soldtickets first. A com:
promise Way Worked ou between
Vw Lonyehem (aside Group)and
Steve Meyer (Outside Group) A
thud bus would be chartered and
the Inswle Group would be given
preterence tor this thud bus. The
decision 10 charter the thin buy
wway made betore st single ieket wits
sol
At this pant. Was dieovered
that MI tickets haad heen teserved
previously for the § olleers and
Iriendy. Ken Was, a Central Coun
cil member, later alleged that the
Class of 4 officers were “very very
uncooperative”, and they relused
to tell how many seats were reserv
ed
Amidyt the conjroversy,
students were waiting on line to
buy tickets. Yet, the number of
tickets available ty b
Anown. Wax recorded the phone
humbers of those on the waiting list
old was un-
) wished to purchase, It
decided that these people would be
contacted when it Was learned how
many tickets were lelt
Barry Davis, Vice President of
SA. was called in to’help resolve
continued on puge three