Albany Student Press, Volume 59, Number 38, 1972 November 14

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Boyer Slates SUNY Move

ALBANY (AP) — A railroad
building of Flemish-Gothic
chitecture will be the new head-
quarters of the State University
‘of New York administration,
which is buying the well-known
upstate structure for $1.7 mil-
tion.

Most SUNY offices now are
concentrated in leased space in
the modern Twin Towers build-
ing just northwest of the Capitol
grounds.

‘The building, and Albany land-
mark, stands on the spot where
Henrick Hudson was believed
to have landed in his exploration
of the river that bears his name.

‘The structure was built in the
early part of this century as a
copy of the famous Cloth Guild
Hall in Ypres, Belgium. It is
constructed of reinforced con-

crete and steel with Gothic ex-
terior detailing. The four-story

building, at the foot of the State
Capitol, hes a 13-story central
tower capped by a gilded weath-
ervane depicting Hudson’s ship,
the “Half Moon

In announcing the plan Friday,
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer of
the State University said the
Delaware & Hudson Railroad,
the present occupants, have
agreed to sell the building for
$1.7 million.

‘The interior will be rehabilita
ted, he said, Asked about the
present condition of the interior,
the chancellor said: “I wish
there was a good synonym) for

‘mess.

He noted that the university
Jong has had an appropriation

from the state for $10 million
that could be used for the rehp-
bilitation.

‘The university board of trus-
tees was thinking about building
a new headquarters before they
looked into the possibility of
purchasing the D & H building,
he said. As for the cost of
acquisition and rehabilitation, he
said, “We're not talking about
much less money than building
and not much more either.”

However, the university admin-
istration expects to move into
the D & H building in about two
years where a wait of four or
five years would have been re-
quired for a new structure.

‘A small park in front of the
building will be expanded and a
dissecting street will be aban-
doned, a spokesman said.

Pathologist Criticizes

continued from page one

several inches" to. make ever
thing plausible. “Nobody chal
lenged them, ‘They said they
hadn't drawn the first sketches
to yeale but now they could
remember where the wound was.
Every other hole sear, incision
and mark was drawn in exactly
Only this hole was several inches
off.”

Weeht said that in Decembe
1966, he wax allowed to view
the Zapruder film of the assass:
ination, which he did over 100
times in addition to examining
blow-ups of each frame. He said
that using this film, the FBI was
able to gauge the length of time
between the first and last times

the President was struck, which
turned out to be about six sev
onds. They alko testfired Le
Harvey Oswald's rifle (a si
shot, bolt-action Manlicher
cano) and found that the quick
est it could be loaded und fired
never mind aimed:-was 2.3 sec:
onds, This presented a bit of a
problem in that four bullets
apparently were fire

length of time between the
purportedly wax six seconds, Yet
early seven sec

and the

it would take
nds just to get off that m

shots,

‘The results indicated it wax
“an impossibility that one per
son could have done all the
shooting." Weebt said it was this

that led to the

Jommission’s “single” or “mag
bullet theory--which  affir

med that one bullet “entered

John Kennedy's back and exited

through his neck, w

ernor Connally’s

(breaking a rib), exite

right chest into his right wrist

where it shattered a large bone,

then went into his right thigh,

only to be found tater on the

stretcher at Parkland Hospital

"Whatever needed to be done
ct their inconsis
was done," Weeht charged, “be
cause no one else knew what was
going on and it was not until
years later that private investi
ators had a chance to see the
evidence."

Warren Commission exhibit
399 is the bullet that

tw cor

WELLS & COVERLY'S NEW SHOP

AT STUYVESANT PLAZA

continued from page one
tu

in which force would have
to be used by students. He then
went on the point out how
SUNY Albany has a greater
‘amount of student participation
in campus governance than other
universities.

‘Another student questioned
President Benezet on the plans
to build a west podium exten-
sion, and wanted to know if the
project were dead. According to
Benezet, the project is indeed,
dead. “At least in our life time
%- will not see the podium
extended,” he commented.

He did point out that there is a
serious space problem on the
‘Academic Podium, and that “we
will be pressing our case for
more facilities."” He sees students
as potentially “effective sales
men" for the University. Com
ments Benezet: “A lot of out-
side people cannot imagine that
this massive podium is actually
crowded," He sees the students
as an effective tooi in convincing

the community otherwise

continued from page one
members of the community.
However, Italian majors and
minors will be requested to read
the materials in their original
texts, Moreover, Part A of Ital-
ian Civilization (Ita. 315) will be
‘a prerequisite for the majors and
minors who wish to enroll.
‘There is no prerequisite for all
other students.

“Elementary Italian” will be
offered on Monday and Wed-
nesday evenings from 6:00 to
8:00 p.m. It is listed as It. 101A,
call no, 2314, four credits and it
will be taught by Professor
Fossa. The basic aim of this
course will be provide both
members of the community and
those students who can’t partici-
pate in the morning sessions of
this course, amply opportunity
to study the Italian language.

‘Any interested person can reg-
ister for these courses beginning
Nov. 1, 1972 in the Colonial
U-Lounge of the Albany Cam:
pus, For more information you
can call the Department of His
panic and Italic Studies. Tele
phone No, 518-457-8356,

arren Report

was found on the stretcher at
Hosp ial, Wecht says
minati a of the Archive
x-rays shows particles of metal
in Kennedy's chest and also in
Connally’s chest=traces of the
bullet that passed through them.
‘This same bullet, according to
the Warren Commission, was al
so supposed to have broken one
of Connally's ribs and shattered
fn bone in his wrist, The bullet is

6.5 mm. shell with an original

ht of 161 grams, Two more
inconsistencies presented them:
selves, said Weeht, because the
bullet found at Parkland has a
weight of 159 grams:

(1) According to the Com
mission's report, the bullet lost
only (wo grams of weight in
passing through both Kennedy
and Connally and leaving traces
behind in both;

(2) and after doing all this
damage to both men, the bullet
has “no deformities in its upper
two-thirds at all and the bottom
one-third shows only very min:

I flattening with no loss of
substance

In addition, one small section
of the base of the bullet was
removed by the FBI for examin:
nyx up the ques.

bullet could

ation, whieh by
tion of how th
have lost any substance in pass

through the two men and
still weigh 159 grams after the

FBI sample was removed.

Still another impossible con
sequence of the Commission's
findinys was that the bullet was
moving from right to teft as it
pawed through Kennedy, then
had te tues abruptly in mid-air
aud go ante Connally’s right
hack (Connally was seated dt
rectly in front of Kennedy at th
time), "Bullets only do that
comic hooks,” said Weeht

‘There is not one forensic
pathologist [have tilked to wh
believes the Warren Commusion
findings."Weeht said “And
without the sin
the Warren Commission conelt
sion of a Hone assassin is des
teoyed ‘The evidence clearly
indicates that af feast more than
fone pemon was involved in the

shooting

CIA Conspiracy?
Weeht claimed no special infor
mation about who the other
wsuanin(s) might be, but impli
cated Dallas Patrolman J.D.‘

pet as purt of the conspi

According to Wecht, 45 minutes
after the assassination ‘Tippet,
‘who was in a place he had no
business being" (since all’ police
had been ordered to Dealey
Plaza), spotted Oswald walking
down a street, “decided that he
was the assassin,” and went
after-only to be himself killed
“J.D, ‘Tippet was there to do»
job that because of his failure,
Jack Ruby had to complete two
days later,” Wecht said
“By legal definition we're deat
ing with a conspiracy," he said
And who is behind it all? Wecht
points to members of the CIA.
He said it is a well-known fact in
Washington that Oswald had
een on the payroll of the CIA
up to the time of the assassina
tion. “The CIA has pulled
bloody, cut-throat operations all
around the world,” he said, “yet
no one wants to believe that it
could happen here."
Wecht's conclusions, as limited
tas they are, parallel former New
Orleans District Attorney Jim
Garrison's conclusions. Garrison
(with whom Wecht
ferred on the assassinat
tigation) claims that a group of
rightwing CLA members along
with members of the Cu
ile community and others plot
ted and carried out the assassin
ation, believing that President
Kennedy was beginning a left
ward dirft that threatened na
tional security, and was also
considering an easing of relations
with Fidel Castres

Lee Harvey Oswald lived for
46 hours after the assassi
All Ut time he was
rogated by federal
lueal authorities. Yet, said
Weeht, we ure told that not one
note, Lape recordin tran
Script was made in all that 36
hours of interrogation.

Yet the Dallay police force was
reputed at the ume to be one of
the most experienced in hand:

tia homocide eases

“Yer who listens to all this?
complained Cyril, Weeht. His
visit to the National Archives
and his important findings re
sulted in a brief flurry of head
lines around the country
little ele No one has

forth to challenge anything
has said, even his most damning
indictments of the Warren Con
findings. Government
policy seems to be to ignore the
critics and hope they eventually
go away

PAGE TWELVE

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1972

NY.
NT.
SS

TUESDAY —

Vol. LIX No. 46 State University of New York at Albany

November 14, 1972

Keystone Cops or Real Police?

by John O'Toole

FRIDAY 20:10 hours

Guiding the black Ford out of
the square patch of gravel- and
onto Perimeter Road, seated on
torn gray upholstery behind a
added dash with a two-way
radio and a yellow sticker —
“Get Gas at State Facilities,”
gripping the wheel with red
worn hands, Gary O'Connor,
Lieutenant, Security Officer,
sand ox

“We have the campus split up
into three zones for the patrol
function. We cut the campus
right down the middle, East to
West, one car for each half, ‘The
third car, my car, completely
roves the campy I the down
town dorms,
“Right now
with six

we're operating
n, in addivion to the
student patrol that’s working on
* quads, There's the dispateh:
. three patrol cars, and two
ng on either end of
podium, securing
the buildings
A car passes; the Lieutenant's
eyes follow. An inch of curly
brown hair breaks on the bh
form coll
And me," I say
His rounded closes!
wrin Yeah, And you."
My na
grudge

‘g0aman, + fue:

Campus Security | carry w

without it can be

Police protection is no sure thing, but being
down

by Deanne Stillman

Alternative Features Service

August 8, 1970, Las Vegas, N. Me
‘gas investigated Friday the shooting death of Michael Pr vat
Mor Neo York Mm. 1 Press, about
New MexicoI arrived
street to the Sangre de Cris: on/off the land, The old Spanish and a fourth nel i
tos, the mountains which harbor villages lie hidd mined : A
all answers, and lure the diamonds, wai for y. ‘aoa
‘d stories about local wt

on red or slow down, The green
mountain hills seem limitless and
so do you

ty awaits, and all you have to de
is tive it

On August 5 and 6, 1970, the
Kingdom of Heaven dies: on
member shot und killed, thi
kidnapped and
times ‘The death
blows are quick and unexp
although signals of

dom’s fall come often. The com
mune does not want to see.

It all seemed so easy, move to

Pretend you have grown up in
Guadalupita, a small town nur
tured and overdosed on machi
mo, and you are one of the six

1's early 1970, communal ti
vogue. If you're a hippie,
hy pass the streets lo go
to the

northern New
Mexico make little contact with
the outside, Some  villag
villages still local men who will crush t
speak 17th century Spanish, and — Kingdom of Heaven. ‘The pre
many people think the Black sence of the Kingdom is an
th You don't really Panther are wild animals you affront to community
4 destination, but “thut’s see in picture books. But you but you suffer several oth:
cin" Norther New Mexiew bee don't know thi, and you don’ Shewibuileeedions
» hor know that the people have al
reudy met your hippie stereo:
where your ride takes you type vin the tube, their periodic
Once there, you realize that in connection with America, and
tural New Mexico the land i you don't know tht young Chi
untouched, unrest by canos hear about free love from
fences and billboards und trees their teachers and talk about it
grow unconfined by telephe U's us popular as eat
poles or electrical wires. ‘The dinner. You don't. know. that
horizon is uncluttered with neon these people have spent lifetimes
signs or road instructions you trying to acquire middle class
aren't invited to eat at Joe's or paraphenalia, while overnight
warned to keep out or turn right you discard it. A life of simpliei-

land, because the

You don't really
values,

On hot days, comm

is arden m the nude A

on your re

this girl and

think, ‘Here's u gil and she's

naked on this piece of property

with all these guys around. She

must be ballin’, why isn't she

ballin’ me? I'm just as good as
them.”

=A transient begins an argu:

ment at the local bur. He talks

continued on page 5

WEDNESDAY PAST - 10:30 -
‘The waiting room was an archi-
tect's Freudian dream, There
were eight doors, four floor-to-
ceiling plate glass windows, one
long bare white corridor. The
secretary, brown-hair plump dis:
tracted, nodded towards one of
the doors, Behind it ten orange
padded chairs circled a coffee
table papered with G

the ASP, The Schenec

wetle, and a three-inch black:
hound Student Protest and th
Law A cartoon on a bulletin
hoard rene Student

rity Patrol ix Watehing Out for
you" Next to it was a chart of
names and dates and hours, evi
dently for the Student Patrol
The traffic on Perimeter Road
rumbled past the window
Williams, director of
Campus Security, walked in He
Was young and) wellgroomed,
Wearing green vest brown Lie and
smokeray” stacks
he carried

dames

tw aw anil
id Usha. gat: Ie inne
Crashed through the pet ure wi
dow, he'd und atthe driver
and ink
tion, We
sat down in opponing ora

chairs to tlk about stude

pause to

Till bis yong
the driver far his reqist

security relations. ‘Time passed

slowly

1045 “What about the druy,

t

bust on Dutch? Did you know
that was coming?”

“Yes. The State Police told us
the search warrant would be
executed and requested what-
ever assistance we would give
them, The administration and
the Residence Director knew in
advance."

“That's the usual procedure?"

“Yes.”

“What image do you think
students have of Security?"

“I don't think we're viewed as
ormtroopers, but neither a
en as Keystone Cops,

1 think the image Jeans
lowards the latter."”

"Most students have absolutely
no contact with law enfor
ment, other than what they see
‘ m 12 and Dragnet

yeurs of excitement
mato thirky minutes,
sere distorted image.
vet like Reed and Molloy do.
Hos
officers. Yet the only cops you
see on TV. are twenty-five to
thirty-five. ‘That doesn't mean

“We have a lot of older

Hhat an older man with gray hair
fective, But |
op si

ficient or
think you ean de
type that he is
“Did the
create any pressure on
your role or image’
The great majority of the
students now participating in the

continued on page 8

Murder In The Kingdom of Heaven

&

; a ibd
SS Nowesieae

Views feviit the Other Side

The Saga of the Cafeteria Supervisor

by Barbara Fischkin

‘The woman in the Quad cafe-
teria whom you would most like
to avoid while running out with
three deli sandwiches for your
friends and two sets of silver-
ware to replace the dirty ones in
your suite is not really a wicked
waiting to pounce on her
. Instead, she is just a
nice, normal person trying to do
a job,

‘And, even though it may seem
that she is there only to under-
mine your finest attempts at
sneakiness, her job is actually
that of a dining room supervisor.
She is responsible for the
smooth management of the en
tire dining room during meal
times,

State Quad supervisor Burnetta
"Bey" Wilson, when asked about
her job, blurted out “Don't got
me started." She was very quick
to explain, however, that she
feels students on the whole are
ver nice and that she likes work
ing around them, “It’s just that
some are spoiled brats and may:
be they had no discipline at
home,” she added. As an exam
ple of a purely destructive act
she cited taking off the Lops of
all and pepper shakers and put
Ling foil on them, Bea, who has
worked for food service for four
years believes the students do
these things because, “either
they have nothing else Lo do, or
do it as a joke.” She doesn't
think that this is their
complaining about the food be-
ause, “Even the
the food ix good still
Even though by this time she 1s
aware of the typical dining room
tricks of coming in the side door
and handing food theough the
back burs, Bea wis very shocked
to find gies jumping over the
conveyor bells. “Fellows, you
can undees
wiels do at! ;
however, that she is extremely
Tond of her co-workers and be
lieves they are all very honest

Motherly Figures

Mrs. Gladys Cutler on Alumni

Quad, and Helen M. Weleh, on

Indian, are the two supervisors
who best exemplify motherly
figures. Gladys, whose warm and
charming British ways are famil-
to anyone who lives or has
ever lived downtown, has been
working for Food Service for
ten’ years, and plans to go home
to England at the end of the
school year to retire. She seems
to feel very close to the students
living in Waterbury and Alden
Halls, Even while being inter
viewed she stopped to usk one
young man how things were
going. When he told her he was
just about making it she quickly
scolded him and said, “Oh you
better be doing more than just
that,” It is obvious that the
students feel much the same wa’
about Gladys: she even spoke
about a “lovely, little letter"
that an anonymous student left
her desk in which he said,

Jit’ was just nice when we
came down in the morning to
yet a cheery hello and. the
motherly touch made the day.”

Since Gladys has been working
for Food Service for ten years
she has seen many changes in the
student body and spoke about
them, “During the first years
there was a role eall and every
fone had to check in and out
You had just so many late nights
per week and if you went away
for w weekend you had to leave
the name of the people you we
staying with.” She added that
“Kids were more afraid to do
anything out of the ordinary
and felt that maybe now there
is, ‘Ma little bit too much per:
missiveness."” Even so, Gladys,
nevertheless, mentioned that, “l
try to be as understanding as 1

n with their attitudes, ‘Three

KO we were so dif

{more could you
awk from your own mother? With
that attitude she will certainly
be missed.

Heten Welch seems ta supervise
Indian Quad with much the
same spirit ay Gladys has on
‘Alumni She is very proud of the
fact that some of the students
come to her with speenil probe

Why Is This Man President?
READ
The Washington Park Spirit

ON SALE- WEDNESDAY NOV. 15
AT THE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE

lems, She is obviously very true
to their confidences because
when asked to describe some of
the problems she answered, “I
can’t tell you because they're
personal." Helen, who has been
working for Food Service for six
years, (‘'I can’t say I hate it 'cos
I don’t”), claims that her biggest
problem is people trying to
sneak in on weekends. Neverthe-
less, she did admit, with a glim-
mer in her eye that at times she
feels a little guilty reprimanding
students, but soon added, “they
know they're not supposed to do
this.” Helen’s favorite story in
volving infractions of the rules
concerns one suspicious looking
young man who claimed to
definitely have a meal card
However, upon checking it, she
discovered that it was indeed a
meal card, but from Syracuse
University. “That was real cute
Of course he didn't eat, But it
was real cute.” Helen ended by
ving that sometimes she gets
feeling the kids don’t like
but she doesn't think it goes
very deep. And from the senti:
ments on Indian Quad, it doesn’t
seem to.
Good Money
For Valerie Hurlbert, being a
dining room supervisor on Dutch
Quad was a frightening propost
tion since she is the only stude
employed in the position, Val
who is a Junior and a History
major, worked in the dining
room last year She wax made
supervisor this year when the
woman who was originally sup
posed to have the job did not
return. Val admitted, "At first 1
was kind of leery, 1 know that
last year's supervisor had a lot of
hassles."” But then, the fact that
she would be working more
hours and getting more money
convinced her to take the job.
When asked about her f
tions to her new pos
Val_ replied,
ost of my f
working here last year. They
decided it wax kind of funny
She said that most of the kids
accept her, but that
still those that resent her be:
suse: she is a student. There are
also those who do things ight
under hep nose, because. since
she Hooks ke everyen
they dan't realize that sh
supervisor Although Val seems
to be domg very well and even
eft the mtersiew ho hier
Jol ay she stopped sani people
she sll maantastis that an alder
woman would be etter suited
Fer the galk, Shwe hae mies
Withorty, mare expenenee wait
kiows more that me
Landa De Sate, on Colonual
Quad, alse, ke Vale net very
removed from the student popu
Hiation, sine she grattuiat ec bream
State anly a few sears ine She
wast Math tnayor, without jot
We hee tiehb sad decade bo
tho sone because it payed mre
than any other she could find ve
Mhany Since her husband. stall
goes te school that wu a very
unpOFnt Consideration — She
Werhing here herausee she
ewwsn't Rave ter deal with acho
snd these “alah and elettorous
Hives” She does feel, however
that her position anvelves a tot
of rule playing and that, “the
job does ential hetng a batch
And even though she feels com
piasin for the kids because the
food i 90 bad, Linda does not
feel guilty about cuteling them
in the act. “Peaple forget Foud
Service iy a buses. It is
stewing and if you did it ing
stare you'd probably be ur
rested

Campus Chest

Headstart Benefits

by Ann E. Bunker
‘The week's voting for “Cam:
pus Chest” came to a rousing

ale Friday afternoon with
Indian's RA Mendy Mendelsohn
winning out over Ron Sim
mons. It was close race and
right up to the gong it was
anybody's game. The final tally
was 1727 for Mendy, 1076 for
Ron and $450 for Year-Round
Headstart, the recipient of pro
ceeds from this year's Campus
Chest drive.

The nickel-a-vote elections

generated as much or more en
thusiasm on campus as the re
cent national elections. People
rushed in and out, stopping long
enough to check the up-to-date
tallies then racing out to drum
up more support for the candi
dates of their choice. Some of
the brothers of STB--Mendy sup
porters were on hand to liven
things up, as were folks of all
persuasions.

Other notables in the running
were: Ebbie Exp. Mike Blay
more, Meg Riffel, Michael “E

Lampert, Amy Condo, Sir
Robert Lawrence Thompson Hill
Ml, Danny Breitherg, Ralph H
Greenberg, Bob “Fixe” Ziff
Laurie Allen, Jeff Berzan, Den:
nis Gitler, Donna Cash, Judy
Avner, Paul “Ace” Amer,
Robert Villanova, John Fraser,
Beth Muller, and Alexander
Pope. It was interesting to note
that George McGovern netted 23
votes. Mr. Milhouse wasn'( even

in the running

Along with the distinct
becoming SUNYA’.
chest, Mendy won two 1
tickets, compliments
man. When asked to
on his victory, Mend
simply, “I want w hea
added, “I'd like t

for starting

ending it

Truly a Success
‘The Campus Chest drive
the co-chairmanshiyy «1
Pallas and Lorrain Ky)
an attempt to rise men
the Year-Round Hews
gram at PS. 5 hen
The Program is sul
funds, as it rece
mal support fen
government and
has un out of m
tinue its program
children

Aside from thw
lest, the drive
fund-raising activitw
ty wives’ bake sale
and the sale of
made by the He
The Chis «
$118.00 to the ew
persons just kick
they could

The drive was

money fur ae

Peace Studies Remodeled

The Peace Studies program hax
decided on « new approach to
the study of war and peace,
violence and non-vic
social change und conflict re
lution,
Ity members have, in the past
Few weeks, reflected an the goals
and worth of the program, and
have decided one new orgunta
structure For the Spring
semester, the Peace Studies
course offered under Pox 49%.
and insteueted by a visiting
pacifist in residence,” will be
moved to the P Project
Hake ia nomeredit course It
hus been found uy the past the
semesters that the eabesive fare
ab an aecedennse cvvta se is meassang,
wid thet an onder ta obtain
coedibulits watt the actly. ane
salmanesteatons at the Unversity
MP sean ot Ou anteseest ati ye the
HOSUNYA ay well

4 Ue bnagae mst

Heqanieements ot pechited

Replacing the 9
Metter jeerunsaes ial toes
pendent study grossgete
the Paes UK contest: nanabies
progesme wall use the skull

Laned ue other diyeqpliny

student and comm
pution in Peace Preyer
and obtain credibi
of the University
that Pewee Stud
program and

cans of study

mn in Py

(Pat
ganization of
tpl

tacalinng oof

een wall bie

wath possibile ath

fen fuetber a

Hien ol

pen pe
Wee doen

The money we spend
on Vietnam could
rebuild East Harlem.

Help America.

Write your Congressman today

Hulp Unseli The War. Box 903, F.D.R. Station, New York NY

PAGE TWO

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

SDAY, NOVEMBEK

Parking Hassles Subject of Discourse

by Ellyn Stemnberger

A very wonderful
expected thing happened last
‘Thursday night.
Association came together. In a
Jong, infomal meeting, that SA

scribed as part of the Central
Couneil’s annual growing pains,
the Council members discussed
the concept and role of student
government at Albany.

AL first, the Council's outlook
was very pessimistic. One mem
ber felt that SA was up against a
brick wall (regarding the parking
rules situation in part

member suggested the Council
disband because he.

seemed to mount

by Glenn von Nos

tween student government

1 he accepts hig full share of

ed for the past few ye
4 determmation of
Hanon of Central Couned to the

all towing would be stop
ped until new ¢

il Charman Ken Stel

Hamunities atid Ed

turned to the President and a
feeling of unity could be felt
among the people present, So
far, the trend this year seemed

to be a greater exertion by Cen-
tral Council of its full power to
the point that some felt the
Council would oppose Lampert
simply to oppose him, With this
meat cleft growing between the
branches (despite Lampert’s ef-

forts to stop it) it was a welcome

relief to see the two branches of
SA in harmony. It seems that
the present “erisis” of student
participation (or lack of it) in
University matters has not only
brought the students into oppo
sition with the Administration,
but has finally united the Stu

Association.
This is not to say that every
tral Council member was
100% behind the final decision

the Council made that evening.
But, for the first time this year,
this reporter could feel the unity
in purpose and intent between
Lampert and the Council, ‘The
Council members were listening
to Lampert ina way they proba
bly haven't in a long time, Hay

Student Leaders Confer
with University Officials

(enure and promotian, and the
urading system.

Hartley: felt that an many eases
students tend to Soverreact’” ty
adminusteative devisions whieh
were allegedly owde wath bite
we Hestudent put Awd severat

muted cut

all decisions cn le made

with full consultations ol every
sector af the university com
munity, and that in many eases
technicians" must make the
decision unilaterally. According
ter President Benezet, "We have
technical chores to be carried
fut and we have people who are
wned te earey them out” He

added that consultation with
everyone is not always: possible

Apparently the adminsit
beheves that
andl tenure
mistianees when nut every
ff the umverity ean be fully
‘ansuited. henezel qave ay an
example of this the deesion to
une Mohawk ‘Tower for
academic purposes. ‘The decision
was made durring the summer

eouusee of
SUNY Central Offices that the
decision be made then Stud
ents have been complaining that
they were not properly con
sulted on the case, sitiee mast of
them wees heme far the sum

Arcane te Henezet, at
Central SUNY that “makes the
rules” hy which this campus ey

perated

ral Administration,
aid must operate this campu:
within preseribed parameter
Beneet also cite
pressure’ fram the pubhe to cut

almost paternal speech to them
cooled some heads and lifted
some spirits to help the Council
make a rational decision,

During the regular business ses-
sion of the meeting, the Central
Council gave the Camp Board
permission to purchase a parcel
of land adjacent to the Dippikill
property. The purchase of the
approximately 80 acres was jus-
lified by a projection of its
future use, the esthetic value of
the view from the lake, and the
ecological effect to the water
shed if it was bought by some:
one else and developed. The
Central Council also approved a
supplemental appropriation for
the ASP. The extra money is
n hy the ASP to continue
Lo publish the number of pages
per issue that it has. this semes
ter

One of the other bills that was
introduced called for the loa
from the SA—Athletic Advisory
Board Surplus to the Faculty
Student Association to be re

turned. ‘The. original rationale

was that the FSA, mainly con

trolled by the Administration.

A

cents as another factor fexticing.
complete consultation,

What came owt of the cordial
meeting wis nat entirely clenr
Students voreed the usual com
plaints about not haying “mean
ingful input." ‘The adminis
tration offered many af the

counter arguments, Bene

Jed them that students

ler participation at

the University than at mast, He
minded them that there sre
wd, students in the Univer
sity Senate and that the prope

tion af students there may soon

According ty Council Chair
nan Ken Stokem, about the
only “really. eonerete thy
seompbsled wan the ayreenvent
what to charge the full, lowing
tee to students who were towed
last week. It was also felt that
the simple act of meeting with
the administration wax bene
fieval, since iL “improved: the
hues Uf communication” which
had previously been somewhat
strained,

gooaman

should not be helped by student
funds when the Administration
is “totally unresponsive to stu-
dent opinion and doesn’t even
stand by agreements that they
do make with the students.""

The bill was tabled and a sub-
stitute bill was proposed. ‘The
new bill called for the abolish-
ment of the $10 towing fee and
a refund of all towing fees al-
ready collected this year. It also
directed the SA President to get
legal counsel to see if the towing
fee as established, implemented,
and enacted without an appeals
procedure is legal. It was the
feeling of the Council as they
passed this bill that the fee
Violates due process

John Hartley, Vice-President
ement & Planning, was
tral Couneil meeting,
questions about the

towing that was done last week

(irom behind the Humanities

building). Hartley was not on

campus for part of last week, so

He xeems that the decision about

towing was made by Director of

Security, James Williams, Hart-

Council Discusses Parking With Hartley; Camp Board Gets OK

ley refused to answer many of
the questions until he could
speak to Williams who was at
home, ill with the flu. The only
point that could be established
was that cars were towed from
near the podium because people
with medical permits could not
park in reserved spots. Hartley
saw nothing wrong with this; the
Council claimed breach of agree-
ment and student discrimina-

question session

ically nothing.

During the report of the Com-
mittee to Coordinate the En-
forcement of the New Parking
Regulations, the Council re-
turned to the discussion of the
present Student-Administration
strife, It was now that Lampert
changed despair and futility to
constructive, hopeful thinking.
The final resolution was to try
to establish a meeting between
the Council and the top Univer
sity Administration, It was de
cided that the fate of the park
ing strike would be determined
after this meeting.

goodman

Emergency Meeting
Yields Little

by Ellyn Sternberger
Central Council held ay ener
y meeting list Sunday eve
ning (a discuss the weekel
eting with the Adininsttration
tion would
on Monday mor
requrding the parking situati
" lutions that
were passed by. the
Council were scheduled to go into
effect yest morning. The
Central Council's effort for the
sinike reduced the park
$3) and yot_people tow
near the Humanities building last
week exempted from the towing
fee, A jomt committee way ew
lished to study parking rey
valine their only
pmendation 1s
hat the nun parking lots
should nat be segregated
The Couneil's decision abet
what tu de on Monday was to
ask security ter hund a notice te
every driver entering (he inner
campus roadways. ‘The notice
frony Ceateal Council, utormed
the duver that a ude
Assoewtion wction wan bert
fom

oven ut as of November 133 are
inating on transcripts ar py
checke Alo included in the
inensage wa the fact that Cem
tral Council hus at given up it

vs seureh fora just sultion,
Security officials have said that
the priority enforcement will be
parking infractions around. the|
podium, then thuse around the]
js, and lastly thore in the|
lots
Student Association President
Mike Lampert brought up some}
new points of the legality of the]
ing regulations that w
at last ‘Thursday’
Central Council meeting. ‘There
I> process for towing,
pointed out a
possible problem with the exist
ing appeals procedure for park
ing tickets. He also pointed out
that the State workers wer
successful in fighting their $9
parking f
Some of the Council member
felt that Saturday's meeteny with
pistration accomplish
and others. feld
Chat atl i dud was fey ter sweep
the past ander the uy Thy
Couned again hashed out thd
problem of communication aad
process on this campus Befor
the end of the meeting, a bill
was proposed in emergency
season that established some
conerete plans the Central]
Counei would like ts see ett
ected, The bill was postponed|
and is scheduled ty be con
sidered this Thursday evening,

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE THREE

“AND YEA LET

THE PATH OF RIGHTEDUSNESS
AND Ler THE Poor EAT
OF THE CAKE OF THE
LAND , BuT Nor Too
myc , LEST THEY
DISCOMFORT US, AND

lo! THus

BE FREED OF THE ;
GUILTY CONSCIENCE.”

US WALE

SHALL WE

Welfare People is Bad People

AUSTIN, TEXAS (CPS)-A
University of Texas sociologist
has found that the majority of
Americans are reluctant to sup-
port welfare programs hecause
they believe that poor people are
themselves responsible for
poverty.

In an article in the November
issue of Psychology Today, en:
titled “Poverty: We Still Believe
that God Helps Those Who Help
Themselves," Dr. Joe R, Feagin
reports results of » nationwide
survey he began in 1969, which
examined beliefs about the
causes of poverty in America

Of the 1,017 people sampled
in the study, more than half
located responsibility for pover
ty in the characters of poor
people themselves. Such factors
as lack of thrift and proper
money management, lazin
and loose morals and drunken
ness, were cited

Fewer of the people ques
tioned blamed poverty on social
and external issues, such as low

wages, poor schools and pre
judice, or on factors such as
illness or “bad luck."

People who hold # person re-
sponsible for his or her own
poverty also tend to have nega
tive views on welfare programs,
and oppose anti-poverty propo:
sals.

Feagin says that he found that
in almost every case," a plurality
took an anti-welfare position.”

Feagin also discovered that the
higher the income, the more
likely it was that one would take
an unfavorable view of welfare

Respondents with a high
school or a college education
were found ta be more anti
welfare than those with a sixth
grade education or less

This finding."’ says Feagin,
Is something of a blow to
the idea that education elevates
one's critical capacities, since it
iw clear that a large number of
educated Americans accept

about welfare.”

WELLS & COVERLY'S NEW SHOP
AT STUYVESANT PLAZA

‘A high percentage of those
surveyed gave affirmative re:
sponses to such statements as
many people getting welfare are
not honest about their need;
there are too many people re:
ceiving welfare money who
should be working: many
women getting welfare money
are having illegitimate children
to increase the money they get.

Contrary to the beliefs concer:
ning illegitimate children, Feagin
points out that most children
born out of wedlock do not
receive welfare, According to a
1969 Aid To Families with De
pendent Children survey, three
out of 10 children on welfare a
illegimate. A recent study in
Utah found that 90 percent of
the illegimate children on wel
fare had been born before their
families went on relief

Feagin states that the survey
data confirm that “Americans
fare dragging their feet on the
road toward welfare-statism, and
that their reluctance is closely
related to strong beliefs about
the meaning of economic fuil
ure,”

He concludes that “as long as
large numbers of Americans ut
tribute social problems tthe
character defects of individuals,
massive economic reform will be
extraordinarily difficult. Indi
vidual interpretations of poverty
mesh well with conservative at
tempts to maintain the status
quo.”

The Youth Vote

by Terry Ryan
Associated Press Writer

What happened to the youth
vote?

It was there and it did have an
impact.

Younger and more liberal can-
didates won state legislative
races and local contests in many
parts of the country with a
strong boost from first-time
voters.

‘A University of Nebraska stu-
dent unseated the chairman of
the state legislature's executive
board. A 26-year-old Vietnam
veteran will replace the oldest
member of Hawaii's house of
representatives. And an anti-war
farmer was elected county com
missioner in Athens, Ohio, home
of Ohio University.

—A few candidates for Con-
gress and statewide offices clear:
ly won on their appeal to young
voters. In many cases, however,
older or more conservative can
didates won despite immense
losses in areas dominated by
young voters

The Rev, Andrew Young Jr.

the first black congressman

tion, said young people were
essential to his victory. “I don't
think we could have done it
without the help of the younger
more moderate in At
Janta,” he said

In this year of President
Nixon's landslide, the
vote made little differen
outcome of the presidenti
Campus precincts almost uni
versally went for Democratic
presidential nominee Sen
George McGovern, but this
strength was seldom sufficient to
carry counties or congressional
districts for McGovern,

More Liberal?

‘There were 25 million 18-to-25
year olds eligible to cast their
fit presidential election ballots
‘on Tuesday. About 11 million of
them were 14-t0-20 year olds
enfranchised when the 26th
amendment lowered the voting
age in federal elections.

jome political analysts, includ
ing ranking McGovern staffers,
had contended that young peor
ple would be decidedly more
Hiberal than other voters and
could carry MeGovern to vie
tory. McGovern campaixn offi

voters

The money we spend
on Vietnam could

clean up the Hudson.
Help America.

Write your Congressman today.

ul

WE PROUDLY
ANNOUNCE

Box 903, F.D.A. Station, New York, N.Y. 10022

TOWN.

| MILE NO. OF LATHAM CIRCLE. RT. 9 783 5539

HELD OVE

THEATRE
LATHAM

“ONE OF THE BEST FILMS ABOUT
YOUTH EVER MADE. | HAVE SEEN
17 THREE TIMES, AND | DARE SAY
1 HAVE A FEW VISITS LEFT IN ME.

7

New York Doily Newt Srndiceted Columnist

A SEPARATE PEACE

ia cr
MON-THURS. WITH
PHOTO ID

a

cials last spring talked of win
ning 70 per cent of the youn
vote.

Republican stratevists argued
that young voters would be my
more liberal than unvone se
and insisted that the Prisidem
would hold his own with thes

An extensive poll taken ec
tion day for CBS Srus by
George Fine Research, Inc
New York indicated that |»
24 year olds supported
McGovern by a 52-16 margin,

The poll indicated that Nixon
did hold his own among young
voters. Those youth suiter. how
ever, gave McGovern utivut 1)
per cent more support
total electorate, which went in
Nixon by a 61-34 margin. Whip
the youth vote had little effer
on the outcome, it ws
been extremely impur'y
close race.

Local Impact

The impact of young
local elections was siihte
tions around the count

With all but als
counted, Steve Fox
University uf Nebrish
has apprently unses
Sen. William Swanson
of the legislative uu
tive board, Fowler wi
drop out of school nex

assume his legislative
The two you
ever to serve in Vern
of repr
They
18, a Vermont
attending Harvard
and Gregory Ki

sentatives we
re Michael (

Archie Hape {I
nber 9
house of
year-old Mindray Inaba
Students fron
of Kansay flooded th

Michael (
university: gradual

Cleans

house
1d Stonebaek
the local
the county commusss

of represent

In cong

meumbents
In lows
Distr

where
rant
Meevitesky
In tnd
eddie t
ary peat
Kita
Hep Batt banat
tive Reptilia
ine
agaist lawerny tt
Fuhvan rane st

pus preeme
Teppecan
BBO te 1H tnd

PAGE FOUR

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 11

Is The Struggle Settled?| Hard Times —

by Peggy Simpson

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON AP—The Bur
eau of Indian Affairs Building is
back in federal hands after being
held for a week by militant
Indians and suffering damage
and loss estimated by the gov-
ernment at nearly $2 million
But no one can say with cer
tainty who won the strange
struggle or what it portends for
the future.

Many officials are uncomforta:
ble with the precedents set, and
are uncertain whether the epi
sode will worsen or improve the
long-troubled relations between
Indians and the government.

‘The White House and most
protesters were unmistakably re-
lieved to be freed from the
tightening circle in which they'd
the Indians
concessions in

trapped themselves
refusing minor
exchange for their only bargain
ing point, the building, and the

Murder

continued from page 1

about the —unimport of
money with a man who can’t
understand why hippies choos
to be poor when they can be
rich. The man ri
living, and fives in a two-room
adobe house, The hippie can't
erstand why Chicanos strive
wealth because to him
money is meaningless. He is em
phatic, and fishes in his pocket
for monzy. He pulls out a five:
dollar bill, then burns it
‘A transient with a hole in the
crotch of his pants walks into
town, dick hanging out of his
nts. He approaches the wife of
d she is too

en sheep for

stunned Lo move. ‘Two commune
Jents drive through Lown, see

him talking, scoop him up, and

drive off. The wom:

him with the Kingdom, although

permanent resident

mildly

he is not
Kingdom members are

yout eidents, es

upset
pecially the last. But they ate
Hot Upset enough Ly expel Cranes
ents from the land, because they
don't want to put anyone on
bummers they ds
neighbors, they
in an open dour
uather e«

Hippies
Guadalupita, uel local resident
try several Cine
ate their hate and lear to com
mune mneniber 1

might net dave you out
«town you dec
because qntting is net
Amencan way, and after all
A sounds something out of
Kay Hider

The seenarie Anil
alujnta louking fer
and loeal pe

Aline

8 quuling then
Otten

tions, sometin
temtory
» te get out, or
sutnply.igne Hitehbikers
frequently watt tora couple of
town, Young

es mare Hostile
A Lonyh
the

tut
Chicanos Cash
stranger coming trough town
rte co ts, but

peace signs le

the gesture is _ not a sign

‘Treaties caravan participants? Or
was it a spontaneous reaction, as
to Indians claim, to unexpected
problems such as finding housing
White House uneasily raising the
ante in recognition they would
use only words, not weapons, to
evict them.

“We didn’t want another Kent
State in the BIA and we knew
damn well we'd have one if
police attempted a forcible ous-
ter of the well-armed Indians,"
said a White House spokesman.

One of the significant con-
essions made by the WhiteHouse
negotiators headed by Leonard
Garment, Nixon's principal ad-
viser on minority affairs, was to
agree to appoint a 20-person
federal task force to study the
demonstrator’s 20-point  pro-
posal for reform.

These questions remain to be
answered in the months ahead

ws the tukeover of the BIA
building on Nov. 2 planned in
advance by the Trail of Broken
and food”

—Who really were these 300 to
600 caravan demonstrators?

—Who! led the ransacking of
BIA files, pillaging of valuable
art and rampant damaging of
property? To what extent will
they be held accountable?

—Will the demonstrating Indi-
ans be received back on the
reservations and in their urban
settings as martyred heroes, as
some of the Indians claim? Or
will they be outcasts who don’t
represent anybody and damaged
the common cause, as the Whi
House envisions?

—What is the future of BIA
Commissioner Louis R. Bruce,
who stayed with the Indians in
the barricaded BIA the initial 24
hours of the takeover?

—Why did the White House
promise the Indians amnesty from
Prosecution for occupying the
building but not from punish-
ment for damaging it or for theft?
With what authority did it make
available $66,650 in cash to
speed the Indians’ buck home?

On The Commune...

dents are harassed by local
xtuds who hope to push the
hippies into a fight, Sometimes
their (aunts are verbal, and other
mex they pull knives, but fights
materialize, ‘The victims
stigmatized as “chickens.”
Men with long hair are called
firls, Braless women are reat
curiousities, and the reality of
we them coincides with
media-ereuted images of “hippie
chicks.” ‘These signals arouse no
fear, though
One afternoon, a caravan of
young and old Chicanos masque
rading a hyppies marches up the
hill to the Kingdom, Some wear
head bands and beads, and
others have their faces decorated
with war paint. A bizarre funeral
parade, they climb the hill, say:

trying to deciph

5, 1970, evenin
and decid

August
m wet drunk
rough up the hippies, ‘They drive
thre town, atid ae the
and a woman, all Kingdom
dents, walking home. At
point, they force th
trunk af thear (wo ears
hae to bar, stopping
exhibiting hese

They
drive fra
hone

ified eargo, then come to a

st at a lake twenty miles south
While she is ull
y rape the wo
They pistol
leave them to
and nica
back to the

of Guadalupita
iy the unk, Uh
man tieee times,
whip the men

die. But nobody d
culously they

Kingdom ‘They
nvtaet the authorities

August 6, 1970,
drunks surprise Uhre
residents as they ait
sound fire, discussing last
night's kidnappings ‘The an
traders tell dhe not to neve or
they will die, but two of the
three ran for the safety of the
dark, uhen might. A bullet tits
one in the back and he dies
unstanitly, the escapes. The
nen mareh the third int

pistol at his back, On the way,
they force him to climb barbed:
wire barefooted, but somehow
he escapes, He runs back to Uh

dom, to jon

gun tuum,

on the side of a moun:
tain, At dawn, a search party

‘Two years lat insanity of
that 48 hours has met justi
Not the kind of justice the dead
Parents would have
and not the kind of

mas of the attack
might have wanted.
July charges against all but
ne were reduced l charges of
aggravated battery. ‘The five m
pleaded guilty and received sus
pended sentences and minimal
fines, ‘The sixth was charged
with voluntary manslaughter be
cause the D.A. said he was the
ringleader. He pleaded guilty and
was sentenced to a $500 fine
and two-ten years in prison.

It was the justice of poorly
lubneated judicial machinery, of
complex, timestalling legal
maneuvers, and of a reported
eyewitness disap;

Defense motions for consoli
1d for change of ve
delayed the trial for 0
and) then Martinez, Uh
suid key witnesses could not be
found, A counter-report said
they were in town to testify,

court

houned in a sh
house, and we
talked, they would dis
town.

The wo
the use at the
hearing, she was
intimidated, asked
ns (Did you

» didn't show for
prelmin:

painfully
typieal rape quest

like 0?) rr

W's now full, 1972, and ab
though communal life is not in
vogue, lutecomen go west, look
ing for a life of peace and
tranquility, A voung man, lon
hair,ouckpack, stands on Houte
66, thumb out
rkered onto a piece of card
hoard he holds in his uther hand
I stop to ask why he is going to

Paes,
T heard it's really far-out
they yot a lot of dope growing

out there, Hey. 1
where it all started

I think of the freak whe burnt
money in the face of a town
which has none and want either
ait or ery. [pull back on
the road and drive away.

to ve

WASHINGTON (AP)-Hard
times are shead for U.8. public
education during Presitlent
Nixon's second term, the ad-
ministration’s top education
spokesman has told newsmen.

“I think this administration is
going to take a position of being
very spartan in virtually all de-
partments of federal government
and I am sure education will not
be spared,” said Sidney P, Mar-
land, assistant secretary for edu-
cation in Health, Education and
Welfare.

“We are in for some difficult
times,” the former U.S. commis-
sioner of education told a news
conference, “I am not prepared
nor do I know at this moment
how difficult they will be but

I'm pretty sure they will be
difficult,”

Marland said the federal chare
of public education running
about $6 billion annually or 7 to
8 percent of total costs may not
decrease in the near future, But,
he indicated there may be #
rearranging of spending priori-
ties, with more money going for
research in the new National
Institute of Education,

Marland said the President has
made it clesr that he wants to
reduce inequities in the property
tax system for financing educa-

tion, adding that this
“necessarily implies some role
for the federal government in
financing elementary and secon-
dary education.”

EMK Outpolled McG

PRINCETON, N.J, AP ~ The
Gallup Poll says ils next-to-last
pre-election survey showed that
Sen, Edward M, Kennedy would
made 9

have stronger ree

against President Nixon than

Sen. George MeGovern

Nixon led McGovern by 59 to
36 percent in the mid-October
survey. Asked how they would
vote if the chu
Nixon and Kenni

were between
dy instead, the
President
pollster

same persons gave the
only a 5243. ede,
orge Gallup said Sunday

Kennedy's strength showed up
rly ax December 1971,

a pall showed him to be

the strongest potential candidate
among Democratic voters, ‘The
Massachusetts Democrat. trailed
Nixon by
points al the time, Gallup suid,

only 3 percentage

declined to be a
however, and he
campaigned for McGovern after
the South Dakota senator won

the nomination

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Days AVES mL,

Bronches im Major Cities io U.S.A.
aa Toterng Shee wth the ative Repti

prepared by exper

Gallup said the mid-October
poll showed Kennedy was
stronger than McGovern in sever:
al categories: among blue collar
workers, Kennedy lead Nixon by
53 to 41, while McGovern
trailed the President, 44 to 49.
Among Catholics, Kennedy led
Nixon 63 to 43, and MeGovern
trailed him 37 to 59.

A group calling itself “Citizens
for Kennedy Committee" has
begun a drive for Sen, Edward
M. Kennedy's election for presi-
dent in 1976-but without his

sanction and encouragement,

diree-
judent

Jeffrey M, Steenberg,
tor of the National
Union, eaid today the committee
will open an office in Washing:
ton in January, About 30 people
currently are involved, he said,
but declined to give therr names,

Keepsake Diamond Solitaires

The ultimate in beauty and brit
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Unga Lave

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE FIVE

‘ON THE BRIGHTER SIDE, GEORGE... THE ODDS ARE,
6/% 70 38% SOMEONE WILL EVENTUALLY FIND us!

Resort Area Suffers $20 Million in Flood Damages

Navy does Rain/War Dance in Cal.

by Eric Mankin
Alternative Features Service
‘The weather of an entire
Southern California county 1s
heing used as w guinea pig to Lest
Navy rainmaking devices, despite
an attempted U.S, Senate ban on
meteorological warfare
Working under a contract with
the U.S. Naval Weapons Center
at China Lake, Calif. a
called North American
Consultants has been carrying
out tests of “precipitation modi
fication devices in Santa Bar
bara County for at least four
years tests which they plan to
continue this winter
The (ests involve the dispersal
of the chemical silver iodide
from "fuses" which bum,
ding the silver compound in
form of finely dispersed
nto selected
(tions, ‘The silver peo:
vides nucle around whieh nan
drops condense, According to a
North American spokesman,
under appropriate conditions use
of the fusees increases earn fall by
some 50) per cent
No control over the project ts
exercised by the residents of
ant Barbara County, a resort
area which has suffered over
milhon of food damages ove
the pust three years ‘The only
eavihan regulation of the projet
currently in fore
posed by the
ment of Water &
bss heenses for
utterpls i the state
Under California law, lieensees
must publish a "notice of inten
ton’ poor to beginning nin
aking operations and file
repert an aueeutions immed:
wlely alter rainmaking atte
ae concluded, However
law contiaia ng provision for
pubhe hearings or other
by which citizens might ©
their reactions te proposed
“If someone

making yrayeets

objected,” a state official said,

hey would have to file a su
‘The state does not have any set
procedure.””

According to John Thompson,
who is directing the Navy. pro:
ject fur North American, the
Santa Barbara tests have “no
military applications, as such.”
China Lake Naval Weapons Cen
ter “just happens to be whe
this research is done. If you're
thinking in terms of military
applications, there are none as

ws 1 know "*
Senator Cluiborne Pell of
Rhode Island has charged, how
that US forces in Indo
din rainmaking

over Vietnam, both to elear U
areas of clouds for later
bombing and also-it is charged
to flood areas, in combination
with bombing and weakening of
the North Vietnamese dike
system Asked about this bya
reporter from the Santa Harbare

News und Revew,
replied “if you estimate the

“Thompson

rount of damage done by
impeding sonwone's Ceansports
tian (hy Hooding) ax opposed ti
Blowing them up or burning
F don’t think is so.
proywet duwetar denied
was any Conneetion
Navy finaneed can
making activities and the dis
troy Sante Barbara foods of
1969 and 1971 In 1968, he
acknowledged, cloud seedinyt
operations were earned on un th
months beture the January
1969 overflow, “but when at
became apparent that there
would be problems, we ceased
faperations ‘The watershed wa
completely saturated, the any
Unig Une atrea didn’t need was
According tw ‘Thompss
ailver iodide making
haw its effects within 01
hours of dispersal of the chem:

cal, and leaves no residue in the
environment
Weather
remains a part of th
senal in Asia, despite Senate
protest A recent news item in
the armed forces publication
Stars and Stripes mentioned that
planes based at Kurat Air Farce

control apparently

ailand, were engaged
a variety of missions, “nel
cloudseeding

enator Gaylord Nelson of
AVisconsin recently ultempted to
write into Uns year's military
Procurement authorization
Proviston against “the dissemina
ton of equipment or instruc
Gans, OF the precuring of agents
for starting firestorm, of using
weather modification aya
Weapon of war”
The Nelson provisions were
chmuated in conference
the House of Re
when the House canteres ob
weled that “ume win not avi
sble to yoither iaformation ty
evaluate the effects such

nendment might have an De
partment of Deterse

tion some leyista

pera
tomy” an aby
tive almeevery took an ian indica
then that cammaking remains
part of the An
Ant
Hegeuretens contacted at Ch
Liske we

boing, tented

deviery
ta Barbies
used ver
Indochina ‘They acknowledged

however, tbat devices desngied
at Chine Lake were an use an
amibitary operations it Okinawa
the Phalippines, anid Alankis

Haale

China Lake
reportedly un praygress at at leant
two other locations East St
Louis, where the Air Force
erat Scott Field
Environmental ‘Tech
nology Applications Center, in
Suitland, Maryland

Pampering the Powerful

In an exclusive interview in the Washington Star Now

last week. President Nixon called for an end tot
permissiveress.” He spoke of instilling an
reliance” the American people during his sec
and compared the average American to 4 clull
and catered co by too many governmental prog
The “pampering” Nixon mentioned way
reference so the social domestic poverty pr
last decads. At best, those programy tated
many ¢ ught up in “the poverty cycle.” At
caused new t

were distal failures chat

shattered Topes. But te say that the natu
papmered by them is an absurdity
Nix a

some who felt

statements seem to lay to rest che
Is huge re-election iar
future reek

subseq tent unconcern with

Fest tn dassive new social welfare inew
from. most recent statements that the op]
will be re

More vermment “intervention

in thes sheve of social welfar
Intere tingly, Nixon faily to notice a doub
evident in his new call for self-reliance. The de
militar

billions oi dollars and pump money into “ox

programs continue to rob the publ

rograms that lead to the dependen
abhor

tractors on the government and dependence «

these,

presidenc seems. to dependence

Americans on the defense industry to ach
stability. But Nixoa does not see the depe
governmental defense contracts ay “pampering
he denne government subsidation ol detense
faced with bankruptey (Lockheed being the 1
“pampering
pampoed by the government in the Nixetian

example) as It is only the pow
is easy te sce why when one studies the role big hi
played 11 caderwriting the Republican campary
The resident's record has been weakest on
fis administration has done little to reb

combat poverty, provide jabs. His polica

sptenily £

wored big business aver poor white «
group members

Ie appears his second term will offer leale
the first. tay a tragic indication of what

Years”

will mean to the poor and powerle

Campus Chest a Success

Tou utter
the Hood ot

the bright spors of canpu
Hitreryin and recrimmation
Gampus and on the editorial: page
One ot these bright spots iy Campus Center. «

thiy vear successfully cansed desperately sneec
the Head Start Program
Campus Chest was not only a finances

woes also. Student

Center lobby

The Chas of

A Campy Chest Cont
1974 pave a donation. ‘The t
sponvored hake sales tn short, the event be
together, an occurence which is none
Albany State

Chanwomen Sue Pallas and Lorrane Kuban

siipus
we think was. must appropriate
Jeorney ofa thousand miles begiis wit

Campus Chest brought this campus just ot
toward sense of community and toward aah
care, then we believe their stremious flor

more than economic benefit

PAGE SIX

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBEK 1+}

ommunications|

Hood against student-run birth clinic

To the Editor:

In response to the letter of Barbara Matilsky in the
November 3rd, Friday Albany Student Press con
cerning SUNY - A Birth Control Clinic ~ Dream or
Reality.

Under no circumstances will any special group of
students set up a birth control or gynecology clinic
in the Student Health Service. I did not agree to
anyone's setting up "a once a week cl
has been a misunderstanding here to say the very

. When a clinic is set up it will be by those

ted to do so and on the basis of need and in
accordance with priorities. Meanwhile, it is for
Planned Parenthood to determine what workload
they ean or will carry, not any atudent group, There
gencies in the com
munity in addition to Planned Parenthood which

There

are many other agents and
are already able to provide conception control

As a matter of fact much thought and careful
planning has gone into this subject und it 1s possible
that if and when we have such a clinic it might be
set up Lo serve the entire university community, As
of now, students’ needs are be
by existing agencies

met satisfactorily
L repeat, if sueh # clinic is set up it will be set up
hy the Student Health Service just as any other part
of our program Lo serve the whole student com:
munity or even perhaps the university community
and it will not be sponsored by any special group of
students.

Just as we anticipated the need for gynecologists

‘Jesus, be my guide.

Te the Editor:
I would like to submit this, that came from my
essence: Lo all who wish to reflect upon it Lam new
to Jesus and | have many troubles and doubts, many
ampus. “This

prayer came spontaneously after | left a prayer

of which are shared by others on

group tonight, for | was very troubled about_my
faith, about my loyalty to the Lord 1 was in the
library studying Restatements on Contracts, and
those around me kept swearing “Jesus!” To me, at
that moment, they weren't cursing they were
stimuli to induce me to put down my hooks, take a
piece Of paper, and write the flaw of my con
sciousness. The following is what came 1 hepe
you'll print it not for me, but for the Chastan

community an campus for (heir benefit

Jesus, he my guide, my mspoation! Lam un
worthy to be of you but an my selfishness, Fwant to
he of you Lama lowly man, ane af thas: for whom
you drei on the erens, tr save fur eternity, Keep me
ut your side, Lund Cruse you, Lard!

Sweet desus, corer me with your goodness and
hte Pneed consetation in Ons tired world Lwant to
he with yous vet Lam af tus world, also Can't
despise my beady, hut know that sts faults displease

uw Teach me. Lord, teveh me se Chat Emay be ted,

Fam the Way, the Truth, und the
bah 0 Jesus gue me the Houd, frach me
weil tMumie my path

tragedy within a

What am Phat a poor man

1 ser aquest shes Hew may vou
nt su, Lond? Phau to vou for
theme fear ame but for thas an at whe
Lond!

yl. hour me and listen [have lutte te
hut Ewwnt to give what Chace to you L
juted you many times ae the past but Eden't
runt te pale myself aguin Help me, Lord, you who
1 the Climate Comforter Thave fated and have
june away frum vou many umes Lam a weak
person But help me, Lord you have newer failed
we Teall an you constantly for strength, and need
fu now more than Poe ever had Help me, Lord!

Meuse! Theuugh vou, Jesus, Lash Uns

Thank you, and the Lord be with you, always
Charles Sullwan

and provided that service years ago, we have long
considered the possibility of birth control on
campus and have worked closely with Planned
Parenthood and Albany Family Planning to keep
ab.east of needs and to consider various possibili-
ties. We are still working on it

When and if we do it, it will be done right. This
takes professional staff, space, time and money

Janet Hood M.D.
Director

Student Health Service

Can't keep a cat

To the Editor.

Last semester, 1 was assigned a room in Mohican
Hall, on Indian Quad. ‘The girl] was assigned to live
with was living with her boyfriend in the dorm,
After I arrived, her boyfriend remained in the room
with us. I brought this up to my dorm director and
nothing was done. So for the entire semester f had
two roommates, one of which was not welcomed by
me, Then too, there are the few things which the
university allows to go on in the dorms which L
consider harmful to my welfare, They are the
following

1) drinking ix allowed in the dorms,
the students the opportunity of getting drunk, If the
students would stay in their rooms, it would be all
es seem to go on all night which

nd thus gives

right, but pa
hinder my studying, and thus my education, as well
aay my right to peace and qui

2) the people on the floor use the toilet, but
forget that there are other people around, and so
forget how to use the toilet, or else they get sick
and can't be bothered with cleaning it up. This too
is a violation of my welfare, which the university is
supposed lo be concerned with. To top this off, the
woman who has the courage to face this garbage
everyday is told that she does not clean right, and
has to fight for her job. If the girls don’t have
enough respect for themselves to keep the place
decent, then it is no one’s fault but their own, and
not the cleaning woman's

3) the university reserves the right to inspect our
rooms at any time; this is an invasic. of my right to
privacy, which is guaranted to me by the Bill of
Rights,

None of these things seem to affect the university
system, but the one thing that does affect it is
the possession of a small animal residing in the dorm
who bothers no one. This animal happens to be my
kitten, which I have received notice to remove from
my room. Since I don't have a roommate, because
the girl who was with me moved out to live with her
friend, the kitten does not disturh a roommate, as
my former roommate's boyfriend was doing. The
kitten has 'd to stay in the room, so sh
does not nin ow ¢ hall where she might
frighten oF get in people's way, us the parties which
xo on al night do, She knows how to use a fitter
box, and would rath o to the bathroom
any place else, This means that her bathroom is
clean, because she apprecia {ig clean and
not offensive or Uroublesome to the humans around
her, whereas some humans don’t even have this
sense of decency, The kitten stays in her room
uurantocmg other people's right to privacy. She

aason, and usually ix 50
Twould

never cries out without
quiet that (C1 didn’t know she was in the
believe she was gone. Therefore, she respects
ther’s righty to peace and quiet, which some
humans in the dorm do not do, Yet, this kitten is
tuld she hay to leave I'd Like to know why? If you
say that FE symed a contract agreeing (a thi
dition, then TF would Like to know if legally, a
phlet stating rules, which you are not asked if
you agree with, ts considered w contract? What I
J was an application form for a room, not a
conteae
Apparently the university is eoncemed only with
certain lypes of welfare, some of which are not
beneficial a me, but then perhaps only particular
given these aghts, and others aren't UL
ture af God, E wil claim
is really. the
In this

people
am forced lo give up a &
that she is my property, although sh
property of her ereator, and no one else
world she is mine, and to remove her from my
possession | will consider another violation of (hi
privileges granted meas a citizen of the United
States of America, theaugh the Constitution
Thank you
Sincerely yours,
Gul Sisto

Benezet not ‘‘on edge’

To the Editor:

1 would like to take this opportunity to thank Mr, von Nostitz for
his article regarding President Benezet’s participation on my talk
show, “Intercourse,” November 8th, on WSUA. It was well-written
and informative for readers who missed the show. However, I would
like to comment on two points in his story. Mr, von Nostitz wrote,

and Benezet appeared on edge throughout the hour long
program." I definitely did not think this was the case at all, The
callers asked intelligent questions, and Dr. Benezet replied in an
honest and relaxed manner, I had no guests in the studio except his
wife,

Also, the article mentions a caller inquiring about 8.A. President
Mike Lampert's recent column in the ASP, and Benezet's response. It
should have noted that the President remarked he hadn't seen the
ASP that day, thereby couldn't comment specifically about the
column. I thought it was an informative show, and our audience’
interest and participation was very gratifying.

Sincerely yours,

Phil Chansky
Producer and Host
WSUA’s “Intercourse”

Justice for 60 year-old students

To the Editor.

I feel hesitant to comment on a situation in which I am not
directly involved, but 1 feel a reply is needed to Prof, Hauser's letter
in your issue of October 20.

Professor Hauser: The injustice of a healthy 60-year-old student
asking for a space at the near end of the parking lot is obvious when
we consider the plight of the poor under 30 faculty member who
then has to walk from the far end.

Yes Professor, equal rights for all! But let us not forget the
disabled and old, both faculty and student!

Why should all users of the parking facilities on any SUNY
campus, under a certain age (say 50) not be required to park in any
available parking area?

Your response to this problem seems to indicate an attitude typical
of SUNY faculty. An attitude that seems to say: We are employees
of the system and we will be here after you are gone, therefore we
should have special privileges. What this attitude does to further the
educational process is questionable.

Yours for justice for all,

Bob Lusle

Editor, Tower

Ulster County Community College
Stone Ridge, New York

Chinese Studies Offered

To the SUNYA Community

Gently | stir a white feather fan,
With open shirt sitting in a green wood.

I take off my cap and hang it on a jutting stone,

A wind from the pine-trees trickles on my bare head,

4 poem by Li Po (700-762)

This coming semester, we are rather fortunate in the Chinese
Department to have with us two young and brilliant educators~-Ling
Chung Odell and Helen Sun. Of the two literature courses being
ed in the spring (Survey of Classical Literature and Modern
Literature in Translation), the former will be conducted by

new book, Women Poets of China, will be
published early in 1973, Modern Chinese Literature in Translation
will be taught by Helen Sun, who ufter winning the Samuel Goldwyn
Creative Writing Award early in her career, has recently won the
Chia-hsin Annual Award (Taiwan) for ‘The Best Novel of the Year
Her course will include w survey of the literary scene from the 1919
May Fourth Revolution to recent publications of Chairman Mao.
Much emphasis will be pluced on the writings of Lushun, "the
futher of modern Chinese literature.”
‘Those interested in Luking either language or literature cours
se register first, and then at your leisure, contuct Mrs, Odell in
room 865 of the Humanities building for more information, See you
in cliass!!
Mark 8, Bergman

ee |

SDAY, NOVEMBER 14.

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE SEVEN

On Security:

continued from page 1

strike care as little about Central
Council as they do about us.
You have maybe fifty students
who really feel strongly about
‘open parking. The rest couldn't with stereotypes, I thought, nod-
care’ less, We have about three ed, smiled, and left with my
hundred cars parked illegally in own,

front of the dorms. Yet two eae

dred and fifty of them, if we

drove up with our two truck and
went boo, would be running out
in their underwear to get their
cars out.”

‘There definitely is a problem

Security Director Williams: Our Man Friday

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ALBANY, N.Y. 12203

OR CALL 456-2547 770 9 P.MJ
Proposed Site: South Mall Vicinity
IN ORDER TO MAKE THE DAY-CARE

CENTER MATERIALIZE SOONER, AN EARLY
RESPONSE IS IMPORTANT!

FRIDAY - 20:25 — In the car,
rounding the curve by the lake,
passing the baseball field and the
tall bright Silo sign and the gym,
the headlights capture two hitch-
hikers. They stick their thumbs
out and laugh, Without com-
ment, Lieutenant O'Connor
swerves past them.

“We make it a point to stop
and see if we can help anyone
that seems like they're in any
sort of trouble. We do make an
attempt to create a community
service image.”

“For instance?”

“Punny you should ask.""

We swerve into Dutch Quad
parking lot, Another patrol car is
stopped perpendicular to an old
model foreign car with its hood
up. A guy, two girls, and a
security officer are looking
down into the engine, It seems
the kid's Urying to put a new fan
belt on, “Got tools?” O'Connor
asks, “Yeah,” To the other cop
“Okay, Cover my zone." His
jacket sleeves yet pushed up and
we spend twenty minutes jux
ling crescent wrenches
Point for the bad guys
20.50 Back on tour, we weave
through the deserted parking
Jats, O*Conne
fednosed flashlight, now and
aygiin using it teehee the lock:
At nine 0

on ear door ‘eluck the
hal-howr radio eheck startles. us
units eal ay “Zone ane
twa. O'Connor

podiwar west

Dewatown

blank ayn A
quy sweatyunt joy by ane
waves, ‘The Lieutenant neds.
The downtown dorms for the
past few weeks have heen ander

we tlio

Senge: by ab teoupy of kids whe eall
themselves “the Purple gang

Five assigned one eae down there
each evenmng ta Ley to chase
these kids ont ‘They've been
ppullang, fare alarms, Darrassiing the
tirls, making a gener

fal Themselves.
tral ear is down there, thie stu
denit pateal ear ts there, plus twer
ig stele That ages
fe jwople trying to
the situation T's not
semous problem at this
the yume

heeenie servotis af an Albany: fire

Bul it could easily

truck gets mite au accident rv
spounelanig toys Folge alarm
1 wateh the tashlight beam:
Hwuinee from ear to ear, remem:
bering my freshman year dawn
town, the fights and robberies
that happened on the way to oF
from O'Heany’s and Jake's and
W's, how Security

would’ or couldn't de any

thing we called a dorm meeting

where everyone threatened and
cursed and stood on tables and
finally emptied into the streets
trying to “find those punks and
show them," but only found a
couple of fourteen-year-old kids
pitching pennies against the
laundramat and pushed them
around until it was too em-
barassing, dwindling back to the
dorms in twos and threes. I
remember too how the next
night one freshman reeled into
Alden with his face the texture
fof a butcher's apron and two
others found themselves all too
alone on the wrong side of
zipgun,

Thinking, yeah ~ police pro

tion is no sure thing, but
being without it can be a down,

21:05 ~ The radio blares:
“Unit one to unit three.”*
“Unit thre
“Are you re
e three y
What's your location? Are

ly to take over

you in zone three?’

No, | came over to see how
you made out with that fanbelt
But you're missing. So 1 wanted

know if you'll take over your

Yeah ‘That's affirmative, Ul
wo hack to zone two and you
cam stay in zone three, Okay?’

He penteplease

You're going into zone three

Tl yo into zone two,

‘min zone two now. E was
eaquusting for you to take over
cone three so Lean resume aane
two, What do you want?

AMI right, do it that way
WEDNESDAY PAST «This
year's Security isn’t the same as
last year’s. Nol every Security

‘curity officer. Ap-
are deceiving. Smo
ing his pipe in his orange chair,
James Williams explained

“We've been peace officers for
sume time, for s
the latte

years, In
rt of May a bill was
passed giving us police officer
suthority, New York
distinetion between peace offi
cen and police officers, Only a

kes a

police officer can execute a
seareh warrant of an arrest wi
rath, Out uniform patroln

in two civil serview cate
urade wight and grade twelve
The grade rights are supposed to
be in thase areas of

loss sttseeptib

FRIDAY © 21:18 Liew

O'Connor, turning into €

Quad parking lot, ced flashlight

bouncing crazily over the ruts
Wo've atte

people with

ted some younger
the recent change

over from: the old. institution

SKI CLUB

November 20
at Henway’s

ALBANY STATE :

AN EVENING IN TYROL
Wine and Cheese
2
Interest Party
Come and find out about the
BEST EUROPEAN SKI TRIP OF THE SEASON

— NO GIMMICKS-
meet the people of the club

presents

go

8:30 pm
FREE
ae

“There Definitely is a Probl

safety officer to campus secunty
officer. I would say prohably
28% of the officers now have st
least two years of college. with
another 10% continuing their
education,

“We're in a transition pened
from the old school-guard tye
image to a law enforcem,
agency. Younger peuple
come in, The majority «
younger people have reves)
the same training us any
enforcement officer would
the outside. In addition ts» that
they've also had various iw
week seminars for sensitwuy
training to younger peuple, the
academic community
oriented law-enforcement
than the old idiot on the
routine.

“Most of the older un
still sitting on the grade e)si
‘They don't have policr «fficx
status, They

ed, The change

twelve is based on tik
motional exams, having th
ifications to do the 9

oral interview. Seme

were shot down Fm
now the old sehen
type, the kind
had a chanee to ge

school hecause he had
I'm talking

years old, ‘The day shit!
with that type f
crowded two and Une

Meet me at the west
BA

“Affirmative
Pull up by a security
and two kids we
miral Byrd artic jack
wiseuss smi The
ught them wandering th
took their names

+ polite
startles me: ‘Are those yur 1
do notin We

PAGE EIGHT

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY

of Stereotypes.”’

could have run, man.”

“Yeah, don't get up tight,
man.”

I cringed. The other cop didn’t
say a word. If this was Dragnet,
Gannon would have blurted
“Wateh it punk, when my part
ner bears down he bears down
hard and fast and deep enough
to strike oil.”

But O'Connor: “I'm not up
tight, If you're in a building that
you don’t belong in, you're tres-
passing."” Very collected. We get
new names. They're checked, by
radio, in the phone book
They're good. “We don't mind
you being on campus but stay
‘on areas open to the public.””

Right, man.”

21:45-If you're a cop there's a
question of guns. You don’t see
‘one under O'Connor's jacket, Or
under any other Security jacket
‘And he’s not happy about it, His
eyes widen and his voice drops:

“It’s up to the president of

ised. My own personal feeling ty
tas far as this campus is
Jo we are the law en
netion, Not only do
have the student body to
contend with, we also have peo
ple from the outside community
to contend with
T know of situations where it
couple of officers see a guy duck
behind a car. They yo aver ‘The
guy crawls undemeath the exr
As it turns out he’s inthe
process of burglariany the car
1 pull the guy out from
th the ear and come up

COMPANY SEEKS ONE
AREA REPRESENTA
VE, SALARY OPEN
SENIOR OR POST
GRADUATE STUDENT
PREFERRED
CONTACT ROBERT
WENGER. 489-4300.
°

with an automatic weapon.
Here's two guys who've just ar-
rested an armed individual and
din't know he was armed, Either
one or both could have been
shot. It seems Lo me that to ask
a man to perform this function
and not give him the proper
equipment to protect his own
life is wrong.’

We follow a red sports car that
shoots in from Western Ave.
O'Connor's eyes jump mechanic
ally from the road to the speed
‘ometer and back again, His mind
is elsewhere.

“also feel T have a respons
ibility to get back home to my

fe and three kids every day.

at the same time, I still

out and say that the

anization should be

armed, because of the manpower
the lack of trained

Chapel House:

by Carol Blackley
they'll be peaple unhappy.”

T think the students realize
now that we're here to perform

crete State University
wet them: is part of ae ts
inthe ultimat

equipped
at us, Chaps

the Dutch Qua
Many students, Uve found

Hf they realize either

white renee and know tittle about
what it hay to offer the SUNY A,

aka, Killing, Whe Built around the tun of tw

Yeah’ thinking fast it
ean adlmuniste

might have undermined a couple

Gf stereatypes that students |W ATS

sedis td Mawr GORESUEIIS by the politicians. Later

ing, “IVs toe east be
you're dealing with individuals,
(when you ilk
tions) Finally, i 1970, the house

Tuy my job at’y hare ter ne
that students are andiyids
a Corporation and Ww

present name of Albany

the bake

Indian Quad He

his cle staring
hing to tun It

seoniy hee wanted 10 be a € fan
hinetorn other institutic
and 1 deft

graphic area
somebody whe could de seme aja’ Baues

elude
ment, and
priest, Harvey Hates and

thing for law ente
turned the eae dawn towards
Western Avenue Not five
minutes pass and the radio apens | Ministry
sid says a gil by the lake

a white male with ae | the RC

sele who pulled out x | four men work out of
playboy faldout
pants, and shook ly pride at

unzipped dus | Chapel
her
pits
Laughing, 1 say, “There must
ea moral there sumewhere
Yeah, Maybe at's

‘A panint far the ze weekend religus m

730 pm. and Suturday

‘Albany Collegiate Interfaith Center, commonly known as Chapel House.

Sitting in the Chapel House
fs easy to forget that you're right
acres the street fram the con
Loeuted
on a hillside across Perimeter
Road, on the south side af the
House overtooks
athletic field

not aware of this House's exis

century by the former Republ
yan Atlaunny, 1

i was purchased by the
Counert of Churches and used is

sant anstitu basis for campus ministry

by the Albany Hntertaith
ven tbs

oc Interfaith Center, However

the familiar name of Chapel

Open for ase to the University
Chapel
House hay four full time chap:

two of whom relate with

eduention in this geo
he chaphains in
Anglican

Smith, sponsored by the United
in Higher Education,
snd Paul Smith, sponsored by
Diocese of Albany

House but spend) the

revices are held on campus
during the week and at the
Chapel House on weekends. ‘The
ngs nn

clude Jewish services Friday at
a 10

ATTENTION PROFESSORS & STUDENTS

There is a new bookstore in the area called
the BOOK BAZAAR located at 813
MADISON AVENUE, ALBANY 12208 tel
465-1301

Teacher and Student Discount
On All Books

FANTASTIC SELECTION

BOOKS FOR COURSES
10 DAY SERVICE AT DISCOUNT PRICES

CONTACT US ANYTIME FOR THE NEXT TERM

_BOOK BAZAAR

‘slawsky

“Going Every Day and Evening’

ves and eucharists
are held Saturday at 11 pam, and
day at 9:30am. HE am.

every day und
fortunately, he feels, the House
ix not big enough to be run ai
here just

and 5 pam. drop-in operation

Chapel House also provides a
place where study. groups, reli r *, it ix necessary

‘operate on aschedil endar
“Run on love (as Mr, Smith
says), Chapel House maintains a
and requires the

ious arganizations and prayer
groups can meet AL present
faculty member fram the Pewee
sides in the

Studies Program, Light budget

House and holds workshops and responsibilities of all partie
paling groups to succeed

Any students desiring tobe
counseling, draft counseling and come Chapel
day retreats are atl held at the House and its funetions ean do
House ax well su by contacting one of the
religious organi

special sessions there Wedd

dinners, Coffer house sessions,

involved with

Paul Smith, Catholic Chaplain,
feels the “students make good
use Of Chapel House [bis going

chaplains or

zations, all of which are regis:

tered in the Campus Center.

HELLMAN'S COLONIE QpPOSITE

W CENTER *":

THEATRE 459-2170

" "LADY SINGS THE BLUES’
A RED HOT SMASH!”

GENE SHALIT, NBC-TV

" “LADY SINGS THE BLUES’ IS A MOVIE- MOVIE
THAT IS A JOY TO WALLOW IN WITH LUMP IN
THROAT AND A SONG IN YOUR HEART!”

JUDITH CRIST, NEW YORK MAGAZINE

EXCLUSIVE
AREA
PREMIER

Y
DIANA ROSS /S
BILLIE HOLIDAY

DIANA ROSS IS NOTHING SHORT OF DAZZLING!”

A

NOVEMBER 14, 1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

PAGE NINE

FOR SALE

1964 Valiant-Good for at least
one year of transportation, Runs
well, $75. Call 456-8682,

1968 Comaro, low mileage, excel-
lent condition. 4 new tires, new
brakes, new shocks, Call—Day
457-3390, After 6 p.m
843.4755,

Snow tires, radial, Goodyear,
158SR13, $45; cal) Earl 674-3045,
Firestone snow tires, 6.85x15,
excellent condition, both $25.
472-5013,

Snow Tires-5,60x15 Goodyear
Polygiass. Used only one season-
$35. Call 449-8517 after
8:00p.m.

Gibon J-40 6 string acoustic
guitar. Good condition. Call Joe!
7-4077. $150.

205cm Head *360' skis~$65,
Call Ken—489-1626,

Durst M600 enlarger plus
daikroom equipment. Hardly
used, reasonable. 482-1556.

T.V.-21"'screen-portable-black &
white-excellent condition-$25-
call 489-0823.

SEIDENBERG
JEWELRY

earrings 2 for $1

patches 25°

Mant 10 9
Sot 10 6

264 Central Ave.
cor, No. Lake Ava
Albany
463-2455

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT &
WEDDING RINGS. 3,000 ring
selections In all styles at 50%
discount to students, staff, and
faculty, Buy direct from leading
manufacturer and SAVE! 1/2
carat $179, 3/4 carat only $299,
For free color folder write: Box
42, Fanwood, N.J. 07023.

WANTED

WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE
Lione! trains. Quick cash. Call
439-5109

HELP WANTED

Parking attendants wanted part.

time Mon.-Fri, Mornings/

Afternoons. Apply: Twin
Gleason.

SERVICES room, kitchen, living room-all
big. Right on Washington Park,
rent $54.00 a month per person
Typing Done In My Home.  pius utilities, near bus tine,

869-2474, Phone 465-9660 Michael.

Need a math tutor? Call Donna
457-7768.

LOST & FOUND

Come Ski Solden, Austria with
the Albany State Ski Club. 12
days—January 4, 1973-January
15, 1973. Price: $312—transpor-
tation, meats, accomodations,
taxes, gratuities, skibag, party.
Contact: Robert Waldman—
518-465-3706. P.O. Box 1780D
SUNYA

Woman's College Ring. Barrel
shaped ruby stone, College of
the Holy Spirit, 1971, Inside
engraving—Mildred C. Bernido,
Call 472-3350.

LOST-Bio Notebook With A
Flowered Cover, Needed Des-
*Professional typing*Pickup & — Perately. 371-6839,
delivery on campus* Call Jackie
393-5385"

LEARN TO ORIVE—
Professional driving instructor
from Triple A Auto Driving
School, Inc, located at 160-02
Northern Bivd., Flushing New
York, Special rates for SUNYA
students, Call Howie 489-1626,

Found in Paine. Notebook
belonging to Bill Hoouie. Please
call Dana 7-8808,

REWARD! (o anybody who can
return two legal sized pads con:
taining notes on linguistics fost
in Humanities 27 last Thursday
night. Call after 4: 465-4147

FOUND: Muttyoung male,
golden color with tong tail. Well
trained, Call 7-3020 of 7-3024.

SUMMER IN VERMONT? Think
Middlebury Collage. Advanced study
In Franch, German,

Spanisn, Beginning and

study In Chinese, Japan

work toward the M.A. as

Joraduate. Write Room 324, Sunder
land Language Center, Middlebury
VT _05753

PERSONALS

Dear Tony,
| heard you were fantastic dur
ing the holidays. I'll take at least

HOUSING

Time Sales Positions
Hours to suit your
schedule, Must be neat appearing
and have a serviceable car. Ave-
rage students are currently earn:
ing over $10 per hour. 462-1960
L. FEY to arrange a personal
interview,
“The Hogazette” 1s requesting
contributions. Call the Hog Con:
trol Board 457-8987

in 49 states and 57 countries to
provide badly needed health ser-
vices in African villages, Asian
cities, Pacific Islands, Indian
reservations, Chicano cont
munities, Appalachia, migrant
labor camps. Work in cone
munity-run free drug rehab-
ilitation centers, mobile health
units. Volunteer a year or two.
Peace Corps and VISTA need’
vou. For information and appli
cations see your placement
director or call Margie
Arnuczky/NYC (212)

Tower ‘EAST CINEMA’S

Weekend

| LOVE MY WIFE! HONEST!

ELLIOTT

Feature:

LOVE MY WIFE! 1 D0" | DO!

GOULD

INA DAVID L_ WOLPER Production

“TLOVE MY WIFE!”

BRENDA VACCARO -

+ ANGEL TOMPKINS

UNIVERSAL PICTURE “ECHNUCOLOM fy

/ NOVEMBER 17 and 18

quad et

se eroM

LC7 = 7:30 and 9:30

$1.00 without

10 Holiday Specials.

Female Roommate wanted start. me

ing January 1. Own room, on
bustine. Call 449-8528

Dear Crispi
Thanx for the weekend you
made us a man.

Spacious 3 bedroom apartment
for rent. Available January Ist.
Near bustine. $200/month, Call
438-6594,

Love
Weasel and Tit
Beverly,
Are you still alive.

Farm; 7 bedroom, Iz baths, 30
mi, south of Albany $250.
1-239-4800 eves.

Joe 7-7723
PS. Say hello to Krishna.
Cris,

We still love ya

Bo & Charleen

Sisters and Brothers of 4 + 2
and Indian: Thanks tremendous
much!—Lorraine and “Head:
start

Dear Crisp,

Happy 19th;. You've got one
more year, Remember Green.
land

Roommate Wanted~-Country
House, just south of Albany.
Own room. $50/month, Call
after 6462-4813,

1 or 2 female roommates wanted
for spring semester. $50/mo, on
busine, Call 463-3841.

Graduate Student seeking small
house or 4 room apartment on
outskirts of Albany from De:
cember on. Please call 472-3684

Little Susie & Humbert

House Hunting?1971 Parkwood
taller, 2 bedroom and study
Many extras. Reasonable, Close
to college, Interested? Call
311-7451

To the guy who had a git! pull
course cards for A Atm Oceans
and Disc.-sect.012, Mon. Nov. 6.
Please return cards to me, |
have gotten into trouble and
cannot prereg, until {have
cards, Call 482-9217

House For Rent, Four Students.
Convenient To Bus.
Call 459-7352.

Colonie.

305.
My vassals are the greatest
Queenie

2 Roommates Wanted-each to
Rave spacious single room, bath:

Leaving the country?

PASSPORT PHOTOS
(Grad/Med School Pictures)

Quick, experienced, cheap service
plus latest passport info and applications.

PICTURES TAKEN: Tomorrow Wed. Nov.15
7:30-9:30P.M. Bio 248

fe EAC 22k 2h 2h 2A C2 a i IR 2 2 A OC a 2 AC 2 OK

To all our friends who gave their time,
money, and effort:

THANK YOU!
Campus Chest '72 couldn't have mado it
£ without your help.

— ea

ae a afc aie a ae aie 2k ae a
aicokakcak ak ak aK AK

aca

ATTENTION
SONGLEADERS:

any changes in
Holiday
Sing
songs must be
in CC 364 by
November 15

hungering
for a
turkey

dinner?

Me

OR

Are you
hungering

for a ride
home to
eat that
turkey

dinner???

If so.....

me,

place an ad
in the

RIDE/RIDERS
WANTED
SECTION

in time for

Thanksgivin

ALBANY STUDEN’ PRESS

‘Atom Heart” — Unsettling?

by Bill Brina

Last Friday and Saturday nites
the Dance Couneil presented a
most unusual interpretation of
“The Atom Heart Mother Suite,"
twenty-three minutes of the
music of Pink Floyd, The con:
ception itself was altogether ad.
mirable; Atom Heart Mother
fairly bets to be set to dance;
it’s definitely programmatic and
expressionistic enough to be
rich material for physical drama,
yet it’s too abstract and non
specific to become any kind of
dramatic production per se. Best
of all, it's ambiguous enough to
lend itself to almost any imagi
native interpretation

What producer Steve Aminoff
and the dancers saw in the

A.S.0. Strikes Again!

By Andy Palley
‘The Albany Symphony playec
another of their famous. “s
wh; certs Saturday night
Half the program was youd, and
half was an utter hore, simply
because the orchestra played as
were bored. Something
the
people are being paid owed
non scale to play Schubert
and they really ought to du a
youd job wh
Schubert's: Fourth Symphony
is aot the most dynamic work
ever written. Neither is Haydi’s
100th, nor Mozart's 20th, nor
Beethoven's Ist. When the ASO
played Beethoven's Sth earlier i
the season, they played at well
hecause they liked it, and over
came both its extreme difficul
ties and Julius Hegyi's miserable
interpretation ‘They just
couldn't get to love the Sehu
bert, though, and the playing
was indifferent and sloppy in the
final two. movements. Nothin
like two weeks of rehearsal be
tween Stravinsky and Mahler!
Albert Ginastera’s Variatwines
Concertantes isa whale of a
piece by anyone's standards |
confess to my ignorance, | had
never hear it before Mis a
well-presented scheme for mod
ern orchestral variation, exploit
ing the full resources of an un
Unusual in that
it contains only one trumpet

usual orchestra

fone trombone, two horus, and
wet a full string section.
gether, they run through ten
Variations and two interludes
(one for strings and une for
winds)

The variations wei
in that they were

Faseanatng
extremely
short, nu more than a minute or
two in mest coe, but captured
so wide range of emotions. ‘The
G pening vanation for cell
(which TE expleeted Dong Mente
to play better) tess directly
inte the Latte for stom. by a
breath-takung laygh neste He uses
1 hhkeaw bridge, hut how exposed
Was! Meant would travee hhatd a
yal Partac

heart attack ate the sp

Symphony ss certannly. Maliler
Moat simple work Ht hay all the
elelqanice and aristovratie favor
OC his Larger effisrts, and yer the
Passionate —emeations
through. And, alter listen

wast (Schubert)

tually «conclusion Hd ¢
to yeurs before) Gustav Mahler
wi mly person whi knew

Suite, though, stretched even
the most liberal bounds of inter
pretation, Cued by shifts of
lighting that were uncomforta
bly reminiscent of 2001, the
dancers shrieked and moaned,
played through duets of attrac
tion and repulsion, built minia:
ture social systems which
seemed to disintegrate on com-
mand from an external dynam:

by the electronic

pulses of the music, and ul
mately returned to their original
stasis, It was a startling concep:
tion, and (o my non-expert eve

seemed extremely well ©

cuted, yet it was ultimat

settling, Unsettling, because it
unieated a neo-Skinnerian
pleau of extemal control, un:

how to orchesteate to the fullest
True, Wagner used large arches
tras anid Berlion was master at
the werd effect Bult was only
Mahler who knew how. te
wrench t und fair every
veeasiont i er
ents combinations at vst
ments And He dulit jut the

v1 aught

sther Mah
oan th

overall concept of the
piece was, L think, a correct ane
Conductor Hegyr's unterpret
every detul [dent tink he's
experienced enough with Mahler
te tes a darinat feat of mgenunty
now and then Exen dubuy Hegyr
has us Iimntations ‘The tempos
followed the instructions to the
letter (every “hedachty
bedachtygs, and the ames
were satisfactory. there way en
ough contrast for all Marjory
Faller miade thes cance after
the tied movement, aad sang
the flowing fyries to the favate
with aplomb) Aga, 1 would
father she sang a a hte Lighter
but that’s a pumt 1 shouldn't
Dayyle over The fet ay that she
sang beautifully and wath ease
and grace

And so, the orchestra berg
Fascmated hy Gustav and: tus
netirenes, phased micely and with
euthusnsm Selubert deserves a

better Gite, thaugl he's not

settling, because it opted for the
easy cliche of portraying the
electronic pulse as physical pain;
insettling, because it refused to
confront the nature of electron-
ic technology as an extension of
the way Man knows himself, 1
don't hear that in the music of
Pink Floyd, although I see it all
too often the way our cultural
avante-garde sees itself.

And One Note: All reviews are
subjective, of course, but this
‘one, due to the subject matter,
more so than most. Any com
munications dealing with this
will be most welcome; it may be
as good a place as any to start
dialogue with you, the “cultural
consumer” on this campus,

For Yer
Enjoyment

Room at the Top,” a searing
commentary on the hollowness
of contemporary values, will be
shown at Harmanuy Bleeker Li
brary on ‘Tuesday, N

Hith, at Spam The prog
part of the current

Tuesday Night Previews, show
lng newly acquired films. Wainer
of the Best Film Award from the
British Filmy Academy and uf the
Academy Award for Best
Servenplay, the film stirs Laur
ence Harvey,
Heather Seam, amd Iermione
Baddeley

Also on the Lith, Pete and
Dotty Spoor will be featured

er with Jack Hume and

the Kight-Step
The program will
jure traditwenal and. contem:
porary folk music with a uniq
country favor, Instrumentation
mcludes guitar, banjo, dobro,
and pedal steel guitar, and per
formances start at 9-00 p.m,
There is no admission charge on
weekdiys

Simone Sunoret,

Caffeehouse

Yhat same day there's an exhi
bition and sale of original graph:
ie art at the Albany Institute of
History and Art, from 11 a.m, to
9 pan, Come and browse.

Another exhibition at the In
stitute, which is located at 125
Wash. Ave, dowatown, i ar
ting view of the highlights of the
Institute's own Pewter, lass, sil
ver, and cerames collvetion,
This euns through the 19th
Wednesday nite, the 1th, at
XOH0 in the Memorial Chapel
Limon College will present the
Smetana String Quartet, an in
Lernationally acelaumed chamber

‘Why Dontcha” Is Quit F
West, Bruce, & Laing - Finally

By Bill Brina

‘The first results of the summit meeting of the kings of heavy
metal, otherwise known as Leslie West, Jack Bruce, & Corky Laing,
are out, Yes, kiddies, right on time for the lucrative Christmas
season, here it is, “Why Donteha” (Columbia KC 31929), the first
installment from the mind-boggling $27 million (more or less)
contract that the boys nailed down. If you've been waiting for
something halfway intelligent with which to turn up the volume and
wrenk revenge on all those James Taylor fans in your suite (or
apartment), this is i — it bashes, saws, and thunders in all the right
places,

If your tastes are a bit more eclectic, your reaction will be less
joyous, Oh, it's competent enough, all right, and some of it’s really
good. The opener, Leslie's "Why Dontcha," is a first rate, full-blast
pounder, and so’s "The Doctor," and we just haven't had enough of
that kind of music done well of late. “Third Degree,” an old Eddie
Boyd blues, gives Jack a chance to work out, and he proves that he
can sing the blues, when he wants to. “Love is Worth the Blues” is
the masterpiece of the album; a riveting vocal by Leslie, and an
exquisitely layered instrumental break based on Leslie's “whale” riff
from “Nantucket sleighride” that produces a Cotal rush.

‘Too much of the rest, though, is filler, “Out into the Fields”
sounds like an outtake from Jack's earlier "Harmony Row" album,
Corky's debut Over” is competent but
colorless, and the d "Pollution Woman" the
hotter — remember "As You Said’ from Cream’s "Wheels of Fire
This band has an enormous deal of potential, They're all fine
musicians, they seem to enjoy each other a great deal (if reports
correct), and Jack & Leslie are quite a contrast — artifs
artlessness, of, as Leslie was w
Felix Pappalardi in Moun blusutnar and the lose, Oe
this first album, they just didn't put it all together on the level
they're capable of, Despite that, you might find it worth your while,
for certified heavy metal freaks, * ix Worth the Blues” alone
will easily he worth the price of the album, and if anybody at
Columbia bother to rend this, il make a great single,

On another musical continent entirely we find “Sonie Seasonings,
(Columbia KG 31234), a double album by Walter Carlos and
Trans-Hlectronie Musie Productions. Walter is the man who gave us
switehed-on Buch a few seasons back; this time ‘round he gave us
switehed-on Nature written overnight, some take
months akes that long to try to frame
some kind of coherent perspective about a recording, especially one
is experimental as this, Remember musique concrete? Walter has
resurrected that technique, which consists of taping “natural”
sounds and miximg them into a musical whole and added to the
technique the wizardry of the modem recording studio with its
mixing boards and the lke, and completed the recipe with the
omnipresent Moog. Rachel Elkind, in the liner notes, explains that
the results were “designed to be a part of the decor," which is
another way of saying that this isn't music in the traditional sense

just background, either. It's electronic Muzak for the
mind, and [don't mean that in a pejorative sense.

The Four Seasons are evoked by characteristic sounds of each,
layered by electronic wizardry in a way that simulates quadraphonic
sound on u stereo system uncannily. It will be especially nice to
have around when you want to evoke the spirits of spring or

jummer during Albany's interminable winters, 1 imagine. Fall is
passable, but | just can't seem to get off on it, although personally

Fall’s my favorite season. ‘Ihe most moving of the four is ~ you

xuessed it - Winter! A dry, cold wind paints a bleak | ydscape of
deathly still, deathly dark, deathly cold night... and then, faintly
al first, then closer and come the howls of the wolves,

Desolation. Hunger. Primal articular piece of

music" just might revive the dying practice of getting together over
your favorite intoxieant(s), your favorite peuple, and your own
head, fights out... ean you feel the sound”? .. Good evening, Ladies

& Gentlemen, Lay buck and relax and watch, wate as. the
Movies of your Mind slowly unfold.

Some reviews
use sometimes it

UCB presents

BEACH BOYS

Nov. 14 9 pm

Palace Theater

$4.50 wi/tax & |.D. $6.50 w/I.D.

lunged by student tax

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14,1972

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

ee
OFFICIAL NOTICE

Students calling other students who
‘are patients in the infirmary should
use 459-9725.

‘The desdline for students to hand
In work to Instructors on incomptete
grades {rom the Spring 1972 semester
‘and the Summer: 1972 session is
Friday, November 17, 1972.

Seniors \t you still have not 1
ceived your senior portrait proofs
please contact John Chow imme-
diately dt the Torch office or call
457-26

Nominations for the Outstanding
Teacher Awards will be accepted
between November IS and February
15, All members of the University
community are invited 10 subs
nominations, including self
fominations. Nominations may be
‘anonymous,

Please note thot faculty refers to
the ocademic stalt of the University
with the following exceptions: in-
structors who have completed less
than one year of professional obli
gation in the University, assistant
instructors, persons having tenporary
appointments; members of the
faculty enrolled in a degree progeaen
at SUNYA, emeriti, administrative
officers, including technical statt
members, who are concerned with

‘advisement for Spring, 1973 pro
-ogistration, Students must meet
with their academic adviser before
they can draw class cards, Pre-
registration will follow the alpho-
bbetical sequence published by the
Office of the University Registra
the first day for drawing class cards is
Wednesday, November |.

To insure that each student can
moot with their adviser prior to their
day to draw class cards, students who
are advised by the University College
are urged to make an appointment to
meet with their adviser as soon as
possible. 11 is recommended that the
appointment be scheduled one week
in advance of the students indicated
period for drawing class cards.

PEACE & POLITICS

Sanford Rosenblum Student
Association Lawyer willbe iwailable
in the SA office, CC346 trom 7
p.m.—9 pan on Tuesday nite.

Inform draftees and enlistees ot
their rights and alternatives by
handing out information leallets at
the Albany Induction Center. Help
thos who otherwise would Hot be
informed, Call Jim 463-2593,

‘There will be a meeting of History:
‘Students Association on Wed. Nov. 16
‘at 7:20 in SS26L Evaluation of
foculty members will be discissed.

Attention Community Service
Students—rogistration will be ex
tended until the end of the month.
To register, come to LCB30A or call
487-4801, There are more positions
‘available in medical work for those
interested in psychiatric work,
working with the handicapped or
doing health research. Apply soon.
‘There are many opportunities for
you to take advantage.

Anyone Interested in Armenian
‘Studies course at SUNY including
language, contact Charlie~457-4656.

‘Business Students: Delta Sigma Pi is
still alive, This you will soon see.

Peace Studies is now a second lield,
People who are interested in ob-
taining w syllabus, or who just want
to ask questions about the program,
‘can do so in S375,

The Psychology Dept. Faculty-
Student Receptionn will be held on
Thursday, Nov, 16, 35 pan. in

A, Froe retrashmonts will be

ALL are invited to attend.

Sponsored by Cathexis and Under-
‘rad, Psych, Associat

‘Student teachars will toll it ike itis
fon November 4 at 7.30 p.m, in the
Physics building room 129 (Physics
Joungel, All interested in hearing
‘about education, the qoud andthe
bad, should come, Sponsored by
student NYSTA

MAJORS & MINORS

INTERESTED FOLK

The Comparative Literature depart

ment his ¢0 ub printed a
rsive listing of all lier

‘and. rewarch progains,
iching library stat,

include more
than just They should also
mention the courses which the pro
fessor teaches that indicate excel
ence; and they should specity in
detail, with reference to sued things
as clarity, organization, tappoet with
students, why the nocninge should be

es and appxoaches 10 be uttered
Spring, 1973. This quide i
Lupa eaquest anid
fray be obtained in the
ottien, MU2 72,

lop guidelines and criteria far
salucting winners of the award.

All nominations, inquiries send itor
ration should be sent 10 the
committee chairman, Dorothy

son in Humanities 318.

Attention all Poyeh, stadennst ie

Undergrad Psych. Assoc. Newsletter
Ww $8217, Us

only chance 10 find Out what's

1 ony
Students are wemined that thie Uri
varsity Collage has beau 1 academic

A career in law...
without law school.

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you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers
— work which is challenging, responsible
and intellectually stimulating. Lawyer's
Assistants are now so critically needed that
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— and a higher starting salary than youd
expect as a recent college graduate. Here
1s a career as a professional with financial
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expertise.
If you are a student of high academic
standing and are interested in a legal
career, come speak with our repr tative

Contact the Placement Otfice
A representative of The Institute
will visit your campus on

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29

NOTE I the above date tor you
please call or wate TH

The Institute for
Paralegal Training

13th floor 401 Walnut St. Phila, Pa 19106
(215) WA 5-0905

Dutch Quad Judicial Board \ww

accent Fonts and,

pplication
sheet may be obtained at
Stuyvesant Tower. Any
Datel Quad resident may apply,
ive will bo a Thanksgiving ross
at Chapel House, Everyone is invited
to bring a special gift 10 the server,
o type ol atl
a you'd Whe to shee

Lh can be a poem,
‘ging, oF white
for the exlebeution af grim thanks,
Gyro Cub is oC bee,
1 thu bee, &, Come More
fntot, call 7.4740 oe stop by at 907
Fasteran Tower

wih “£3 i tooking for talent
4 oMC%s for nue 24 howe tase
my eves ws 8 1 Appleation

Hooter wath be

‘The Thanksgiving Turkey Basket
Program, sponsored by Saint John's
Rectory, for needy families of the
south end is now under way. Canned
goods are now being collected in
boxes in the lower lounges of each
‘tower. Please contribute!

Applications are now being sccep-
ted for the position of AMIA Student
‘Assistant, You can pick up appli
cations in CC358, If there are any
‘questions call D. Elkin, 7-6978 or L.

‘The Committee for Soviet Jewry is
looking for @ visual representation of
freedom to be shown on @ poster.
Everyone is Invited to submit ideas
by November 20. The final choice
will be made into @ poster and be
available for sale as a perfect gift for
anyone, For information and to
contribute your idea, please call
Robin ot 7-8988 or Sue at 7-5293.

Attention all AFS:AA Returnees
Interested in getting back into the
activities? There is a new region
Returnee group forming, Contact
Meg or Anita at 465-2789 for dotails,

The Students’ Caucus on Women’s
Rights is alive and well at SUNYA,
Join their meotings Wednesdays at
6:30 p.m. in HU

The Interriational Fold De @ Club
invites both experienced dancers and
beginners to our weekly dacice sess:
jons—avery Thursday evening, trom 6
to B pam, in the gym dance studio,
Mmternational students. are
welcome to come and
‘own country’s dances, Seo us per

Sailing Club meating ww
esdlay at 7 parry (tthe library, root
1.43, | veryine is weulecant

Ail poopie interestod in sacvitwy ot
the sutyconmmtters of the Student
Affairs Council pie: ntact §
Gerber, Student Asocution Othee,
Campus Coeter 346, 451-6542,

Waterbury and Alden residents
plese pick vp a enpy of the food

areviess quiretiounaites aud rotor it
soon as possiblel LY should be aval
able tdday (Hriday) on tur dinner
Hinwe, Wee want to haa yout
Coalition for a tree choice

ergs saver ir Oe a Law
14 Wardington Avenue
G2 WOKS,

Moating: Worms He

6 a HEC ZL,

En tu

saint: wanna
ent, te Usarahay, Newws

GALLOWS HUMOR

by
Jack Richardson

directed by
James Leonard

(The Second of Soe Mayor Productions Tits Year at SUNYA\
Nov. 15-18, 8:30pm Nov. 19, 8:00 pm

presented in Studio Theater

Adm

sion $2.00 w/tax $1

Box Office Phone 457-8606

Coming Soon

“Alice in Wonderland” |

Dr. David Wellons noted sx re-
searcher will conduct a free clinic on
Wednesday, Nov, 15 in the Clinton
Hall lounge.

Don’t forget tomorrow is the Food
Fast. \f you signed up. remember not
to go down to supper. It you did not
sign up and wish to, call Regina
Colangelo 482-3440,

Outing Club is going to Dippikit
this weekend, Think you're inter-
ested? Sign up at the meeting at 730
Wednesday night in CC315.

Games,Tournaments Men's and
Women's bowling, bridge, table ten
nis, chess, billlards, trap and skeet
Winners represent ALbany in regional
college ACU-| tourney, Must sign up
in C356 by NOv. 15.

Ukrainion Student Organization
will hold a meeting on Thurs, Nov.
16 at 7-30 pm, Room will be posted

in the campus center

Zon workshop on 1
practice of Zen Buckiisin Sat. M
18, Call §18:284-2670,

A Commuter Central Council rep.
wall be in the Ce
in CC346 on Monday trom 1-3 and
Friday trom 10-11, Mace tires will

be announced. The phone number is
497-662.

Cuncsmned about the population
problem? You're invited 10 join the
Albany Zora Population Growth
Chapters 10 holy 8 our |

educational efforts, For information
Shaton Cange at 789-4676 01

m DiSarre at 766-2712
Thor is coed volleyball wvory Wish
toaday evening at 7 pan, an Gyin ¢

Bring a fie

if you need rehobilitation —
or know someone

who does — write to
HURRAH, Box 1200,
Washington, D.C. 20013

HURRAH

Help Us, Reach and Rehabilitate
America's Handicapped

GALLOWS HUMOR

State University Theatre of
State University of New York at
Albany will present “Gallows
Humor,” second in its series of
six major student productions
for the 1972-73 season, begin-
ning Wednesday, Nov. 15.

‘The comedy-drama by Jack
Richardson consists of two one-
act plays, related to each other
in nareative thread as well as
theme. Mr, Richardson main-
tains, in his play, that given the
small routines of contemporary
society, the ritual of schedules
and the demand for order, it is
becoming increasingly difficult

to distinguish the living from the
dead, “the hangman from the
hanged.”

In the first play Walter, a
former lawyer, is about to be
hanged. Having gone beserk
when the order and routine of
his life was upset by a particular-
ly intense case of hiccups in the
client he was attempting to de-
fend, Walter has set about strict-
ly ordering his daily routine in
the cell, in an attempt to regain
his “sanity.” The routine is
broken by Lucy, the state's offi-
cial “female companion," sent
to give the condemned prisoner

AFRICOBRA

An exhi

ion by the members of AFRICOBRA will open at the

State University of New York at Albany Art Gallery on Tuesday,

Nov. 14.

AFRICOBRA (African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) is a
Chicago-based group cooperative formed in 1968 whose art strives to

express the styles and rhythms of black li

‘The artists say of

themselves, “Our people are our standard for excellence. We strive

for images inspired by African pe

African people can relate to directly without forma

and/or experience.
peopleness is questionable."

ple/experience and images which
art training

Art for peuple and not for erities whose

Looked at from the outside, the work in AFRICOBRA come
across as a strongly expressionistic art whose creators conve

contemporary black experien’

and black history through powerful

outsize images that come at the viewer with the startling frontality

of Byzantine icons.

olor is important to AFRICOBRA, Jeff Donaldson, one of the

founders of the group says that

that is free of rules and regulations...is exp
exhibition

introduction to
painter, speaks of “Coolade colors

‘The exhibition shows work in

color is “eolor that shines, color
In his
« Donaldson, who ix a

a nun Napoleon

Henderson and Howard Mallory makes

conducting vessel to he rvckor
exhibition are invited to

em and Jet ‘en
Barbara Jones who works in silk ser

with Viewers of th
blow your mind.

in chooses the medium

Smokey’s friends
don't play with matches.

PAGE TWELVE

ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972

hecause it is important tu the artists U
and accessible lo everyone.
richness and color of Afri
nationalism.

AFRICOBRA will exhibit paintings of oly
Lawrence, Wadsworth Jurrel, and Gerald Willi
designs by Jae Jarre

‘The exhibition ix being circulated by th » Muse Harlem
through a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts.

On view concurrently with AFRICOBRA will be a one man
exhibition of recent prints by Robert Cartmell, Mr Cartmell is
assistant professor of drawing and p ing at SUNYA. His work

aL major national prot exhibitions such a
aker” exhibitions ay well as th

tthe work be inex
Her styhzed ams

ns as well ay clothing

/LLUMINATION
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WT

arta \
SPROVTED PUKING }
AIRE

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HLL UMI NATION }

DAY NOVEMBER 14, 1972

a in his lest
hours.

‘The second play shifts to Phil-
lip, the state’
his

of his existence by
wearing a medieval hood to
Walter's impending execution.

“Gallows Humor” is being di-
rected by James M. Leonard. In
the cast are Fred Trachtman, Joe
Ritter, Howard Kollins, Margaret
Dwyer, John Rubin and Marci
Perres,

‘The production will run from
Nov. 15 through Nov. 18 at 8:30
p.m. in the SUNY Performing
Arts Center's Studio Theater.

‘A Nov. 19 performance will
begin at 8 p.m. Further informa-
tion conceming the performance
may be obtained by calling the
PAC box office at 457-8606,

International Nite

by Sue Leboft

‘The International Students’
‘Association sponsored an “Inter-
national Night,” Sunday evening
in the Performing Arts Center.
Described in the program as

“not only a gala affair, but also

an adventure in human under-
standing,” International Night
proved to be a somewhat less
than-gala potpourri of folk mus-
ic and dance, performed by stud-
ents of different nationalities
and ethnic backgrounds. While
parts of the program could well
be called an adventut
understanding, others

trial of human patience.

‘The program opened with
speeches by Dr. J. Paul Ward,

International Student Advisor

Da Beach Boys!

The ghost of summers past returns to the Palace Theater tonite, as
SUNYA’s Concert Board presents the Beach Boys in concert at 9
p.n. Ticket prices are $4.50 with student tax, $6.50 without. Lest
that disturb you, Concert Board Chairperson M. Wurtz has an-

anced, “What do you expect? The price of everything is going up,”

presumably a ref
price, you ca

ee to the price the group demands
expect a load of California sunshine, the sweetest

that

harmonies in a long time (erry Garcia, who should know, once
introduced them as “the greatest singing band in the world”), taste

ol the oldies you know and lov

Stull, There's no opening act, a
sets during the ev

and a whole load of their new

the Beach Boys will perfo
¢ of the evening,

Taj Mahal-A Gas

by Kevin Daniels

Union College last Piday
uy Iwo very fine blues perform.
“Spider”

4 mellow coun

ances. The fist wa
Jolin Koemer
iy blues perlormer whose sing
sng. anid acoustic guttat work was
very reminiscent of Larry John:
son, and whose lyntes have a
tach of David: Rea, Spider's
Strangely Lunny stones and orige
al compositions held ite audi
enee’s attention for seme time
hetate the ever present boors de
cued they would much rather
speak loudly to the neighbors
Ever wonder why some must
suns decude to be very loud?
Alter the showing ot a Charlie
Chaplin thek way cuined at antes
kinds ol
Fay wats
eadly Alter i way made ele

mes hamial alisorders

that Lay wanted everyone to sit
down and he quiet or he
woulda) play. Tay came aut and
Haun hed inte some excellent,

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Schoolgirl. Taj played slide gui
tar with such prowess and speed
that the slide was only a silver
blur as his magic Nashed up and

down the guitar neck. For v
ly, Tay switched over to piano
‘and did fifteen minutes of
hoogie-woogie that would rival
Roosevelt Sykes (the king of
boogie piano), Taj held the audi
ence in complete control, rum
fing tempos that ranged fom
feverish to relaxed with his vo:
cals, and playing the audience
hike an instrament
For the encore Taj launched
J vocal,
sending the Chapel into a rock.
ing freavy that only the Clara
agers could mateh, Taj és

mt an unaccomy

Syed Agha Jafti, president of the
International . Students’. Asso-
ciation, and Erastus Coming Il,
mayor of Albany. Next, the
SUNYA Black Ensemble and
Burundi Dancers, colorfully cos-
tumed and well rehearsed, trea!
ed the audience to folk dances
from Burundi, a small African
state. A violin solo by Helmut
Graupner, a student from Ger-
many, followed. More folk dat
cing, featuring the Internation:
Folk Dance Club, the Ukranian
Club, and a Philippine group,
and a set of calypso songs per-
formed by Jim Bishop accom:
panying himself on guitar,
rounded off the first half of the
Program.

‘The second half of the pro-
gram began with a “Demon-
stration of International Cos-
tumes” ranging from an Indian
sari to American blue jeans, and
continued with more folk dan-
cing-this time by the Chinese
Student Association, a Puerto
Rican group, a South American
couple, and a Russian ensemble.
‘Technical difficulties marred the
festive atmosphere; Master of
Ceremonies Marteze Sajadian
was reduced to telling gentle
ethnic jokes while the stage crow
hunted for missing music, The
music for the Russian and Chin:
ese groups mysteriously —dis-
appeared. “Nixon must have
something to do with this,"
someone in the audience remark-
ed audibly

‘The show wax an amateur pro-
duction from start to finish,
which was in part understand-
able, considering that many of
the performers were busy stud-
ents with no particularly pri
mary commitment to folk dune:
Good effects were achieved
by the previously mentioned
Burundis, and by the Ukranian
group, whose dance included a
couple of flamboyant gymnastic
solos, A liltle more rehearsal and
better orgunizati
improved

would have
ing. But, un
even ay it was, Internatio
night wan good for Albany
students, expecially such u broad
sampling of Albany students, to
watch, applaud, and appreciate
each other for u change

“HELLMAN

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PAGE THIRTEEN

Soccer—A Disappointing Season Revisited

by Nathan Salant

‘The soccer season ended last
weekend with Albany finishing
last in the university centers
tournament after losing both of
its games. Now it is time to look
back at what originally looked
like a very promising season.

Back in September, the team
opened its exhibition season
with some ¢ play
against
schools like Colgate. The team
looked great, and this served to
raise hopes. Now that the season

cover, several comments can be
made about those games. First
of all, we can look back and
point out what was to be our
weakness all year-lack of
scoring, We only averaged 1 goal
a game in those pre-season

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PAGE FOURTEEN

games, and this was to be slight-
ly less than our season average.
Secondly, we can attribute the
team’s success to the other
team’s poor condition which was
remedied as the season went on
and the excellent soccer we
played in those games which we
did not play during the season
In our opening game versus
Geneseo, the pattern of the s
son was established.~the offi-
ciating went from bad to worse,
the team came out flat and
quickly fell behind, there was a
general lack of aggressiveness

and hustle, then a second half
resurgence which resulted in too
little and too late, many missed
opportunities, snd too many
costly mistakes.

‘The only break in this pattern
occurred versus Queens, in a
game which featured 6 Albany
goals thanks to some unusual
hustle on several players’ parts,
and their totally inept goalie. We
played well enough to beat
Hamilton, but the refs gave that
one away. The loss to Oneonta
was expected due to their being
the No. 1 SUNY team by far.

THE WHO ROLLING STONES CRO
SBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG JET

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ALBANY STUDENT PRESS

‘The losses to Cortland, RPI,
Oswego, Stony Brook, and Buff-
alo were inexcuseable, especially
since we blew the lead in each of
those games, Our tie with New
Patlz showed how strong our
defense really was, and how
weak our offense was

‘The season was highlighted by
outstanding play by Larry Her-
zog and Cliff Walzer. The second
half of the year saw the emer-
gence of Mark Solano and Leon
Sedefian. George Keleshian
never really came around for us,
partially due to his problem of

leaving games early due to a
disagreement with one of the
refs or an opposing player. Per-
haps the biggest disappointment
of all was Carlos Alvarez who
was billed as our star scorer and
offensive player, but fizzled
right from the start, The defense
was rounded out by John
Streeter, Bruce Michaels, and
Greg Macmillan. Karl Hauesing
starred at halfback in the tourna-
ment, but was a disappointment
in many of the regular season
games.

Unfortunately, last year's
superstar goalie, John Thayer,
was plagued by injuries all year,
yet still did a good job in the
goal. Fifty saves might sound
phenomenal, but that is the
record he set against Oneonta.

So ends another disappointing
soccer season, our fourth in as
many years, However, there is
hope for the future. Our star
defensive unit will all be back
as will Leon Sedefian
Hopefull:

next ye
and Cliff Walzer
some more offensive punch can
be added to the team via the
EOP program with which Coach
Wingert will work hand in hand
with, and via the one soccer
player whe will be admit
the basis of ability
uy, several players
elligible this
«next year
they should be weleon

tions,

AIL in all, it has to be a very
disappointing season for cookie
coweh Wingert, but next year
will be different

The Danes-
Are Back

by Bill Heller

The most exerting winter at
mieten a Albany, the Great
Dine brayket bal

Ise first appearinee of the

ay a pee seen
+ aygannst thee University

GL Hartford

wards of

fame oul to wateh Doe Sauers

Surprisingly, up
weenty five peaple
wid his boy despite the fet
that the event wasn't pubherzed
What they

aw was lasieally a
Danes
who lok fenward te erat
things fallowing last your's 176
anak Wath eneht

fetes let
Promising new
comer, and ane at the Gnest
Athany

men By cu Maller, Werner Kedln,
Hols Curtiss, aid Harry dohusen
shies” are Dennis Terry

per, Mike Hl deers

and Felton Hyche, the

The "72

smart, and a winner tn

On Beday, everybody saw av

tran, ay Couch Sauees looked for
what he termed “winning com
hinations Offensively, Regie
South, never known for beige
gun shy, and Bob “shoot fre
anywhere’ Rossi, were consis
tently hot Dave Welchons um
pressed an defense, and. Byron

Miller did
hoards, John Quattrecehy al

Wukewise on Ui
thongh not hitting, played his
usual alert style, with good
parses and a tough “D." OF the
new persennel, Dennis ‘Terry
showed great quickness wlsle
Heh appeared ta be
fitting

Phe team as a whole 1
thea patterns well, alt
then taming was a bit oft
defense, the 11
work and

nm needy a Hest «
rebounding. must
he smproved. Ln general Uh

adequately

2, in thi

time to ifun out any minor
problems

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1972

Danes

by Mike Igoe

The Albany football team
which has benefited from a num-
ber of breaks in some close
games throughout the season
had the tables tumed on them
Saturday.

‘A questignable pass interfer
ence call against the Danes with
just under four minutes to play
led to what turned out to be the
winning score as Plattsburgh slip.
ped by Albany 14-7.

‘As Couch Bob Ford's scouters
had predicted, the game proved
to be a tight contest.

After both clubs exchanged a
series of possessions in the first
period, Frank Leader came up
with a big play for Albany
Leader blocked a punt and dove
on the ball at Platishungh’s 43
yard line

John Bertuzzi, MeCoy Allister
and Marvin Perry took turns
racking up yardage to move the
Danes forward.

After six plays, Perry sprinted
hard to his left to put Albany on
the scoreboard. Mark
added the kick and
joyed a 7-0 lead.

In the second quarter quarter
back Tim White of Plattsburgh

ut on a classy passing exhibi
tion that got the hosts moving

But two costly

inst Albany-- pass interfer
infraction and a personal
elped the Cardinals

along. Finally,
down pass from White to Chris

penalties

1 yard touch

Cringle capped the drive.

Jeff O'Donnell was furious
that he was unable to break up
the play, but White's throw was
an unbelievably accurate pass.

‘The Cardinals faked a PAT and
went for a two point conversa:
tion but were unsuccessful in the
attempt.

As the half drew to anend, the
Danes mounted another scoring
threat, Loi added some
punch to und gain and
one bany ot rolling.

Noel Walker picked up a"
good blocks and raced a
adl gain, Bertuzzi then hit
Bob Baxter on the 28 yard line.

With furty. seconds. rem
and a second and four sit
the Danes decided to use a play
that was successful in the Hud:
son Valley game Bertuzzi gave
the ball ts Vie Giulianelli who
turn passed it This time.
ever, Giulianelli was intere

Plattsburgh was content t
the clock run out so they trailed
Albany 7-4 at halftime

In the second half things got
even tuyhter The Gridders
moved the ball well and Pl
burgh had success in the air but
neither team was able to jt
nay hg
fourth period mishap

The call which set up. the

chinelung touchdown — seemed
particularly suspeious
After the whistle was blown ne.

flags were dropped and the

Plattsburgh fans
Led pass interfe
ring notorious signs of
lirys

Danes had another chance
to try to score but were unable
to capitalize
After Bertuzzi suffered a bad
«, Gordy Kupperstein
1 uided the Danes to
two first down
Albany tried the Giulianelli
play but once again he was
intercepted
Plattsburgh then held on for
the win as time expired

State 25th in NCAA Meet

by Kenneth Arduino

Fifty-nine schools fro
the nation met in Wheaton, [1h
nois last Saturday: for the NCAA
College Division ¢

Cross-Country me

picnship
‘The Albany
St am was one of the un
vited teams along with eastern
power C, W. Post, who was also
the Albany Invitational winner
RIT and Geneseo St

The Albany team whieh fur
hei 25th of 42 te

aan finished 25th ‘The

wax hampered by a ants ted
star runner Vine tt

haul Thart his sank

tree this week and was nat gaven
doctors pern
Thursday

‘Though hampered,

Vine cin a beautiful eee tin
ishing 97 out af 115 to bead the

Albany State team

hin Shrade
ana tan the
shed 11th

NCAA'S, fimshed 11th, Geneseo
Stand RIT fnished 45th and

North Dakota State, the favor
te and defending champion,
wen the meet, paced by the

elividual wamer Mike Shack

Albuany add ity ant race yest

tay the [OHA'® Albany: a 0
the few State seha
tnemubernhinpy an this. «

wn TE wall he aw touch meet

Hy connie yust two day

Hope tutty

savkle wall he

Mtoe this week

Many State

it must be remembered that in
pre-season the thought of
posting such a record would

ride back to the c have seemed impossible,

ital city. But

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ALBANY STUDENT PR

PAGE FIF

: NIA
BOONE'S FARM, MODESTO, CALIFO! 1. LIX No, 47 State University of New York at Albany November 17, 1972

/ FRIDAY

ee
t tS)
eel

I aaa

(AP Wirephoto),
Two black students lie dead in front of the administration building at Southern University in Baton Rouge after a clash with police

Two Students Slain In La. ;
Guard Quells Violence

All students, except these living in dormitories, were

A university campus was once again the scene of violence ordered home

Combined News Services

and death as two students were killed yesterday morning, The student deaths chinaxed a bleady ten minute

t Southern University in Batons Rouge, Lotisana. Several confrontation between sherit deputies amd student

others were injured protestors whe were occupying the adiiinttration butlding

One of the shin men was idenufied as Denver A. Sith of the predominantly black canipus

20.01 New Roads. The other remained anidentitied They were warned to move ay some 2.0000 student

A coraner's report confirmed that both had been shot lucked on from the outside, When five minutes elapsed

One student alse suttered a crushed skull the pohee moved in with leashed dogs at ther side and

Corner Hippolyte Landy said last nght both men wer wmed with rifles. shotguns and pistols. ‘They fired tear gas
Killed by either buckshot or shrapnel Both had head vite the burkding and the students fought back by hurling

innqutte fragmentation bombs

An area state of emergency way declared in Baton Rouge Phen. gunshots were fired and two: young black men lay
by Lounstana Governor Edwin Edwards alter Sheet Al dew

Amis leaned of stepped up purchases of guns and Two have been shot and there may) be more af
ammunition in the area necessary,” said Baton Rouge Mayor WoW. Dumas. “We

Phe state af emergency extended throughout East Baton we gomp to Che back over the administration building at

Range Parish County and the measure gave the mayor any cost
power to seta curfew i necessary. Sale of Girearms was But the occuprers left with hrtle resistance shartly before

Also prolubued noon, Hhing out with ther hands over che heads, past a

F turnover A curtew way reportedly in effect onthe campus last puddle of blood on the sidewalk nn frome of the building
a @ might. Police and) guardsmen remained on university Sheriff Amiss of East Baton Rouge denied his men were
prounds responsible for the shooungs.
Earlier in the day, the governor had ordered the National “We didn’t use anything but cear gas," he said
Guard onto the university alter the registrar's office was

set ablaze continued on page twelve

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1972

IXTEEN ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SIX

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