1 - University Libraries

Transcription

1 - University Libraries
SPECIAL SALE, „,.,
Publishers Overstock And Imported 1 itles
DICTIONARIES
T H E L A N G U A G E OF P A I N T I N G : A N I N F O R M A L D I C T I O N A R Y . W r i t t e n & illus. by
J o h n N . B a r r o n . More t h a n 1,000 alphabetized
entries, each clearly d e f i n e d and e x p l a i n e d .
Includes terms pertaining t o materials & techniques, art c r i t i c i s m , personalities, movements,
and schools of painting, etc.
Pub. at $ 4 . 9 5 . Only $ 1 . 9 8
CROSSWORD
ffjB
CROSSWORD PUZZLE D I C T I O N A R Y . More
than 31,000 words, more than 7 3 , 0 0 0 answers,
excellent for all w o r d games. Also weights &
measures, p o p u l a t i o n and other statistics.
Only $1.00
D I C T I O N A R Y OF C R I M I N O L O G Y . Ed. by
R.W. Nice, Terms dealing w i t h c r i m i n o l o g y ,
penology, delinquency, anti-social behavior ana
definitions o l c o m m o n slang terms.
PUD. at SG.00. O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
F I V E C O U R T I E R POETS O F T H E ENGLISH
R E N A I S S A N C E . E d . b y R . M . Bender. Stylistic,
amourous, o f t e n satirical verse of Sir Thomas
W y a t t , Earl of Surrey, Sir Philip Sidney, Fulke
Grevlllo, Sir Walter Raleigh, along w i t h I n t r o , t o
each period and t o each Individual p o e t .
Pub. at $8.95. O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
T H E C O M P L E T E B O O K OF G A M E S A N D
S T U N T S . By D.A. H l n d m a n . Illus. Nearly 2 0 0 0
selections In this huge 4 4 0 page collection of
I n d o o r and o u t d o o r a c t i v i t i e s - b a l l games, w o r d
and figure puzzles, races and relays, gags and
stunts, p a r t y mixers, skits, etc.
O r l g . Pub. at $ 7 . 9 5 . O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
G R E A T A C T I N G S . E d . by Hal B u r t o n . 266
Photos of outstanding performances by L.
Olivier, Sybil T h o r n d l k e , P. A s h r o t t , M. Redgrave, E d i t h Evans, J. G l e l g u d , and Noel Coward w i t h their o w n c o m m e n t s on their major
role and on how they learned their c r a f t . 8 lli x
1 1 1/4.
O r l g . Pub. at $ 1 0 . 0 0 . O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
A C T I N G : A H a n d b o o k of the Stanislavski
M e t h o d . C o m p . by T . Cole. I n t r o , by Lee
Strasberg. T h e basics of the actor's craft by
Stanislavski himself and P u d o v k l n , Chekhov,
others. JPub. at $ 3 . 5 0 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
H A M M O N D W O R L D A T L A S . Illus. w i t h over
2 5 0 full Illus. w i t h over 2 5 0 F u l l Color pgs. of
maps of the total land surface of the globe w i t h
detailed I n f o r m a t i o n
on cities, p o p u l a t i o n ,
t e m p e r a t u r e , etc. Incl. every c o n t i n e n t , count r y , state and colonial possession and gazetteerindex of the w o r l d . Washable covers, expansion
b i n d i n g . 8 '/: x n W.
Pub. at $ 5 . 9 5 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
HANDWRITING
A N A L Y S I S : T h e A r t and
Science of Reading Characcter. By M . N . Bunker. More than 160 illus., step by step Instructions.
Pub. at $ 1 0 . 0 0 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
D E M O N O L O G Y A N D W I T C H C R A F T . Letters
Addressed t o J.G. L o c k h a r t , Esq. b y Sir Walter
S c o t t . Fascinating chronicles on dark side of
human nature discussing s u p e r s t i t i o n , persecut i o n , heathen rites and possession by a master
of legend. Nearly 4 0 0 pages.
Only $1.98
D I C T I O N A R Y O F L I N G U I S T I C S . B y M. Pel
& F. G a y n o r . Unique d i c t i o n a r y for* those
interested in tne fields of grammar and language, p h i l o l o g y , phonetics, etc.
Pub. at t h . 0 0 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
N U M E R O L O G Y D R E A M B O O K . By / o l a r . A
master of trie o c c u l l reveals How to f i n d y o u r
destiny number and use n to understand tII*J
meaning of your dreams.
Only $1.49
R O W A N A M D M A R T I N ' S L A U G H - I N . Thebest jokes, o n e l i n e r s g r a f f i t i , and sight gags
f r o m tne hilarious I V show. I m e d w i t h l o t t o '
pictures and color photos. Guaranteed to keep
yoti Laughing for hours, w i t h the same hilarious
dialogue they use in trie show.
Put), at ifo.05. O n l y $ 1 , 4 9
The Frederic Remington I l l u s t r a t e d E d i t i o n of
T H E S O N G OF H I A W A T H A . By Henry Wadsw o r t h l OrtgfellQW. A facsimile e d i t i o n ol (he
complete classic poem w h i c h weaves to-got n e t
tho beautiful Indian t r a d i t i o n s . Rare e d i t i o n
enhanced with m;
Hemtngton pen and Ink
drawings, l a i t h f u l representations of the actual
objects in u>o among tne various tribes makes
[his collection ol drawings a veritable museum
of Indian artifacts and curiosities.
Only $2.98
KA5HJ ''•'<
t,^!
>f l i t »>^'
••HHHil^
*""*'
Pj r y j ' f l
jgg*m mam
THE I L L U S T R A T E D HASSLE FREE M A K E
Y O U R O W N C L O T H E S BOOK By 5. Rosen
berg S. J. We ner. Illus. w i t h hi ndruds o l Hue
d r a w i n JS, A step-by-slup
guid u to creating
inuxpe isive, g oovy-to-weai c l o t i es lor all sexes
and Hi es w i l l instructions on t mis, patterns.
stltche , c o p y ng and uthor n e l p f l 1 goodies
Pub. at W . 9 6 . Only $2.98
T H E A R T O F D R A W I N G . By W. P ° 9 * n y . Illus.
w i t h over 3 0 0 drawings by the author. Defines
fundamentals in a simple instructive manner,
covering perspective, shading, the complete
figure, balance and m o t i o n , sketches and studies.
Pub. at S7.50. O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
A U D O B O N , H O M E R , WHISTLER A N D 19TH
C E N T U R Y A M E R I C A . By J. W l l m e r d i n g . 89
illus. Incl. 60 gorgeous Full Color plates. Exciting c o l l e c t i o n of A m e r i c a n art by Inness,
Stuart,
Sargent, others, the Hudson
River
S c h o o l , Federal Period, etc., plus biographies. 9
3/4 x 12.
Now Only $2.69
T H E BOOK OF J A Z Z From Then Until N o w .
Revised E.d. by L e o n a r d Feather. Foreward by
Dizzy Gillespie. A guide to the entire f i e l d - i t s
nature & instruments, sources & sounds, performers, composers, etc.
O r i g . Pub, at $ $ 5 . 9 5 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
T H E B O O K O F SPIES: 4 0 0 Years of Cloak and
Dagger. By B. limes. 127 Illus., 30 in Full
Color. Lavish, fascinating history ol espionage
f r o m A l e x a n d e r the Great t h r o u g h Richelieu
and Mata Harl to today's Col. Gehlen, R u d o l f
A b e l , etc. 1 1 3 / 4 x 1 0 >U.
Pub. at $2.96. O n l y $ 1 . 4 9
D I C T I O N A R Y O F PHYSICS A N D M A T H E
MATICS
ABBREVIATIONS.
Ed. by
D.D.
Polon. Thousands (if cntries--l.ie first major
c o m p i l a t i o n of abbrevial ions (or text and drawings; signs; graphic and letter s y m b o l * ; and
designations lor physics and mathematics.
Pub. at $20.00. O n l y $2.98
J U D O FOR W O M E N : A Manual for Self
Defense. By Ruth K o r a n . *?*> step-by-step
photos covering ' J 0 sent;', ot moves. t irst iiido
book w r i t t e n exclusively 'or w o m e n by one o l
the leading practitioners. Detailed f r o m basic
techniques tu advanced locks and t h r o w s .
Pub. al i i . ' f j . Only $1.98
ANSWERS T O YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT
T H E B I B L E . By J.C. S w a l m , Ph.d., d.d. Complete guide to the b a c k g r o u n d ,
historical
periods, cources, q u o t a t i o n s and most significant elements of the " B o o k of B o o k s . " 4 4 1
pgs.
Pub. at $ 6 . 9 5 . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
TREASURIES
JEWELRY
AND
SCULPTURE
THROUGH
U N I T C O N S T R U C T I O N S P. M e y e r o w t t / .
148 illus. Techniques and designs for metal
working-fashioning chains, necklaces and other
l i n k e d jewelry and sculpture.
Orig. Pub. at $ 8 . ' J O . O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
C O L O R T R E A S U R Y OF HERBS A N D M E D I
C I N A L P L A N T S . By C. D ' A n d r e t a . Over 100
p h o t o s all in ravishing Full C o l o r . B e a u t i f u l ,
fascinating volume of the nxt raordinary variety
of plants that have been used to enhance l o o d
soothe t r o u b l e d souls, cure disease, etc., I r o n
the brilliant Poppy to the delicate • but deadly
foxglove. 9 x 1 2 .
I m p o r t Special O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
*ESS
NOW ONLY A $1.00
i'Vol.
LIX, No. 41
State University of New York at Albany
October 27, 1972
a
Kissinger Declares "Peace Is At Hand
THE ARTS & SECRETS OF B E A U T Y
A N A S T R O L O G Y G U I D E T O Y O U R SEX LIFE
T H E B A S I C BOOK O F T H E C A T
THE BIBLE D I C T I O N A R Y
Stories on pages 4 and 5
BLUE M O V I E
BOOK OF F A M I L I A R
QUOTATIONS
C A R E A N D REPAIR OF A N T I Q U E S
C A T C H ' E M A N D COOK ' E M
Strike Truce Called;
Towing Banned
Christmas S t o r y : T H E B A B Y JESUS
C H U R C H I L L ; The Life Triumphant
C O L L E C T I N G A M E R I C A N CLASS
C O L L E C T I N G COPPER & B R A S S
COLONEL SUN
THE COMPLETE K E N N E D Y WIT
ROLY A N D POLY
W H A T HAPPEN TO YES
BIG JUMP FOR R O B I N
All indications are that the Student Association Parking Strike was
STAR BEAM AND RECOIL
a success. Strike leaders met with several administrators Wednesday
PRINCE A N D SEVEN MOONS
ADOLPHUS THE T.V. HORSE
morning in an attempt to reach some sort of agreement on parking
SILVERWOOD
regulations.
PUSS I N B O O T S
What came out of the meeting was a decision to stop all towing of
BEGINNING WITH MRS. McBEE
ROGER A N D ROSIN B A C K
cars until the recently approved new Parking Regulations go into
WHO WOKE THE SUN
effect
SPARKIE A N D PUFF B A L L
on
November
committee
C H A R L E S PROTEUS S T E I N M E N T
of
13th. Meanwhile, a newly
created joint
the Student Affairs Council and the
Community
G O L D E N SWAN
grievances: parking on the gravel areas and segregation in the main
LONG HIKE
Council
will
University
P R O P E R R A C E FOR C H I P
negotiate on the two major
parking
lots.
M E M O R Y OF A L A R G E
CHRISTMAS
What this means is that until new provisions are decided on, or by
RUNS THE RIVER
PLAYTIME WITH MUSIC
November 13th (whichever comes first), students will be allowed to
M I S S H A R R I E T HIPPO
park in any legitimate space on campus. Both Campus Security and
W H O L L Y CATS
Central Council will enforce "no parking" regulations in certain
C O M E A N D SEE M E
"safety zones."
UPSIDE DOWN BOY
So open parking, the main objective of the strike, is now a reality
T H R E E L I T T L E PIGS
SONG OF THE SOUR P L U M
on
T O BE A B E E
campus . . .
at least until
new provisions are hammered
out.
L I T T L E DUCK LOST
T H E FLOWER OF T H E R E A L M
REBEL: THE RELUCTANT
N I N E LIVES OF B I L L Y
RACEHORSE
ROSE
Gilded Age: T H E N I N E T I E S
G E N T I A N S IN T H E G A R D E N
BEST M A G I C T R I C K S
A C O M P L E T E G U I D E T O H O M E S E W I N G . By
S.K Mayer. W i t h hundreds of drawings. Fveryl l t i n g you need to k n o w about patterns and
stitches, mending and r e m o d e l i n g , f i t t i n g , etc.
Special Only $ 1 . 4 9
101 BEST M A G I C T R I C K S
A Look At The Tenure System
101 B E S T N A T U R E G A M E S A N D P R O J E C T S
P A I N T I N G M A D E EASY
THE P E R S O N A L I T Y OF THE B I R D
Bureaucracy, Apathy Limit Student Power
PHOTOGRAPHY
THE
COMPLETE
WORKS
OF
WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE.
A l l the plays: comedies,
tragedies ana histories i n c l u d i n g the lovely
sonnets and longer poems -complete and unabridged. Over 1,000 pages w i t h preface, introd u c t i o n and glossary.
Pub. at 1-ii.:»b O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
P L A S T I C F O A M l o r A r t s and Crofts
R O L L I N G THE CHEESE
T H E COW T H A T SPOKE FOR SEPPL
MR. BUDGE BUILDS A HOUSE
News Analysis
by Al Seni:i
T H E W O R L D O F PUSH A N D P U L L
W i n d o w Homer & James Russel L o w e l l : T H E
C O U R T I N ' . 1 xacl facsimile o l tne 1 8 / 4 odi
l i o n . I ovely volume w i t h / drawings by Wins
low H o i n e i ic-produced in h e l i o t y p c . 8 x 10.
Pub. at i ' j . o o . O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
THE C H A M P I O N ' S G U I D E T O B O W L I N G . Uy
D.ck Weber, U.S. N a t i o n a l C h a m p i o n . With 8b
Photos & Drawing-.. A c o m p l e t e book ol
instruction I rum stance to f o l l o w through,
angling, grips, hooks, c o m m o n faults, etc.
o . i g . Pub. at i J . ' i b . O n l y $ 1 . 0 0
8 3 8 W A Y S T O A M U S E A C H I L D : Crafts,
Hobbies Si Creative Ideas tor the C h i l d f r o m 6
to 12. By
June Johnson. W i t h
122 illus.
Easy-to-follow directions for hundreds ol simple tilings for bOyl and gtrls t o make, to do and
O i i g . Pub. at 1.1.'J'J. Only S i . 0 0
Cigarettes: G O O D B Y E T O A L L T H A T .
Lewine. Over I'JO Photos & drawings,
f oil C o l o i , Devastalirui chronicle o l Ihu
nant role cigarette smoking has played
popular c u l t u r u .
Pub. at l u . ' J ' j . O n l y $ 1 . 0 0
By H
'J'J HI
domi
in oui
CHINESE
FOLK
MEDICINE
AND
ACU
P U N C T U R E . By H. Wallnoler and A
Von
Rottauscher. f avcinoting histirtv on curiuus
i unlur.es old r u i a U h i e s t o i i n y I root men Is ami
i umedies the disc ovuries ot medical man ana
laymen handed d o w n t h r o u g h thousands o l
yean. A c u p u n c t u r e , herbs, love p h i l t o r l , ail
oilier areas of folk medicine. /I Illus
Pub. al M 9b. O n l y $ 1 . 9 8
A S M A L L BIRD SANG
A BOOK OF R E A L SCIENCE
L I V I N G L I K E I N D I A N S : Treasury of A m e r i can Indian Crafts, Games, and A c t i v i t i e s . By
A . A . Mac I a> Ian. i 00 drawings. 1000 indoor
Outdoor
ideas and projects f r o m authentic
Indian u l c : : handle rails, canoeing, c o o k i n g ,
h u n t i n g , fishing, conservalion, w o o d l o r e , etc.
o n y . Pub. at i b . ' J ' j . O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
TREASURY
OF
WITCHCRAFT.
By n . i .
Wedeck. 110 Photos & Drawings. Source book
of the magic ails, including d i v i n a t i o n , astrol o g y , necromancy, spells, charms, occull piac
tices, medicine men, riles, e t i . f r o m earliest
times to the present.
O-ti-g. Pub. at $ 1 0 . 0 0 , O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
C O L O R T R E A S U R Y OF M U S H R O O M S A N D
T O A D S T O O L S . By u
l u s c o & A I anuil
Over 125 b e a u t i f u l p h o t o s all in rich Full Colo
every si/e. shape, and f o r m ol m u s h r o o m and
t o a d s t o o l vividly p o r t r a y e d , plus a wealth
i n f o r m a t i o n on poisonous I y pes, myths
..story, etc. 9 * 1 ? .
I m p o r t Special O n l y £1.98
T h e r e are t w o w a y s t o l o o k
THE M A G I C T U N N E L
everything
THE LAST DOOO
is
SLEEP, BABY, SLEEP
NO ROOM FOR THE BAKER
NOT THIS BEAR
seeond
is
is a p p a r e n t .
see
N O L O V E FOR S C H N I T Z E L
and
it
is
V I C T O R I A : A PIG I N A P R A M
apparent
A T U R T L E IN T H E H O U S E
ture
and
Y U R I A N D THE M O O N E Y G O A T S
is
an
student
and
DOLPHINSI
the
is
The
really
promotion
What
seems
elaborate
struc-
designed to provide
merits
JACKANAPES
with
tenure system.
of
faculty
evaluation
individual
of
the
professors
pass j u d g m e n t o n t h e i r
per-
But
K N O T S 8, SPLICES
what
flawed
is
really
bureaucratic
&
Sciences—William
mutter—an
had
made
the
decidedly
was
the height
granting
equal
some
of
departmental
and
tenure
oblivion
there
is
a
system,
a
There
by
student
from
generally
on
students
more
than
the q u a l i t y
of
education for w h i c h they
short,
appearances
a
the
pay.
arc
tive.
A R e - e m e r g i n g Issue
issue
I
promotion
faded
That
promotion
reached
and
but
and
system
"save"
rarely
one
faces
is
The
and
candidate
tenure
decided
Level
for
must
promotion
pass
or
through
college, and
Council
on
the
University
Senate
recommendations
Faculty
once
meet,
Psychology
Water
of
mendation,
to
Current
department,
vote
of
Rhetoric
was d e n i e d
appointment.
decision
meetings
building
affair
of
This
t r iggered
and
sit-ins,
the
Depart-
and
Public
continuing
unpopular
marches,
administration
hut
the
entire
was, f o r s t u d e n t s , n o m o r e
t h a n an e x e r c i s e i n p o l i t i c a l
futi-
lity. T h e matter ended n o t
only
i n the ouster o f Wagner b u t also
on
Students
fessors
the
chopping
supporting
voice
similar
block.
these
pro-
complaints
depart
state:
"An
of meaningful
stu-
view
in the p r o m o t i o n
and
member."
t e n u r e p r o c e d u r e and charges
pettiness, and jealousy by
of
fellow
f a c u l t y in the d e p a r t m e n t s .
Student
alleged
similar:
reaction
injustices
has
supporters
"It
the
is
can'
these
been
But
using
opinion
are
the
Tucker,
and
David
on
the
''The
Executive
agreed
that
bylaws
datum
appointments
tor
and
is
students
of
a
that
valuable
since
faculty
students
source
they
influence
is l i m i t e d
were
department
of
attend
classes r e g u l a r l y . "
to
also
Clara
Hoffman
Kendall
recognized
information,
Coyle,
the
Elsewhere, they state:
a
Mary
recognizes
teaching
be
to
granting
continuing
dents. A m e m o r a n d u m signed by
on promotions
continuing
merits of
and/or
Birn,
Robert
debate
the
important
the decision
or
Donald
to
of
information about how
Lack
a
along
held
the
ments:
say
the a c a d e m i c
even
recently.
meetings
Goodman
centering a r o u n d t w o m a i n argudent
Two
to
business
of
stu-
to
the
which
the H i s t o r y
The
cated
is
Some
will
be
of
students
sitting
in
in
many
never
be
departments
care.
the
because
factor:
because
the
They
is
there
interesting
and inin
students
want
administrative
which
no
bur-
understandable
are
many
things
to
more
do
with
complained
that
y o u r t i m e in c o l l e g e . "
The
"even
report
if
there
students who
are
committee
work
is
interested
want to work
departments,
tive
others
only
student
departments
great
part
permt
classroom
cited
for
and
very
the
with
most
administraboring
and
univer-
executive committees that
vote,
the
can't
association
representation
compli-
the
have
to
these
their
departments
students
fluence
will
also
departmental
structure throughout
sity.
"Student
of
13,
as
they
as a d i s c o u r a g i n g
part
members
further
varying
report
den
Department."
issue
by
The
apathy
slates.
12 a n d
department
such
a student
Richard
1th
Department
faculty
get
on
others
started."
don't
p e r s o n n e l d e c i s i o n s , w i l l be o p e n
only
influence
just
Committee
the
meetings o f O c t o b e r
the
to
chairman
October
student
of
barred
In
s t u d e n t s are v e r y a c t i v e a n d h a v e
R.P.A.
sends
The
department.
s o m e as t h e n a t u r a l s c i e n c e s . . . t h e
exam-
results,
level.
each
"In
participation
for
heads
member
their
varies
in
Affairs
concluded:
student
Department,
recom-
policy
report
summary,
History
tenure
Central
twenty-one
presi-
value of s t u d e n t o p i n i o n o n
Department—find
decide
The
In
promotion,
personal
Dean
Commission.
policy.
departmental
a
actually
the
much
appropriate School.
Depart
students
departmental
by
Academic
The
History
Wagner,
that
di-
1971
con-
the
p l e , d i d so j u s t
then
of
and
merit and David G o o d m a n of the
Gerry
denying
the
department
the
own
Council's
study
Rothman
issued i n F e b r u -
cases.
inence here at State in the s p r i n g
when
by
to
appointment
chairman
ary
easiest,
further
minished
motion
his
is
entrance
meetings
Report, a study
page
power
some
The only comprehensive
on the m a t t e r was the
appointment
of
1970
Student
and
committees
at a l l .
teacher
tative m e t h o d .
promotion
i n en I
the
altogether
d o n ' l have executive
tinuing
the
tenure. The
is
advisory capacity. Some exclude
students
makes
discuss, evaluate and
and
the
apparently
filling out
forms
on individual candidates for pro-
breakdown
sics D e p a r t m e n t , C a r o l i n e
the
have
the
university.
in
with
G a s c o y n e o f t h e Clas-
to
qualitafar,
Uni-
Promotion
which
so
[ this
collec-
and
And
that
be
most systematic, and most quali-
three levels: the d e p a r t m e n t ,
dent of the
on,
way."
evaluation
The Departmental
professors
prom
because
posing and often confusing.
these
Promo
promises
become
the
task
be-
guide
value,
powers-that-be
effec-
trundled
of
the
should
im-
versity
to
be
tive
school
attempts
"to
information |
forms
to
ted in a s y s t e m a t i c
significant
of
linos,
faculty and admini-
easy
a
man
message
evaluation
according
the
an
issue un t h r e e p o p u l a r
tenure
its greatest
powerful
their
teacher
cause,
and T e n u r e , a c o m m i t t e e o f
tenure
to
to carry
peti-
personal
not
into
is, u n t i l t h i s y e a r .
and
again
and
s t r a t o r s . T a k i n g o n t h e s y s t e m is
political
unchallenged.
Richard
The
but
faculty,
The
virtually
lion
de-
ceiving.
T R I C K S A N D G A M E S FOR C H I L D R E N
T R I C K S 8, S T U N T S W I T H P L A Y I N G C A R D S
excludes
having m u c h
t o k e n say
T H E SUCCESS
at
committees,
groups
and
lobbying
to
campaigns,
gathering
bureaucracy
on
various
Sam Lavenson: SEX A N D T H E S I N G L E C H I L D
in the hands o f a few
writing
tion
faculty
student
were
letter
about
and
system
as
SAILORS, SAILORS
T H E R E GOES W H A T ' S H E R N A M E
being
through-
representation
for the most part, the
were scattered
NIGHT"
of
discussion
students
50-50
individual
T H E S T O R Y OF " S I L E N T
who
the t u r m o i l
of
In
Perl-
out the entire controversy.
s y s t e m t h a t places great a m o u n t s
S O N N E T S OF S H A K E S P E A R E
mistake
pro-student
of
Arts
administrator
LOTS OF L I M E R I C K S
SOCCER
purging
of the College of
LIVING WITH DIABETES
power
the
Dean
activism waned.
formance.
THE KEY TO H O Y L E ' G A M E S
Address,
CAMPUS CENTER
what
at
first
to
the
There
So
ment
w
to
The
there.
T H E S O N N E T S OF M I C H E L A N G E L O
CHESS M O V E BY M O V E By P I anglaUd l o t .
hue ritawmqs, plus 8 lull-page coloi pholos or
rare and beautiful cltUii piece*. A n uiluSudl
c o m b i n a t i o n , a nook o l instrui l i o n h o r n begin
nui to advanced techniques of play w i t h inter
evtinij i n l o t m o t i o n about the chesspieces / 1 4
. 10 I 4.
I b . U ' j Value O n l y $ 2 . 9 8
tit S U N Y A .
t o see w h a t
popular
Ilu
contributed
have
in
an
Continued on puge two
Criteria
by Glenn von Nostitz
The o d d thing a b o u t Richard
Gascoyne is that h e seems s o
nonchalant. He's been an Assistant Professor o f Classics here
since 1 9 6 9 and was up for
tenure review earlier this year.
He received positive recommendations from
fellow
faculty
members and the department
chairman, and h e is very popular
among his students.
Yet the University still denied
him tenure. A n d although h e
d o e s n ' t have a n o t h e r j o b lined
u p y e t a n d h a s a family t o
s u p p o r t , he d o e s n ' t seem particularly worried. H e just seems t o
accept his fate, and fate has been
rather cruel this year t o Professor G a s c o y n e .
The w h o l e G a s c o y n e s t o r y
c o n t a i n s m a n y of t h e p r o b l e m s
i n h e r e n t in t h e t e n u r e s y s t e m as
it o p e r a t e s a t this University.
T h e r e is t h e often alleged lack of
s t u d e n t influence in d e t e r m i n i n g
which professors s h o u l d be fired
or p r o m o t e d . W h o , s t u d e n t s ask,
should m a k e t h e u l t i m a t e decision? A Dean, reclining in his
carpeted office? A c o m m i t t e e of
faculty m e m b e r s ? Or s h o u l d t h e
students,
t h e people
most
directly affected by t h e t e n u r e
s y s t e m (beside t h e F a c u l t y m e m ber),
m a k e t h e u l t i m a t e decisions?
And there is t h e p r o b l e m of
w h a t m a n y observers t e r m a
" c o l d " and " i m p e r s o n a l " s y s t e m
which grinds on with little regard
for h u m a n
feeling or
emotion.
" N o Ph.D. Slash"
T h e reason why G a s c o y n e
w o n ' t be teaching here n e x t year
seems simple o n t h e surface. H e
doesn't
last long
here at
S U N Y A , no m a t t e r h o w good h e
may be or h o w well-liked. Comments Gascoyne: " N o Ph.D . . .
slash, y o u ' r e t h r o u g h . "
He c o m p l e t e d all his d o c t o r a l
c o u r s e work at C o l u m b i a a n d
has begun work o n his dissertation. B u t even the fact t h a t he is
rapidly nearing t h e c o m p l e t i o n
of his doctoral work d i d n ' t seem
to have m u c h effect on t h e
Lenure decision-makers.
Student Role Minor In Pronwtimhjenun
Continued
from page one
tedious, and t h e student becomes
very
apathetic and
doesn't c a n y o u t his job o n the
c o m m i t t e e responsibly."
T h e reaction o f department
chairmen t o the writing o f the
report is also interesting. S o m e
provided the student* with detailed explanations of their departmental structure and the
role students played in it. Others
reacted negatively. T h e report
has this t o say about the astrono m y department: "They did not
wish t o answer. All they said is
that this school has t o o many
b u r e a u c r a t i c c o m m i t t e e s rinding
overlapping
information...and
the university w o u l d be better
off w i t h o u t s o m a n y of t h e m . "
The Geography
Department
c h a i r m a n was even m o r e a b r u p t .
In t h e w o r d s of t h e r e p o r t : " T h e
G e o g r a p h y D e p a r t m e n t did not
wish t o answer t h e questionnaire. T h e y said that S.A. a n d D.
Neufeld
(student
government
president at t h e lime I h a s n o
right t o k n o w what is h a p p e n i n g
in this d e p a r t m e n t .
By way of summary'- then
s t u d e n t power o n the .nittal level
of t h e bureacracy — the individual d e p a r t m e n t — is limned
to teacher evaluation forms and
scattered
representation on
\anou;- c o m m i t t e e s that h.ivt\ a n o u > td>k> and various am o u n t - of power. Student repre>entalion c o m e s about largely as
j result of benevolent faculty or
d e p a r t m e n t c h a i r m e n - a n d the
lasks c o m m i t t e e s perform arc
often so r o u t i n e and boring th.il
th.-y hold little interest t o student*.
MM:
I tnv numtm up lo tsoo may par
T„« m*'»' " • g.ist.sicMCQT.eP-ofwsn-Ei^na.
3 Each playef "'PS a c o n :o aeie-- une
".o* many spac.s 1e
»,ll ad,anc« H.aa,-°n« s » c . / » « * - ' " » » ; " '".'
, puwlsnda on a Qo a Budsjw t w » « space - t
nun .OH 3 Die 10 d W «* !»« 0u<C0~*
PosSiDle oolcomes a'*
PROMOTION
^J^J^^--AND —-^^Jl
i
2
3
4
5
Lot. a turn * M . l i w w , i r o " * >"•'•'" ** » *
Re'meo DM m Oo MM IO r* san-,e sow,.
Lot. on. mm oarmj i w * «we«.5»o» W «• Boa
Pioiioletl Advance 2 sajams
F.reU il onienuieo l«a, w j n e e s w i e t m w *
piomolion feieciea
6 b o s s ' . ' lost n o " again
„ HUHIMI
iABTIMft
\ FINISH DiSSERTATiO*.
A PROM JTEDTO
» ASSOCIATE PR0FESS0P /
PARTICIPATE
I G E ' A NEW
/ifj A
\ \ ' i-PEWniTEO
/POLITICAL
\ \ ,r/
DEMONSTRATION
L0SE 7 T
^ h ^ ^
fjr
UPNS
fr^W/WHILE
BOARD
INVESTIGATES ,—_
In particular instances of prom o t i o n , t e n u r e and c o n t i n u i n g
a p p o i n t m e n t cases, tilt- e n u r e
question of "power' is nearly
irrelevant because of .in added
factor !hr d e p a r t m e n t chairman
sends nol only live d e p a r t m e n t a l
ri-commendatuin !" tin- next
level ,.! :h.- oureoucrac) lull his
own ;>.--.in.i! r ecommemlali<in
.,. -A.
And his recommeil
fiat o n
, an
;l
hi
Wishes
Faculty members all receive a
copy of the "Ftculty Handb o o k " which, among other
things,
explains
University
policies in regard to continuing
appointment, tenure, and promotion. The handbook lists five
criteria for determining an instructor's fitness for appointment, tenure or promotion.
Fiist of all, the instructor is
supposed to show "mastery of
subject
matter." The book
doesn't go into much depth explaining what this means, but if
his testimonials are to be believed, Gascoyne certainly fulfills the qualifications in this
area. One of his professors at
ut-parimenWil
Iht
\*r.'>u?
(<>ii- '!• •
C o l u m b i a hay said, " H e is n o w a
thoroughly
equipped
young
classicist w h o m I w o u l d trust
t e a c h i n g o n a n y level s h o r t of
the doctoral seminar." And the
former
Classics
Department
chairman
c l a i m e d that, " M r .
G a s c o y n e is d e c i d e d l y s u p e r i o r . "
T h e h a n d b o o k also lists "effectiveness at t e a c h i n g " as an imp o r t a n t criteria. In this area,
G a s c o y n e ' s p r o o f of c o m p e t e n c y
are t h e highly e n t h u s i a s t i c rec o m m e n d a t i o n s filled o u t by his
s t u d e n t s . Of 104 q u e s t i o n n a i r e s
c o m p l e t e d , all of t h e s t u d e n t s
t h o u g h t G a s c o y n e had "excellent m a s t e r y " of his subject
m a t t e r , 1 0 3 t h o u g h t t h a t he
"organized t h e course well" and
102 f o u n d t h a t his lectures were
" i n t e r e s t i n g a n d s t i m u l a t i n g . " In
a d d i t i o n t o these r e c o m m e n d a tions w e r e unsolicited s t u d e n t
testimonials,
including
letters
supporting
Gascoyne
in his
tenure struggle.
•'
<
<
m
n.:nd> ol ihe dpproprti t e
n w hu accord.nj: to <-s J
r
nlivhht-d u)r* 'shall consult »' Hi
om
mit'.ee ol tne faculty and
d e n t s in ail ca>e.^ of p r o m o t i o n
and
continuing
appointments
arising .n n * school or college
But
agb.n
appearance-
a'e de
eeiv.ng. T n e Oean can tolallv
disregard h,s "ad^.surv commit
!«- and send his o w n evaluation
o! the case ~ along with n.s
c o m m i t t e e s findings - u p the
ladder
T n e n e l t slop IS Ihe Council
on P r o m o t i o n ! and Continuing
A p p o i n t m e n t s a Senate C o m
m i t t e e thai includes four slu
d e r . u Thr t ouncil can overturn
i n s of tne findings that m «
ptev.ouslv h e r n made and it
mai.es tr.e !in»J r e c o m m e n d a t i o n
to
me university,
president
Evaluations are based on l m
c nteri.
mastery
of
subject
matter
leaching el lee l i v e n e d
ability as a scholar efjeclo eness
ol univensily service and c o n
tinuing g r o w t h
But it is the president of the
university w h o ultimately make*
the binding decision It is a role
thai carr.es with It e n o r m o u s
political c o n s e q u e n c e s
It „ a rule that SL'NYA Pre*!
Cent Louis Benezet h a s n o l been
c o m f o r t a b l e with Whde he. as
president
it the court ol t h e
PAGE TWO
papftic coot-wi* u' Pic Chronicle of H,gher EducM £
final decision tieneiet ». gen
erally supporu.*- of • "«- l ni\er
M!\ Council and prefers nol t o
mterven* T h r view i* best ex
prt-sb*-d in .1 letter B*-nezel wrotf
lo a s t u d e n t on F e b r u a O J , 9 7 2 In II. ihe president wrole
' T h e gt-nrral ruit- remain, thai a
profrw-or i- fulur.' •• -ntl bhould
tj«- decided t>> rii> p«T* .n h >
departmt-ni T h e n i . n . ihr prt-n
dent i n l t - n m n in. n m r r m u n
it-rpruducli^t- i! bet t . m r . d>i the
(aru(t> m e m b e r
Benez.et h<u. gone un record di
Mating that the entire p r o m o t i o n
and t e n u r e i>>hiem .: in ne*-d of
reform u> include more htudent
contuilalion
But he explain*
that it " Ih*- I'niven.it> Senat*
that muM chart t h e opecifio of
Oie c h a n e * I* effect, he e n
dorve* reform but call* on t h e
faculty t o inblitule it for t h e
Serial* a n d Senate c o m m i t lee*
jre d o m i n a t e d b> facult> mem
ben.
T h e question thus be
r o m r b How much pottei will
the (aculis ihemselveb grant u>
ihe ktudenl bod> "
\ New "Reform"
| | Ihe r e t r n i [».»»l i» aH> null
, «|itm Hi. jil>Wei lo the queh
turn <>• S o l nun n
An ad hin
w i n o m m i t t e r ..1 uie I niverMtv
Senate > Ele*-uli\e (.'onimtt tee
is*ued .. report i-.niitM m Hie \e.ii
Miggeblmg •'reform
nl Ihe pr«.
mot ion and tenure c\ »tem li
Mub nol a d o p t e d
The
new proposed
»y*tem
would tia\e differed from the
: . j , , of the
.rj.
old in thai t-,:,.
h e role
powerful
I'niverttitv
Council
would have been down graded
by having iU work load reduced
and greater power l o decide p r o
m o t i o n and tenure Cases would
have been returned t o individual
department*
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
^L
tea
'
The I'n<vers11> Counci-l would
have been retained a> an ad
\iMir\ h o d \ lo the president b-ui
would have been given power to
i-onsider "onl> '.hoM* i ,i.->«•> m
vt thing
recommendaiioivt.
foi
i utii Miunig a p p o i n t m e n t
Mem
ben>ltip would have l u t n >et A\
\ hit lee n P l e m b r i v nine Ucult>
and fnui k t u d e n u
the
powt
would
ll.
ihe new
guarantee
In general, powei would have
|>een restored l o t h e d e p a r t
m.-nial level foi p r o m o t i o n ..nd
lenure cases and l e n u r e d l a c u l n
and the deans would h . . \ . ..
greater s.tv m deciding tliose
u and
The h l r u c l u i
procedures o u t l i n e d Would have
been even more complex than
under the old system and the
net effect
ol t h e " r e f o r m
would have very posaiblv been a
'educ-loN in s t u d e n l involve
me tt Direct s t u d e n t ».i\ (as
token at it is in the current
dent vui
would ;
negai.w
irtmicalh
les* >Uld*'
Professor
One
(above)
i throw h»i
S t u d e n t As
Lam pert tall
played son.'
bottled up
committee
denied tenure.
The G a s c o y n e case has
b e e n s o m e w h a t c o n t r o v e r s i a l in (hat h e w a s very p o p u l a r
and
by his work t o w a r d advanced
degrees.
T h e Classics d e p a r t m e n t faculty voted u n a n i m o u s l y t o rec o m m e n d G a s c o y n e for t e n u r e .
It is q u i t e clear t o all t h a t
Gascoyne did very well in all of
the criteria. B u t t h e fact is t h a t
he does n o t yet have his doct o r a t e . As he told this r e p o r t e r ,
" E i t h e r y o u have it or y o u
d o n ' t . " U n f o r t u n a t e l y for Gasc o y n e , he still d o e s n ' t have it.
Another Reason
T h e case isn't all t h a t simple,
however. A c c o r d i n g t o R u t h
Schmidt,
Associate Dean for
H u m a n i t i e s , there was at least
one o t h e r reason w h y G a s c o y n e
wasn'L rehired. S h e cites a " d e creasing interest in Latin a n d
Classical S t u d i e s . "
G a s c o y n e is quick t o point
out, however, that a l t h o u g h t h e
n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s majoring in
Classics has declined s o m e w h a t ,
the n u m b e r of s t u d e n t s taking
courses in t h e Classics Departm e n t h a s d o u b l e d during t h e
past three years. And it has been
G a s c o y n e ' s courses which have
been m o s t popular, a t t r a c t i n g
the m o s t new s t u d e n t t o t h e
department
His m y t h o l o g y
course b e c a m e so p o p u l a r t h a t it
had t o be divided i n t o t w o sections of 7 5 and 125 s t u d e n t s ,
and his o t h e r courses have been
equally well a t t e n d e d .
He a d m i t s thai m a n y Classics
courses have been small, including several Greek and Latin
classes with only H or 10 stu
dents, b u t he feels t h a t this is
good a n d should be s u p p o r t e d
rather than eliminated. He sees a
certain irony in that h e , t h e
professor w h o teaches the m o s t
s t u d e n t s , is t h e o n e being forced
to leave.
Dr. Hans Pohlsander, D e p a r t
merit C h a i r m a n , feels t h a t t h e
decision t o release G a s c o y n e will
" o n l y h u r t t h e classics d e p a r t
m e n t . " He refuses t o c o m m e n t
on w h e t h e r t h e decision was
correct or wrong, b u t feels t h a t
this decision is best reserved for
the p r o p e r a u t h o r i t i e s , although
he did remark t h a t G a s c o y n e
was enthusiastically e n d o r s e d by
the d e p a r t m e n t and that "HIU
d e n t evaluation was very favor
able."
R i c h a r d G a s c o y n e of t h e Classics D e p a r t m e n t
has b e e n
respected
among students,
fellow
faculty
members,
a n d t h e d e p a r t m e n t c h a i r m a n . The n o - t e n u r e decision was
made
primarily
Ph.I)
degree.
because
The amount of student Input
into the tenure decision process
has become a subject of some
controversy, not only with the
Gascoyne c u e , but with the
tenure case* of Dr. Caroline
Waterman of the Psychology
Department and History Professor David Goodman as well.
The Arts and Sciences Committee has six members in addition
to Dean Hunsberger. There are
presently no students on the
committee.
Whether the inclusion of students on the committee would
have affected the final outcome
of the Cascoyne case is uncertain. All of Gascoyne's student
evaluations were highly favor-
"Only On Paper I Failed"
l>-
'.< o t n i m n d
asks Huniberger, "why should It
be reconsidered?"
Hunsberger did say that the
decision to release Gascoyne was
made "essentially on his own
merits." But he later pointed out
that there was at least one extraneous factor which influenced
the decision making. If Gascoyne were to be tenured, the
result would be a 100% tenured
Classics Department,
which,
according to Hunsberger, would
seriously reduce flexibility. Once
an instructor is given tenure he
can be fired only under very
grave circumstances. According
to Hunsberger, "tenure is not
something to be considered
lightly."
The Gascoyne Affair:
i . . m p i e : e l \ opposite from that
ol n.s d e p a r t m e n t
The S\ stem Described
•.f
The tenure
decision-makers
also ask about the candidate's
"ability as a scholar," "effectveness of university service,"
and what they term "continuing
growth." In all of these areas,
Gascoyne's Departmental Recommendation gave him very
high marks. Former professors
of Gascoyne's were quoted as
having
"outstanding experiences" with him as an undergraduate. He was co-director of
Classics Weekend on campus in
1970. He is a member of a
plethora of professional associations, and was Vice-President of
the Eastern Zone of the Latin
Teachers Association. His continuing growth was exemplified
Gascoyne
does
not
yet
have a
Reconsider?
Of course, t h e a r g u m e n t is n o t
alt one-sided. T h e r e are m e n like
1. M o y e r Hunsberger, Dean of
the College of Arts a n d Sciences.
He doesn't find a n y t h i n g wrong
in the G a s c o y n e decision ut all;
the decision d o e s n ' t seern ut ull
unusual t o him. " R e c o n s i d e r V "
Hunsberger doesn't seem to
feel t h a t t h e t e n u r e s y s t e m is
particularly cold or impersonal.
He rather glibly justifies t h e w a y
it functions, saying that, " A n y
organization is forced t o m a k e
personnel decisions, and if t h e
individual is n o t given t e n u r e ,
he's n o t likely t o feel very w a r m
a b o u t i t . " He draws an analogy
b e t w e e n a university a n d "ind u s t r y , " saying t h a t t h e r e is
" m o r e c o n s u l t a t i o n " with t h e
e m p l o y e e in a university t h a n in
industry.
Gascoyne has speculated t h a t
il was Hunsberger who was behind the decision to deny him
tenure. He felt that when "all
was said and d o n e , " Hunsberger
had t h e greatest voice in d e t e r
mining w h o gets t e n u r e and w h o
does n o l .
Hunsberger oilers a disclaimer
to this bit of speculation. He
claims that the Arts a n d Sciences
C o m m i t t e e , which he heads, has
a "major v o i c e " m t e n u r e decisions, and that the C o m m i t t e e
r e c o m m e n d e d denying G a s c o y n e
tenure. Hunsberger disavows personal
responsibility
for t h e
decision, saying thai it " i s t h e
President (of the University)
who makes the final d e c i s i o n . "
Sorry A b o u t That
Ho it looks like there is little
that can be d o n e t o reverse t h e
G a s c o y n e decision. T h e case h a s
run t h e c o m p l e t e course of a d
ministrutors, councils, c o m m i t tees a n d deuns. Guscoyne hus
received his letter of regret from
President Benezet und will be
o u t t h e d o o r n e x t fall. T h e j o b
murket for clussics professors is
tight.
able, a n d it has been suggested
t h a t s t u d e n t m e m b e r s of t h e
c o m m i t t e e would be m o r e likely
t o listen t o their peers than
w o u l d faculty members.
The T e n u r e Machine
Apparently,
then,
t h e decision-makers
found
t h e recommendations
from
faculty
m e m b e r s , t h e s t u d e n t evaluations, a n d university service of
less i m p o r t a n c e than G a s c o y n e ' s
lack of a P h . D a n d t h e inflexibility t h a t would result from a
100% tenured department.
T h e t e n u r e system is alot like
well-oiled,
smooth
running
m a c h i n e , ll accomplishes its j o b
cleanly and with little loss of
efficiency. Once a decision has
been reached nothing s h o r t of
throwing a m o n k e y - w r e n c h into
the gears can stop it. T h e t e n u r e
m a c h i n e has no reverse gear.
Some profit by it. Some are
ignored by it. And others, like
Richard Gascoyne, are t h e victims of its impersonality.
Although the C a s c o y n e case
may n o w be closed, alot if
classics s t u d e n t s are still asking
q u e s t i o n s : What were ihe " p e r
sonal m e r i t s " on which t h e final
decision
to deny
Gascoyne
t e n u r e was ostensibly
made?
"Who actually made t h e final
decision? H o w can s t u d e n t s bec o m e meaningfully involved in
the t e n u r e process?
These are all difficult questions, und n o o n e in a position
of
uii t h o r i t y
seems
overly
anxious to answer them.
Professor Gascoyne, himself,
seems t o s u m up the s i t u a t i o n
m o s t succinctly when he says, " I
d o n ' t feel I've failed personally.
Only on paper I failed."
t
FRIDAY OCTOBt
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE THREE
vl64
u zzyyyxuiv
vl64
179
u zzyyxuiv
BULLETIN
With Hanoi Lead
WASHINGTON AP - Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger said today "peace is at
hand" in Vietnam.
179
BULLETIN
With Hanoi Lead
WASHINGTON APvl64
u zzyyxuiv
u zzyyxuiv
179
BULLETIN
Witli
Hanoi
Lead
WASHINGTON AP - Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger said today "peace is at
hand" in Vietnam.
In the Wake
179
BULLETIN
With Hanoi Lead
PrcsWASHINGTON AP
Hciiry A. KiS.
idential
adviser
singer said today
" peace
is „
liand" in Vietnam.
10-26-72
by Holger Jensen
Associated Press Writer
Hanoi talked peace Thursday,
but ordered its forces to continue fighting until the United
States signs a cease-fire agreem e n t w o r k e d o u t in s e c r e t .
N o r t h V i e t n a m e s e and Viet
C o n g t r o o p s r e s p o n d e d with intensified
shelling,
small-unit
g r o u n d a t t a c k s a n d terrorist inc i d e n t s in S o u t h V i e t n a m .
12.46pcd
10-25
Peace/1963/Tonkin/Johnson/.-2-3-4We Don'tWant Your
Lousy War/Blood/Napalm/1965/Peace Now!/Chicago/
Kent/MayDay/Nixon/Washington D.C./Pigs!/Harrisburg/
South
Vietnamese
headquarters reported 113 enemyinintiated incidents, including 81
shelling a t t a c k s , in t h e past 24
hours.
T h e Saigon c o m m a n d said it
was the largest n u m b e r of attacks in any 2 4 - h o u r period
since the Tot offensive of 1968
but U.S. sources said t h e y were
of " n o military significance since
most consisted of o n l y one or
t w o rocket and m o r t a r r o u n d s .
A Viet Cong d o c u m e n t captured in Da Nang i n d i c a t e d the
s t e p p e d up at Lacks w o u l d continue for the n e x t two d a y s , and
U.S. t r o o p s in t h e n o r t h e r n p o r t
city were placed on h e i g h t e n e d
alert.
T h e newspaper Tin Song, controlled
by
the
presidential
palace, said President N g u y e n
Van Thieu o r d e r e d the c o m m a n ders of all four military regions
t o crush any e n e m y a t t e m p t s to
create " a general u p r i s i n g . "
Across the b o r d e r in Cambodia, the high c o m m a n d in
P h n o m Penh said a C a m b o d i a n
infantry brigade o c c u p i e d a large
and i m p o r t a n t e n e m v training
and staging c a m p 40 miles west
MyLai/Lavelle/Thieu/VVAW/Arms/Legs/Babies/Death/7]
Nixon/Kissinger / "PEACE IS AT HAND" . .
by Frank Cormier
Associated Press Writer
Washington AP — President Jul
aide Henry A. Kissinger said
T h u r s d a y " p e a c e is at h a n d " in
Vietnam and, in his view, can he
achieved in t h r e e or l o u r d a y s ol"
private d i p l o m a c y .
T h e Saigon g o v e r n m e n t , h o w
ever, remained a principal s t u m
hling block, stating that the
S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e could n o t he
h o u n d hy any N o r t h VietnamU.S. a g r e e m e n t .
t r o o p s and e q u i p m e n t within
sixty days, an exchange of prisoners in the same lime .span and
laier r e s o l u t i o n b y t h e Viet
namese
themselves
of
longstanding political differences.
Kissinger did quarrel, however,
with a N o r t h V i e t n a m e s e claim
that
the
United
S t a t e s had
agreed to sign a peace pact next
T u e s d a y b u t now w a n t e d further
n e g o t i a t i o n s on g r o u n d s that
South
Vietnamese
Presidenl
N g u y e n Van Thieu was balking
at the terms.
Kissinger, President
Nixon's
much-traveled assistant for national security affairs, gave news
men an hour-long r e p o r t after
Hanoi Radio s h a t t e r e d the sec
recy lid hy a n n o u n c i n g the Uni
ved S t a t e s and N o r t h Viet nam
were on the brink of signing a
nine point peace plan.
T h e While House aide did not
quarrel with H a n o i ' s recitation
of the tentative framework of an
agreement - a quick cease-fire in
place, withdrawal of American
First of all, said Kissinger,
Hanoi had set the T u e s d a y goal.
He said the United S t a t e s , while
accepting Oct. '\ 1 as an object
ive, never gave a firm agreemenl
to w r a p p i n g up a peace package
on t h a t day
S e c o n d , h e said, "it is inevitable that in a war of such com
plexity t h e r e should be occasional difficulties in reaching a
final s o l u t i o n ' '
and he cited
what he t e r m e d the justifiable
desire of the Saigon government
" t o participate in the making of
their own p e a c e . "
In s u m m a t i o n , the President's
key foreign policy aide gave the
view that Thieu would ultimate
ly give his approval to the blueprint for ending the war.
question, said he could n o t conceive that Hanoi w o u l d seize
upon such grounds t o s c u t t l e
peace efforts t h a t have c o m e so
close lo fruitation.
"We believe," he said, " t h a t by
far the longest p a r t of the road
has been traversed and w h a t
stands in t h e way of an agreem e n t now are issues t h a t are
relatively less i m p o r t a n t t h a n
those that have already been
settled."
Kissinger said there need not
be a long delay
that remaining
difficulties could be settled in
one more negotiating session
"lasting no more than three or
four d a y s . "
In Paris, where another round
of formal peace discussions were
held Wednesday, the North Viet
namese chief delegate, Xuan
T h e y , was asked if Hanoi would
c o n t i n u e the talks, privately or
otherwise, if the Oct It | deadline were not met.
"Wait and you will see," he
replied.
Kissinger, fielding a similar
Saigon radio e m p h a s i z e d t h a t
S o u t h Vietnam would not be
b o u n d by any a g r e e m e n l but did
not
indicate w h e t h e r Saigon
would (jppose it.
"We in S o u t h Vietnam have
the right of s e l f - d e t e r m i n a t i o n , "
tin* b r o a d c a s t said. " A separate
agreement between North Vietnam and the United States does
not concern us in any w a y . "
Allegheny Airlines
helps you beat
the waiting game
A n i l ' , ( ! « . ' > , /<>u uj)
lo
.{. -]•. .f. 4; + 4",
Kissinger said S o u t h V i e t n a m ' s
President Thieu had been talking
a b o u t "a previous plan, not this
version" when he expressed opposition earlier this week to any
coalition g o v e r n m e n t that would
include C o m m u n i s t elements.
The dramatic d e v e l o p m e n t s of
the day seemed certain to have a
4
J'S'H,
A11. - ( J h. • r I v' • Young Adult Curd let', y
Ity ^ l i u i i i ' v i ' / you waul I'' (i*v< -n
holidays) oiid vlill cjcl udvoni i>
#
major impact <•
e l e c t i o n camp,i
ing t o w a r d i in
• [iri'sidt'i
..(iidh n
Kissinger several Mini-- i-mw
sized t h a t the nmi.ni! "I K
a c c o r d n o w • ,inil the (jtarget
for
.nim-mi-nt *c
H a n o i ' s idea. I 'ui iMh-i • >.•
major shift then m II ,w,.. •,
gaining position In -,.,i<! "h a d been no po^itnlii\
settlement.
F r o m the head of t h e FBI t o
the man in the s t r e e t in Harlem,
Americans
expressed
elation,
h o p e and disbelief at the news
t h a t a cease-fire in I n d o c h i n a
seems near.
' 'Tremendously
overjoyed,"
was the way FBI Director L.
Patrick Gray III p u t it after a
l u n c h e o n speech in New York.
" I t ' s t o o good to he t r u e , "
c o m m e n t e d .Joyce Blakeley, a
secretary in Harlem.
T h e c o m b i n a t i o n of anticipation, skepticism and u n c e r t a i n t y
was c o m m o n T h u r s d a y .
"We'll all be h a p p y to have
p e a c e , " said Mrs. L y n d o n B.
II , 1 , / n - bulwi.-.-n i.
and //*, whul o i l - you
Allegheny In h-l ( uunttM
and |jur< huv• t< '•'
Young Adult ( d i d
A d o z e n persons in Nashville
Term., got t h e news while standing on the steps tt\' the c o u r t b o u s e d u r i n g a peace vigil, " T h e
fact t h a t it c o m e s on this day of
all days m a k e s it just t o o m u c h
of a c o i n c i d e n c e , " c o m m e n t e d
Fred Elding, a s t u d e n t at Van*
derbilt University.
A n o t h e r Vanderbilt s t u d e n t ,
Don Soma, said he and o t h e r
HtudnotS had had a table set u p
on c a m p u s t o distribute a n t i w a r
literature " a n d people c o m i n g
by said: 'Why are you doing
this? It's over, y o u k n o w . "
Several a n t i w a r groups said
that previously planned d e m o n strations would go on as sell
eduled, A m o n g t h e m was a
march s p o n s o r e d by the Cleveland Area Peace Action Coalition,
A n n o u n c i n g t h a t an afternoon
d e m o n s t r a t i o n was still planned,
D u n c a n Williams, c o o r d i n a t o r of
the g r o u p , said: "We will believe
t h a t the war in Vietnam is over
w h e n we see all the t r o o p s , war
i m p l e m e n t s a n d war planes an*
brought back."
Msgr. J a m e s F. Higney, administrator of St. Patrick's Cathedral
in New York, a n n o u n c e d that
the
regular
5:30 p.m. mass
would be changed into a special
pence mass.
•»-o^aaaaH > <fl*a»-o ••••»-o-«•»-( >«•»< x
O n e w o m a n leaving the c a t h e dral earlier said she found the
news bard t o believe, "11 seems
so s u d d e n because the war has
almost b e c o m e a way of life,"
she said.
Daniel Ellsberg, w h o leaked
the Pentagon Papers t o the press,
said in Ithaca, N.Y., t h a t the
news of the p r o p o s e d s e t t l e m e n t
was " a t r i b u t e t o t h e American
people; and the a n t i w a r movem e n t . " He a d d e d : " I t definitely
looks like the President is a b o u t
to agree to the s e t t l e m e n t North
V i e t n a m has p r o p o s e d since he
has been in o f f i c e . "
*i>-mm*i>-mmm-i>'mmm-<>-*mm+-i><mm+i>-wmB-i)-mmm*i>-mmm><h
Midterms are over!
Take a weekend vacation with
PYE
SUN. NITE
|
Dance to the Music of j
'Trek' j
FRI. & SAT.
Bijou Presents
Halloween Horror Film
Action!
Beer & Soda
Allegheny cihoai • i-jjt
'ill other mii|oi tiiflini
foung Adult Cord',
General meeting:
Free with Colonial tax
Monday, October 30
ALLEGHENY AIR SYSTEM
W» have a lot more going for you.
i
Colonial Quad Board
that believes in
WIJIII'IIJ for '•* Slf J|J by ' my
Johnson,
"It
seems
very
t e n u o u s , b u t I, like e v e r y o n e
else, will w e l c o m e p e a c e . " T h e
former first lady, in New York
City, said she had n o t talked to
h e r h u s b a n d since H e n r y A.
Kissinger said a peace a g r e e m e n t
was near.
Donald J o h n s o n , U.S. adminis t r a t o r for verterans' affairs, said
in Las Vegas t h a t T h u r s d a y ' s
a n n o u n c e m e n t " d o e s show the
n e g o t i a t i o n s have b o r n e
fruit
and t h a t Hanoi has indeed now
acceded to o u r p o i n t s for n
s e t t l e m e n t . All of us are looking
forward to an end to this conflict."
l»»o<«a>»o-Ma»o-«aa»n<4aaaa>o<«Ha»o-«
get involved in a club
ICl.'l AJtlOT,
My Only Regret Is That t Hava But Ona Country to Give for My Ufa
SAIGON—Reporter Marsh Clark asked President Thieu
to consider the following hypothetical proposition:
"If someone came to you and said, 'If you resign, I can
guarantee that peace will be restored and South Vietnam will
nave the right to determine Its own fate,' would you resign?"
Thieu replied: "I have no reason to resign. I am doing well."
We Will All Be Happy to Have Peace
R e m i n d e d that Vmm - \>"
o c r a t i c opponent Sen fi*-v,
M c O o v e r n , has tunHiM-wl Ni
now is prepared u, ->i-v\>t e r m s h e could havi- <>IA*U-four years ago Kiwi-rigM *
" t h e r e was no pn . rbilitj u\ ••
eluding
this .igo-i-nicni
ago "
Referring lo Hitn e g o t i a t i n g sigii.il
said a c c o r d w.i ••
" f o u r years ago i
or t w o m o n t h ..;•<>
McOovern * >
in the day on <> \»
e n t in tin- d.i*. •
i m m i n e n t pe.n <•
t h e r e is no holdn
part ol d e n
Hi •
else and ih.H ••••• •
the Win ovei
o f the capital, at n o o n . A
spokesman, Col. Am Rong, said
the e n e m y fled during the night
as the Cambodian column began
an advance from K o m p e n g Speu,
2 5 miles southwest of Phnom
Penh.
T h e U.S. C o m m a n d a n n o u n c e d
the d e a c t i v a t i o n of 19 A r m y and
Air F o r c e s u p p o r t units and the
r e s u m e d w i t h d r a w a l of an A37
jet s q u a d r o n t h a t was d e l a y e d by
e n e m y activity a r o u n d Saigon,
T h e total was 1,210
men,
m o s t l y postal, s u p p l y , signal,
t r a n s p o r t a t i o n and medical detachments.
The
withdrawals
lowered U.S. military s t r e n g t h in
V i e t n a m t o less t h a n 3 3 , 0 0 0
men. President Nixon has set a
goal of 2 7 , 0 0 0 m e n by Dec. 1.
T h e U.S. C o m m a n d also announced
no Americans
were
killed in a c t i o n last week, the
second week in the past five that
n o c o m b a t d e a t h s were r e p o r t e d .
T h e S o u t h V i e t n a m e s e command r e p o r t e d 5H0 of its o w n
t r o o p s and 2 , 7 8 5 of the e n e m y
killed last w e e k , the highest
totals in a m o n t h . Saigon said
2 , 0 7 5 g o v e r n m e n t t r o o p s were
w o u n d e d and 146 were missing.
T h e allied c o m m a n d s now have
r e p o r t e d these casualties for the
war: American— 15,884 killed in
action;
303,475-wounded,
1 0,2 8 1 -dead
of
nonhostile
causes and 1,699 missing or captured.
South
V i e t n amese-157,917
killed; 4 1 7 , 1 6 7 w o u n d e d .
North V i e t n a m e s e and Viet
C o n g - 9 0 1 , 9 6 7 killed.
All others $.25
8&10
LC2
7:30 pm in FA 217
•
funded hy ntudetil tux
Free w/colonial tax card
I
i
All others $.50 j
In the Colonial Quad Flagroom J
•
8-12 pm
i
I
I
funded by stude nt ia'
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
PAGE FOUR
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBKK -'/
|972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE FIVE
Communications
The Nuclear Family
Finds Wonderland
Community Referral Needs Volunteers
To the SUNYA Community:
Community Referral Center,
Inc. is a non-profit organization
working in the inner city of
Albany, but has been able to
reach out through the Albany
County. We have never had the
The Triumph of Ego
Tenure and Promotion
at SUNYA
Ideally, the university
should be the
means In
society looks at itself, but here at S U N Y A
,i
so bound up in ourselves we never see anything |<
own
immediate, petty
munity
than
it
is
concerns. S U N Y A
fourteen
thousand
Wachtler Promises
"Social Change"
,1
most " i
.;!]
is Irs-, ,
tit f let em
.„
,.
,
continually w o r k i n g at cross purposes.
At S U N Y A , personality
is unquestioningly in I
itself. Events are judged by
the individual
nor
,,<-.
mi
i
regard to their direct effect on h i m , but to vvli.u ill _•
•„
i.in turn them to Ins own advantage.
In this issue, there are t w o articles which dcsi i ih<
and
promotion
procedures
in d e t a i l , and
IIKII
effect (lie system has on the i n d i v i d u a l . "I'hev air '
ill ,i series ul promotion and tenure articles.
What occurs in many fights for p r o m o t i o n and n i
,r,
personality conflicts which resolve themselves o n l \
triumph o l
one ego over
another.
'
"
A lew years , t .
administrator who unwisely sided w i t h students in
ice i
of a teacher denied tenure, was later gradually eased
his job.
*NEGOriKIE, NOWANP YOU'LL SET A &WI3S BANK ACCOUNT.
. ..POUT,AHt> ENt> UP WITH 7St ALLOWANCE1.'
What we fear, t h o u g h , is that
The
reader o f
resentment
or
of
part
of
fantasy
on
American
the
writers
my
slumher.
Just
the
for
the
entire
story.
night before, he said, he had
Wouldn't
read
a copy of the finished book
the
4 0 , 0 0 0 - w o r d ex-
or
cerpt f r o m my n o . e l , " T h e
copies
:
he
and artists to think that our
Confessions of Nat "lurner,"
political
which
novel to his stall and olhei
interested
in
might
or
slightest way
be
be in
the
influenced by
Vet, I lind it a wunderfU
strange
gent
fact
Shiiver
is
cerned
with
matters,
and
gives
me
derived
been
published
in the current issue ol Harper's Magazine. A l l
writers
like praise and Sarge's praise
their works.
and
had
that
truly
to s.iy
con-
not
lor
hope
all
from
ol
us
personal
it
is
ex-
perience.
distribute
associates so that
the
they
might he as illuminated and
simple
flattery,
it
Save lor my ediloi
was
and
publisher
the
two
close
informed
by
deepest
and
sensitive
most
understanding ol
the i m p l i -
been
Nat
and
one 01
fni'iids,
the
first
111111 cI
and
il
I had
ceived
be remembered that at that
that I was exhilarated.
little
had
icaction
thai
cations of the hook. It may
I his
issue
conservative
journal
of
hei.iuse
ASI' agrees or
the
and
ic
wit h it.
publishes only
may
10:00 (I am a late sleeper)
pubhi ain.n ill.i
by a pleasant
the cities. Sarge's feeling lor
o c c u p a t i o n , and
who told me she was calling
the
tell
from
tween
the OI.O
ton,
and
Shiiver
in Washing
that
Sargent
was on the line. It
historic
the
holocaust
work
and
was both
was not a call f r o m a total
penetrating
stranger.
might
I
had
met
Saige
parallels
add,
my
own
subtle
and
augmented, I
by
remarkable curiosity
President
come
years
my
wife
spent
more
since
and
than
those
I
had
one plea-
to connect
Sargent
Shriver
What about my
already
know
exuberant,
who
made
sell pic
might
not
than
we
about
questing
man
the phone
call.
contact seems to have risen
f r o m an almost miraculous-
the
ly sane and decent impulse,
manner.
one that has been shared in
account o f
America
by
lew
Turner's actual revolt?
of
the family Satge carne ngril
loved
power. It was the gesture of
to
said,
the
brant,
quickly
p o i n t , and that
PAGE SIX
bql
what
excerpt,
he
about
the
'
mi
u
by A S I ' lo help
•u
H was staled
own anil mil
prominently
on the l i o n i
.;•
p.u'
the views expressed in II wen •
those ol
the ASI'. The m i l l n . 1 ' "
have been i a used to mil read el ship was u n i i i l i m ;
|p
a civilized man
•• A , l - .
«M
,., . ! „ . A . I . . - 1
Kit
*•-,
Mar
in all the
rest of the book? His appe-
t r u l y valuable and honored
me up out
tite had only been whetted
meanings of that term.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
which
ihe
Town of
has many prob
need
I t , he s o l v e d .
many faults which have l o he
ehmuialed, hut only .. handful
id people who have the com
passion, intelligence and desire
to eommil themselves to the
enoi moils task of bringing Anier
it-a home again Kb Mellan is a
person I have known all my life
and have always known him to
live his beliefs and not jusl pay
lip service lo them
When PresidenI Johnson was
sending young men by ihe hun
dieds of thousands into jungles
11),DUO miles away, .mil while
Kichard Nixon was and still i.s
sending hundreds ol thousands
ul ions of bombs lo destroy a
nation lie |irefe.sses to save, K|i
Mellan has conl inuously been
working to end this abominable
war
Dun.IK
-be i,„,e when
.
,
l
i
i
American cities have heen .lying
KI.ID
from benign neglect ,\i\(\
- ,uu\ inhuman ways of life,
Mt Mellan has given hope lo
many by woi lung with inner city
youths as a liig Brother advisoi
He has also been responsible for
the establishment ol ti siimmei
day camp in the Sheepshead Bay
urea in B r o o k l y n , thereby malt
mg Ihe lives of numerous youths
mo.e meaningful and rewarding
At a lime when individual civil
rights ami liberties have been
threatened, Kh Mellan continues
to in.mil.mi his long standing
light to preserve those rights
I l'„„ ( i M U , , !
and
voice
enthusiastic
buoyed
vi-
the
influence
men
He
evening w i t h him and
such
very
Nat
sant
wiiii
B u t , in retrospect, that brief
truly
with
sympathizes
m. I ..
the
I have
that
when John I". Kennedy was
and
be-
contemporary
more
ni'"l
was
It was i i i i b i i l u i i a t r that si.me readers w r i e
what
much
It
sporadu ally, so many
In short, II was an attempt
plosive, w i t h death fires in
lemale voice,
opinion.
sister Student Assot lalion p u b l i c a t i o n .
about
excessive
S/n./.
GYUs.woo/.s, ,i
because OdvvrtJur.s operates 'in an extreme! 1 ,
lor
at
ol
expressed in (iriis'.rtiitl-. fas some leaders havr . I. r
to
I need not say
anecdote
page
seem to rise out ol a some
awakened
'
in ul.i i
the Etlttur
, , . , . ,
" I t is my belief thai the men
and women who are chosen as
Hitlges are charged by our socie
ly with the highest responsibility
of all governmental processes
These are the words ol Kh II
Mellan, candidate lor District
Court Judge
llempsleud.
This country
Included in Tuesday's issue ol the :\ll),ln\
its most h o r r i f y i n g and ex-
was
attniid
l\i
lems
time our racial crisis was at
a morning in
an
procedures
To Our Readers
I ( )d7, I
On
with
resentment and anger only breed themselves.
was a twelve
as moved as he had heen.
the least. But it was
piaise
rather
those departmental
too
for my work was generous,
Sar-
intellectual
the
to
rather
Respectfully,
•Urn O'liuurite
Vice President
Student Ikir Association
Albany Laic School
Mellan for Judgeship
,i i
I please send him
wanted
leaders
but
To my mind, that's worth remembering when the lime comes
to pull the lever in Ihe voting
booth.
Community Referral Center is
also putting together a Halfway
House. We are just about finished, but we still must do a few
things. If y o u like to paint and
do a few odds and ends, please
call -165-7046.
A n o t h e r project we have is
t u t o r i n g inner city kids. We will
provide free transportation for
y o u . All we need from you is the
c o m m i t m e n t to work with some
one in their home. We also work
w i t h ex-ul'fenders in all phases of
life. So,
y o u can see your
accomplishments in action
hi the Strufifilc,
Cordon I) Van Ness
ICxecuttve Project Director
P S . IT unable to work, how
about a small donation'' Jusl any
thing:
$1 00, $.'1.00,
$.r> DO,
$10.00 $100.00. 11 is tax de
ductible.
AMIA Feels Slighted
by Scant Coverage
To the Editor
these f o r t h c o m i n g articles should
anger,
the other candidates hover in Ihe
neighborhood of 60 to 65. Judge
Wachtler at 12 is by far the
youngest of the candidates and
identifies more readily with the
problems of today and the solutions for t o m o r r o w . When the
Judge said the other day that
change in the administration o f
justice, and l o a great extent in
the laws themselves is long overdue, we law students could only
say " A m e n . " This should and
must become the concern of the
student population because as
Judge Wachtler points out, the
battleground for social changes
for civil rights, for consumer
protection, and for the preser
valion
of our environment
moved from the campus and
street to the courts.
lot of work to do but at the
present time we have no help. If
y o u have free time and like this
kind
of involvement, please
come to 170 North Pearl Street
or call 465-7046.
Ask for
Gordon Van Ness. If he is not
available just leave name and
number with someone.
I-"
the circumspection most ol us lack. He shouldn't read ••••''
breaking down
irresistible,
To the Editor:
I am writing this, admittedly in
a flush of enthusiasm, after having heard Mr. .Justice Wachtler at
the Albany Law School Student
Bar Association a few days ago.
I I is regrettable that, despite
his frequent visits to law schools
and other campuses throughout
the state, most young voters
have not had the privilege of
hearing Supreme Court Justice
Sol Wachtler. l i e brings the
problems of the courts to life,
relating them to the crime explosion, to consumer protection,
and to ecology. I l is also regret
table that the political race for
the Stale's highest court, the
Court of Appeals, has received
little press and remains a con
lu.vi.iui in most people's minds.
The ('tmrt o f Appeals is a
seven-member body on winch
three seats are vacant in this
year's election. Judge Wachtler,
who has been on the Stale Supreme Court bench for five years,
i. running for one of these three
.-.eats, l i e is the Republican
Liberal candidate. The ages of all
behavior, as to encourage them.
"Shriver a Truly Civilized Man"
I suppose it is a vain, yet
series will in
so much help to turn around certain reactionary
Pulitzer Prize Winner Says
by William S t y r o n
this
full benefit of funding, but we
believe that with some good help
from volunteers we can make it.
We need people who can run
an office and people who would
like working in the community
as community aides. We have a
Mi* •'n.,--,
itmimt pi„, ,i imimo.xi i n n * rnxkiy >'r t i n SiuU.
'»™«
ul iln t t u n Um.mriy ul Na»> Vuik * i Albany II n lu..tl*l
ttta inwidaliHy tlultanl H I I I I I I I I (•«. btllM knutvii * t tiloiUni (•« Oui » " "
• ' • " i Hi.
j?l) ul Ihfl CimplH C
, *n-l mil |tl>u»*l • ( • •»••' iHUO •
Mil i I'M i liiminl nuiii y ,< i|il*'.n.iiti< liy III* kililoiial (luaul
guaranteed by the Constitution
His book. Your lituhts As A
\/fteran,
served to provide veterans
with
material
in-forming
them of those benefits guarnn
teed under federal law
This man is an example of
" ! ' m ^ " l " , l ""l>ar. lallty Since
I'.Mi-I, he has served as a member
of Ihe National Panel of Arbitrn
lion on behalf" of the American
Arbitration Association, lb- was
night court arbitrator of the City
of New York lor six years and
Pie trial Master in New York
County Civil Court
l:
I " spile of his public endorse
merit of Senator (leorge Mc
Covern and his lies with the
Democratic party, Kb II Mellan
has been appointed moderator
for the upcoming debate bet
ween Attorney Kichard K rams
representing Richard Nixon and
Allan! I.owensleui representing
Ceurge MeCovern The high res
peet Mr Mellan commends as a
person concerned with justice to
all sides, and his equitable record
as a mediator, clearly illustrates
I be reason for hot h part les desire
I " have Mr Mellan as moderator
for the debate
T h
" « U , l t " y »''JUfclire '•-deter
" ' " " ' ' I !'V Ihe judge Mi 1. Mel
tin
bin's pliilosophn
kll i
" " ' l h m k l » K W f ' ' ( l "» ' " "
courts now Mr Mellun has said,
" i l i s l o r y has established that Ihe
most cruel,il issues of the (lines
often lade away only lo give rise
(o the more paramount prob
lems ol tomorrow Our judges
therefore, must always be on the
alei l l o maintain
FRIDAY, OCTOHI
those
proce
' s w,,M"h
"ur
'""'fulhem
lhuir
WIM
" ' " .American!
created
for ' -the' " benefit of 'all
lw
i tin
"-fleeted and \t
During
the year
1071 72,
l,:'l)i) students both male and
female participated in intramural
athletics The A M I A was eslab
lished in order to service fluent ire
university
community,
and it has succeeded in ili.il goal
Yet, for Ihe ex t eiisivencs.s of Ihe
program, M lias not received the
r e c . i n n i l K . i l t h a i It deserves
Inliamurals
on the Albany
Slate campus serve many pur
poses
Kirs I, they provide the
opportunity
lo take ,i study
break, and ease the pressures o f f
school work Secondly, they pro
vide .ul al nio.sjihere of lun and
exercise, as well as competitive
ness for those who play lo win
Kiiiiilly, they oiler variety
there arc nineteen sports (o
choose
from
in all seasons
A M I A was so popular lor these
reasons lhal there were over one
hundred teams in basket hall and
over eighty in so ft hull last sea
Tile ASP spurts page is often
devoted to athletics that are of
little consequence l o the university c o m m u n i t y . I am not asking
that these articles be eliminated,
However, 1 am requesting oil
behalf of the AMIA adequate
and additional coverage.
m m
ll,,vt
Constitution "
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
K 21, 1^72
This letter l.s lo reijuest more
space in the Albany Student
Press devoted l o the coverage o f
men's intramural athletics. The
A M I A feels that we arc being
slighted in the coverage of our
athletic events.
lee
liehi'iinan
Sincerely,
L l o y d Kishman
President. AMIA ('turned
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE SEVEN
-
W* are too^.'ira '•& » s s j * f * ' •»
salt 3 i r 3 b a t * t a p e s . * * * *
r e s p w i s i i S t o « a t # i o " t She = " J r --.' s proflBCWS £ p r e m i u m V>
Ourt t w e • * • « * " » * • * •
PuiirKss. »'e GSTr a i m ? ^ * "
sastectrara of »" W 8 8 ! r n : i S ' : "
SPU'.. = 5 5 . O w n s . C o u n t r j &
Western. Pootrtat. Etc - you f-
CLASSIFIED
,-i-E ir,r_ I201J 57=-&*3B as* 'o>
FOR SALE
For Sale: 1970 l/acn 1. S 1 5 W 433-2033
T w o / W winter tires. Uses o r *
condi t i o n .
E««le«t
season
J 2 3 . Ca 439-4306.
D i a m o n d E-rijaae—en: & Wedding R t a s i . 3 . 0 9 0 ring selections
in ail styles a: 5 0 % d i s c o u n t t o
s t u d e n t s , staff, a n d f a c u l t y . 3 u <
direct
from
leadino
man^.
fact'-re- and S a v e ' 1 'Z cars"
4
$ 3 7 9 . J , caret only S 2 S S = o>
free co'o* ' o l d e r a m l e : Bon L2.
= ar.»ood. N J . 07023.
Beautifal 5 b e d r o o m c o u n t r y
f o r e Jor r e n t . O n e c o u p l e t h e r e
r o w needs 2 couples or 3 or 4
rssopte. 10 acres, m o d e r n urtilifies. o a m , 2 M t h r o o t r a e t c .
35-CO m i n u t e s south ot S.U.N.Y.
$ 2 5 0 . m o n - h rent. Call a « e r 6
o.m. 1-235-6 .'59.
Graduate s t u d e n t seeking small
nouse o» * ' P = m a p a r t m e n t o n
outskirts
of
Albany
from
Please
call
;e:e^-.oe'
172-353*.
Roommate W a n t e d :
country
house iusl s o u t h of A l b a n y .
550/month.
Can
after
6
462-1813.
SERVICES
—<
Typing
done
4 3 2 - S * 32
nome.
Pr.rate Cr*s: lesso's *Tprri
ted 5tates Cness Fede T at , o
- * - - s - ' - . o ^ ' Can 4 8 2 - 6 0 H
K m j s ze
Waterbed
ooooeframe. Imer, h e a t c ^ s i u n g S A O .
Lea^e message 4 5 7 - 5 3 0 0 Janse.
N
^
Dear Barry & Cliff,
Bet y o u never t h o u g h t * e ' o oo
it. did y o u ?
Help Tarkus!
Need R-A.'s 'or 5ta
Oct. 3 1 . Benefit per
start after 5 p.rr
.
do's S t i l e t t o . We oe i
I.F.G. to Present Pre-Halloween Thrillers
Dea'est Roy.
Thank you 'or
year. Y o u na ,-e giver
so much love
T o c e l e b r a t e H a l l o w e e n a little
early this y e a r T h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l
Film G r o u p a n d A l b a n y S t a t e
C i n e m a will p r e s e n t four films
this F r i d a y and S a t u r d a y , O c t o ber 2 7 t h a n d 2 8 t h . At 7 : 1 5 and
9 : 4 5 in L e c t u r e C e n t e r 1 8 o n
F r i d a y , I F G will present, " T h e
Titans of T e r r o r " Bela Lugosi
and Boris Karloff in w h a t was
their first film t o g e t h e r , The
Black Cat. T h e 1934 film tells
the s t o r y of Hjalmar Poelzig
(karloff), an Austrain architect
w h o built his u l t r a - m o d e r n castlt
on the very ruins of the fort he
betrayed t o t h e e n e m y during
the first World War. T o this tflass
and
marblemausoleum
comes
Dr. Vitus Verdegast (Lugosi)
w h o is t h e r e to avenge his wife,
killed by Poelzig. Lugosi and
Karloff play off each .other like
the masters they were; Lugosl's
s y m p a t h e t i c , but sinister seeming Verdegast, and
Karloff's
Poelzijj w h o , a m o n g o t h e r nefarious activities, holds
formal
dress Black Masses in his castle.
TigerHappy B i r t h d a y '
Joyce.
it is because
that I am as I i
Complete
|f *ound.
immediately to
cv r 2 0 ! Cayuga.
/ery m p o r t a n t '
s
SO'
With
You
kespea
1966 CI•ie. Beta • « uto • '2-'S
Cleap.
-. n o w
• - ,'.
6
r ad o
432-M7'
i - o » . t l '•es-Goodyear PtHyg ass
omy one sea5.60*15- -uvea
—ca a»le» 8 00 s' "
M 9-351 ?.
O* C2
RIDE/RIDERS
WANTED
HELP WANTED
T b e Albany
Student
frm
Trayrvo' -A ^ e a d s : i - f e - o e p . .,,_{.,,, Be.e-r, A ~ s I V .
-'
,-,,
t h e year beginning J a j i u a n 1
6/r.e lent
la'
*IVJ
*•«
<• 14- rJ • 54
t-ono ! vO"
Guild Mono« rxx)/
no.es SvO Cai J e f
eiect'-c
482-i&62
20V.rr
•>- '. V . v
the >ob of Uitorm-Churj
19"3
able
Applications
in
r_d,
• •-
'>•,-
SOO
for
are avail-
Center
326
PERSONALS
T h e deadline
Left to right: Boris Karloff, Peter L o r r e , V i n c e n t Price, und
s t a n d i n g , Basil R a t h b o n e .
It's o n e h a p p y family in A Comedy of Terrors, to be shown Friday at M i d n i t e !
R ,ae /.antea
:
Wed Nov 1 '1
472-8200 0' 472
F r i d a s . Scrt
3
HOUSING
- o - i s * 2 --eo • i f . " ' , s n a r e ' s
rnaKe o « f
/-8720
A s ' 'o-
Married
CoupUri-ViVMime
oi
hornes
free
ca;
*hile
on
r o o m and b'ja.'d
as you » a n i
One
child
crng *e 'ippy'
beau*. f u week' A'e d on't oo
fco
care fw o i h e i people's
much
f o' S i e
o / a o ' e 8 /reek 'J C
r y « ' . ' Oerrna' S h e p r * ' d . AkL.
nas oeer d e « 0 ' m e d $ 3 0 '.«'
s t « . / e 4V4.44aa
chjliier
vacation
P>.,.
%ork as
c , a i c s 1 . ' . , : Ca
bed inr: • - ; 'v saie
Must
->rj>
have
SI 0 0
a
weefc Call 3f 5-%3'^" a m t i r r *
S J '•
•'
/ou>e neei-o-BOP
1
A ft en t on C-j .. i*
De an m p c ra1"'
Freshrr.ar. ir te>e;*^
for the Class o' '30 at 7,30 -r CC i\
Western WO'id • L»'
needs good ^ o ^ e
help
f e i ' neac* 785-9311 a*te- t t
''ou'ifi 3 esse- Study Cnem
— ave i j.^at ^.ee^ena
B ! other
Jl'
present
75'
WRITERS
FILMS-STAGE-TV
7:30 & 9:00
all proceeds go to the McGovern campaign
FESTIVAL PRESENTS
iPROCOL
ISTEELEYESPAN
TIR-NA-NOG
Thursday, November 2nd 7 pm
PALACE THEATRE - ALBANY
t imited (but respectable) number of tickets al $4.50
When gone, all tickets will b e $ 5 50
Hassle With Reserved Seats Sil Where You Like,
T „ H L n o w o n n l e . 1 M a - * ''I"--'' 1 "' a n d V a n ^ ' ^ " " i f i n
^ a „ y M " „ Hhack T i o y Btereo S o u n d . B . h n . c t . d y L a t h a m
MU.II: Bar, CryaUil Mannion, SaratogaDaily from 11 to 2 J
Tickets available in Campus Center Lobby,^
PAGE EIGHT
5
-;.
J ^ 2 ^ ' it
Charlie Chaplin in the Army
and
a Beatles' Short
Fri. Oct. 27
--'•
Love ya.
AiDany State
R o o m m a t e ^ - i ' t e a to s r
^. •- 9'ao student Le«
sage at 4 72 i ? 9 0
<:-.-e-
| Students for McGovern
Later Friday night T h e International Film G r o u p will try
s o m e t h i n g new and different. In
addition to F r i d a y ' s t w o screenings of The Black Cat, IFG will
present t h e first in what is h o p e d
Marat: Interesting & Weil-Done
MISCELLANEOUS
!f,H
':,• ooo 1 '. •'as' " 9 * ' '• ' C o ' d t '
r'j 9H uubd ' . ' ' * e/uerrie , 'ea
*>onaD.% 370-00<s<i
N o
Desoe'-ie ' ~ °
Stonyb'ocr. Nc
Msrc.a-457-500:
for s u b m i t t i n g applications is 5
p m
^ead
Campus
from 11-4 d a i h
ana Di&ck
co 'a-. Cai
is
no*, accepting applicatkirts for
:
C.
Buddy—"Wish
eyes" j e t'aime
uooaveaCa
£.*•
S
Eiecf<
j . a n t A-
mos = s?t of keys
set Ga
457-5209
__
Sno* 1 •«
'»•!
155 SP : ;
S-'6,74-3045
s;:;
S4GC Asking
sage 457-5 3O0
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by the right people?
— least of all produced
CREATIVE SCRIPTS. LTD. otler« you the opportunity you've
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Atlentlon: Mr. Coleman
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER V
197:
by E d w a r d Hayes
Haves
From O c t o b e r 18*21 the S t a t e University T h e a t r e in association
with the T h e a t r e Council presented "Marut-Sade.."
a play by Peter
Weiss.
"Mural Siulc" is a play within a play, and m a y b e all thai is within
a n o t h e r , m u c h larger, play The advertisement for it s u m m e d it up as
;i play of " t h e persecution and assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as
performed b> the inmates of the asylum of C h a r e n t o n u n d e r the
direction of the Marquis De Sade " It is a play about a group of
mental patients p r o d u c i n g ii play about Marat's death, It is also ;i
format lor the airing arm c o m p a r i n g o! the philosophies of both
Marat and Sade. Perhaps it's also Ji play about me and you and life
T h e action takes place .it the C h a r e n t o n Asylum on the- opening
night of the i n m a t e s ' p r o d u c t i o n , " M a r a t . " The progress of (he play
is i n t e r r u p t e d from time to time by the o n g o i n g d e b a t e between
Marat and De SodeJ who, as director, is in c o m p l e t e control of the
entire s i t u a t i o n ) , by t h e antics of various p a t i e n t s , ;mi\ by the
stepping in from time-to-time of Coulmier, the a s y l u m ' s director to
censor ideas which are " t o o radical." (Of course we are all
revolutionaries n o w a d a y s , b u t . . . " )
T h e play deals heavily in the question of " w h y revolution'.'" and
" w h y n o t ' ' " But it even more deeply explores the topic of the
non-thinking m o b and the m a n i p u l a t i o n and control of it- especially
when that control is very subtle. (A perfect e x a m p l e of such
low-profile m a n i p u l a t i o n is how De Sade uses the Herald to control
most of what is h a p p e n i n g and only steps in himself to control
things directly at selected times.)
T h e S U N Y A version of "Marat Sade"
directed by Dr Jurka M
Hurien
was q u i t e different from m a n y of the other "Mural Sudo"
p r o d u c t i o n s in its i n t e r p r e l a t i o n a l aspects Missing were » lot of the
hysterics and antics of the asylum's patients
s o m e t h i n g quite
d o m i n a n t in I he Peter Brook p r o d u c t i o n ol the same work Instead,
Di Hurien kepi the patienis's pranks to a m i n i m u m
tr>ing to
create as (he primary focus lln- contrasting philosophies ol Marat
and ol Sade
My feelings were exteniely mixed almul lln.s choosing "] all
intellectual l o t u s ovei Brook's two pronged e m o t i o n a l intellectual
locus On o n e hand, I greall> enjoyed the art of weighing and
c o m p a r i n g Ihe conlrahling philosophies within the pln>
I also
enjoyed i be exercise ol probing Ihe internal c o n t r a d i c t i o n s and
im:uiiM.-.tcneies of the two leads
Maral and De .Sade Bui at the
s a m e lime, 1 felt as if 1 was eating a jell> d o n u l only lo discover no
jelly inside
It's r'.Wreme/.i wranf} lo think Unit the intellect and the heart are ol
two s e p a r a t e , never touching worlds They are deeply interlocked
und mingled Yet, the presentation seemed to deny this joirilness of
existence At the beginning of this article I m e n i o n e d that the play
within a play was all perhaps within a n o t h e r much larger play
thai
is the c o m e d y of errors and tragedy we call life. By c o n c e n t r a t i n g on
Ihe intellectual and ignoring the e m o t i o n a l , the poinl is all too easy
t o miss that we are all starring within a real life p r o d u c t i o n of
•'Mural Sudf"
c o m p l e t e with the contrasting philosophies, and
everything else and then s o m e which were within the play.
T h e o t h e r major p r o b l e m in i n t e r p r e t a t i o n
or p e r h a p s in style •was the inconsistency in the portrayal of s o m e scenes S o m e wore
d o n e very realistically, o t h e r s very unreulisticully.
An e x a m p l e of o n e less than realistic scene is De Slide's speech
a b o u t his role in the revolution. During his discourse, de Sade is
" b e i n g flogged." In Ibis i n t e r p r e t a t i o n , the floor next to .Sade is
being w h i p p e d as he recoils in pain. In the Brook's i n t e r p r e t a t i o n ,
the fl" 'King was simulated in such a way t h a t it l o o k e d to the
*-*
audience as il'De.Sade was really being w h i p p e d . This latter portrayal
seems to d e m a n d a lot more full e m o t i o n a l involvement from the
audiece than the former. This is especially true when the former
portrayal is c o m p u t e d wilh the handling of the characterizing of
D u p e r r e l , C h a r l o t t e C o r d a y ' s e x t r e m e l y depraved c o n f i d a n t e . Every
time Duperrel got within arm's length of C h a r l o t t e , the good nun
nurses had t o drag him off before he pawed her t o d e a t h . This
strongly p r o d u c e d the desired effect of c o m i c relief in Ihe audience
It seems the o v e r a l l effect would have been much stronger if the
flogging scene was as realistically played as lire pawing o n e
Aside from these i n t e r p r e l a t i o n a l disagreements, I though) the
p r o d u c t i o n itself was e x t r e m e l y well d o n e
Dr. Burien did a
remarkable job It is m y d e e p (and s o m e w h a t selfish) h o p e that he
directs several m o r e p r o d u c t i o n s during m y short stay here.
T h e set - designed by R o b e r t Donelly
was elegant in its
simplicity This simplicity was indeed fundamental in helping lo
focus the a u d i e n c e ' s a t t e n t i o n on the play's intellectual slruggle.
T h e acting was s u p e r b . A m o n g the m a n y to be c o m m e n d e d are
Joseph Alaskey as S a d e , l i o n Vawter as Maral, Sandra Hallfors at.
Charlotte C o r d a y , and Melinda D o n o v a n , Robin Sangon, Jerrold
Brown, and Keith Torg.in as the four singers. I especially enjoyed
J a m e s Hart its the Herald and David Palma as D u p e r r e l , w h o really
seemed to gel into his role
Overall, I would say "M a rut Sade " w a s e x t r e m e l y well-done and I
eagerly await seeing the "Hallows
Humor"
p r o d u c t i o n scheduled
next • for N o v e m b e r 15-19.
t o b e a series of Midnight S h o w s .
T h e Friday Midnight S h o w will
b e a little k n o w n film b y
J a c q u e s T o u r n e u r titled, The Comedy of Terrors. T h e S a t u r d a y
Midnight S h o w will be t h e rec e n t thriller, Wait Until Dark.
The Comedy of Terrors is just
t h a t ; a black c o m e d y dealing
with t w o New England m o r t i cians at t h e turn of t h e c e n t u r y
who, whenever business slacks
off, go o u t and kill p e o p l e in
o r d e r t o keep their financial
heads above water. O n e c o u l d n ' t
ask for a m o r e fitting cast: Vincent Price and Peter L o r r e as the
two u n d e r t a k e r s , Boris Karloff
as the senile senior p a r t n e r of
the firm, and Basil R a t h b o n e as
the m u c h righteous holder of the
mortgage on Price and L o r r e ' s
little business. Add t o this character actress J o y c e J a m e s o n as
Price's wife and an a p p e a r a n c e
by J o e E. Brown as a m o s t
unlikely c e m e t e r y k e e p e r and
you have o n e of the m o s t c h a r m ing spoofs of the h o r r o r genre
you could h o p e for.
T o u r n e u r , w h o w o r k e d with
Val Lew ton in the forties to
m a k e such fine e x a m p l e s of
subtle h o r r o r as The Cai People.
directed the film from a script
by veteran fantasy writer Richard Matheson whose credits include The Incredible
Shrinking
Man, Detil and The Night
Stalker
as well as several episodes of The
Twilight Zone
T h e film will be
presented at Midnight in L C - l h
Admission for IFG films is 25
cents with a s t u d e n t tax card, 7 5
cents w i t h o u t .
On S a t u r d a y the 2 8 t h , Albany
S t a t e Cinema will be in L e c t u r e
C e n t e r 18 at 7 : 0 0 and 9 : 0 0 with
The Bird with the Crystal / J /i;
mage by Italian director Dario
Argento Original distributors insisted on billing the film as " T h e
p i c I u re
t n ;i t
Ou t-psychoed
Psycho1"
and calling A r g e n t o
the "Italian H i t c h k o c k " resulting in a good a m o u n t of confusion seeing as the only thing The
Hud with the Crystal
Plumage
'''"•' •;, c o m m o n wilh Psycho is a
knife, f o o r taste in advertising
aside, Argento's film is a tight,
slick little thriller designed t o
scare the great e x p e c t a t i o n s out
of you...and it works. The film
tells the story of a m y s t e r i o u s
series of ghastly m u r d e r s of
y o u n g w o m e n . A y o u n g writer is
accused
of
the crimes and
a t t e m p t s to clear himself by
finding the real killer. T h e r e are
enough false leads, m y s t e r i o u s
strangers and dark side streets to
salisfy even the most ardent
lover of the genre. T h e murder.,
may he a little too graphic foi
s o m e , but they d o n ' t last long
and Argento is quick lo gel back
lo the lightly drawn characters
w h o t h r e a t e n and are t h r e a t e n e d
in his fine little thriller.
Saturday's
Midnight
Show,
also in LC-18, is
Vrrenee
Young's taut s t u d y of suspense
and terror, Waft Until
Dark
Based on the Broadway play by
Frederick K n o t t , t h e a u t h o r of
Dial "M" For Murder, the film
duals with a y o u n g blind w o m a n
w h o inadvertently b e c o m e s involved with three d e s p e r a t e m e n
w h o are convinced she has in her
possession a child's doll...a doll
which they would d o a n y t h i n g
to recover. Wait Until Dark is
one of the b e t t e r suspense films
m a d e in this c o u n t r y over t h e
past five years and is well w o r t h
your attention. Audrey Hepburn
continued
on page
2A
• " ua " ,; mfi^te
H S S r i p B r i H i a n t Cello Talent"
ron hendren
Young View of Washington
by Andy Palley
(
A good-natured h a m , Hanani stikes a unique pose.
Below,
artist L e R o y Neiman sees the performer from an ott u n seen angle in a 1 9 6 8 portrait.
Y e h u d a Hanani, the m o s t rec e n t addition t o our illustrious
music faculty, has been described as m a n y things. Leonard
R o s e ( o n e of the three t o p e
cellists in the world) called him
" a n absolutely first-rate cello talent, potentially o n e of
the
world's great cellists." T h e great
musicians of the world have
Hocked t o praise him, the critics
have given him almost unanimously rave reviews, y e t he
himself, is a modest, soft-spoked
man of great personal charm. He
has little of the overbearing egotism which s o m e t i m e s mars the
world's great masters.
T h e first question o n e asks is
why such an accomplished man
is teaching here, at a small,
budding music d e p a r t m e n t ? 1
like the a t m o s p h e r e , " he states,
" T h e r e is none of that 'Conserv a t o r y ' presure. It is easy to
learn and t o teach h e r e . " But,
then, what of the m o n e t a r y aspect? Surely you could make
m o r e m o n e y as a touring soloist?
You must have been offered a
rather attractive salary.
" A c t u a l l y , it's not t h a t fantastic. You know, I'm really a
lousy businessman." He must be
- C o l u m b i a Artists M a n a g e m e n t
has decided that they should
help him o u t .
In December, Mr. Hanani will
make his first public appearance
in
Albany
when
he
plays
Tschaikowsky's Rococo
Variations.
A photographer c a t c h e s the moment
Hanani in performance,
in a Berlin recital.
and locations in this
supercede
all
other
THE BIRD
WITH THE
CRYSTAL
PLUMAGE
I
PAGE 2A
m
If Saturday, October 28 (only)
i
m 7:30 and 10:00 pm in LC 18
I
$.75 weth tax and id
mw^mmmmm
their c h o i c e . " He did n o t elaborate on w h a t he has in m i n d , b u t
any way y o u cut it, the policy
does n o t s o u n d like o n e calculated to bring t o g e t h e r a nation
deeply split, as it has been for
years, over a war n o b o d y understands.
For once in his life, indeed
perhaps the first time, Mr. Nixon
does not have to w o r r y a b o u t
playing the role of the u n d e r d o g .
His lead is so wide there should
be no need for bitterness t o w a r d
any of those w h o , rightly or
wrongly, but nonetheless sincerely disagreed with his policies. In fact, if the lead proves t o
herald a victory of the magnit u d e now being predicted, the
President will have a rare opportunity to d o exactly what he has
said many times is his d r e a m - to
bring us together He would d o
w e l l . t o c o n c e n t r a t e now on his
plans for making that d r e a m a
reality.
Unfortunately,
political victories of such wide margins have
proven t o be mixed blessings,
both for the victors and the
c o u n t r y . Il was on the heels of
such a victory that President
J o h n s o n , h e a r t e n e d by what be
viewed as an e n o r m o u s personal
m a n d a t e , spurred American involvement in Indochina against
considerable advice to the contrary
Should Mr. Nixon receive a
c o m p a r a b l e majority, we can
only hope that he will realize
that the vote in 1972, as it did in
1964,
reflected
more
doubt
about the alternative than confidence in the i n c u m b e n t . Had to
say, that h o p e is m o r e fervent
than realistic, as his remarks to
the POW families only too well
attest.
by Ron Simmons
Ed. note: The views
expressed
in this column are strictly
those
of the writer and do not
reflect
the views of the SUNYA
Gay
A lliance.
Q u e s t i o n s and answers regarding last w e e k ' s c o l u m n .
DO
YOU
KNOW
WHAT
Y O U ' V E DONE?!...vaguely. As
s o m e of you may well k n o w , I
c r e a t e this c o l u m n on T u e s d a y s ,
s u b m i t it on Wednesdays, a n d
take the 2 : 0 0 train to New York
o n T h u r s d a y s . I c o m e back on
M o n d a y s usually at 2 : 3 0 , and
l a k e a cab from the station t o
m y first class. Although I d i d n ' t
learn of the public's r e a c t i o n
until after 10 p.m. last night, I
assure you that this evening, I
am a w a r e of your o p i n i o n s . ,
vaguely.
T H E N WHY DID YOU T E L L
T H E S T R A I G H T S T H A T SOME
O F US H A V E SEX IN TEAR O O M S ? ! To my knowledge 1
h a v e never s p o k e n t o straights
a b o u t s o m e gay people being so
psychologically oppressed that
(hey are psychologically forced
t o seek sex in m e n ' s r o o m s .
BULLSHIT!
YOU
KNOW
S T R A I G H T S R E A D T H E COLUMN
MORE THAN GAYS!
T r u e , however, my close friend
Princess Ann Van Noariae, and I,
b o t h agreed that the fact of a
few disgusting straights deliberately reading this c o l u m n , is in
n o way a reflection of m y alt
l u d e s . As you may recall I have
o p e n l y s t a l e d m a n y Limes that
until p e o p l e , such as yourself,
can find me a c a m p u s gay publication which I may use as an
a l t e r n a t i v e t o m a k e k n o w n my
views, I m u s t refuse to take such
"THE BIRD WITH
THE CRYSTAL
I PLUMAGE" |
I
A MYSTERY- |
I THRILLER 1
$1.25 without
As
written
I
Argento,
"The
%
Hitchcock,
i s
the
Plumage"
pared
masters
and
to
Bird
with
invariably
has
the
of
Grand
dire, led
screen
horror
Polanski
Guignol
U)
the < ^
been
works
and
and
"
"I
"
suspense
Clou7.»l
nail-biting
of b u i l d i n g t e n s i o n u p o n
I1 '
-eh
tension.
• M i n i m i pjy i i u
. v,
Washington D e m o c r a t s
once
again are dredging up the old
familiar question a b o u t Richard
Nixon. Political posters are asking voters: "Would you buy a
used car from this m a n ? "
T h e question is especially unfair in this political campaign,
since George McGovern aclualiy
has had m o r e experience in dealing with used cars,
A few years ago, in fact,
McGovern swung a sweet car
deal back h o m e in the Da kolas.
He exchanged his used Chevrolet
tor a new Ponliac and then let a
friend pick up $ 7 0 0 of the bill.
T h e friend is Paul McCann, a
Minneapolis businessman, whose
family owns an interest in James
River M o t o r s in J a m e s t o w n ,
North Dakota McGovern .sold
his Chevy for $2,H00, then
picked up a $ 3 , 5 0 0 Ponliac at
the factory McCann made up
the $ 7 0 0 difference.
At o n e point, the Internal Revenue Service investigated ihe
deal. Agent William Heath ques
lioned McCann a b o u t it and
travelled to J a m e s t o w n to inspect the a u t o firm's records.
T h e IRS, however, found nothing incriminating.
Senator McGovern himself has
discussed the transaction frankly
with us. He called the money he
saved on the deal a gift from a
friend.
T h e deal was all perfectly legal,
but it does provide a new twist
on an old q u e s t i o n . A Republi-
can might well ask "Would you
b u y a used car from George
McGovern?"
CHINESE CONTROL DRUGS
New evidence has c o m e to
light that Mainland China is virtually free of drug problems.
Last s u m m e r , we q u o t e d an
internal White House
memo
which strongly refuted rumors
that China was heavily involved
in Ihe international flow of illicit
drugs Recently, we obtained a
secret intelligence report which
backs up the White House memo.
T h e d o c u m e n t ' s a u t h o r s state
"We believe that the o p i u m prod u c t i o n and c o n s u m p t i o n
is
u n d e r effective control inside
the People's Republic of China
and that any possible illicit export is in miniscule a m o u n t s . "
T h e intelligence report con
eludes
" T h e n - is net reliable
evidence thai C o m m u n i s t China
has either engaged in or sanctioned
the illicit export
of
opium or lis derivatives to the
Free World."
Our sources tell us that the
Chinese have a three-pronged
antidrug program. First, they
exercise strict control over the
cultivation of o p i u m . Second,
they have instituted a vast program to educate the public on
the evils of drugs. Finally, they
have rehabilitated old o p i u m
addicts and p u t t h e m to work.
suggestions seriously. T h e princess and 1 realize t h a t y o u m u s t
realize this progressive penal
c o l o n y , which s o m e have t h e gall
t o call a university, is s u p p o s e d l y
full of ideal A m e r i c a n s t u d e n t s ,
w i t h high I Q ' s , c u l t u r e d backg r o u n d s , a n d grade p o i n t averages of 9 2 % o r b e t t e r . Dealing
w i t h p e o p l e of this n a t u r e , in
y o u r suggested m a n n e r , w o u l d
be useless since t h e y are apathetic, mindless, little c r e a t u r e s ;
m o s t of w h o m d o n ' t give a d a m n
about what some cocksucking
queer does, since this is a free
c o u n t r y . ( E x a m p l e , the c a r t o o n
in T u e s d a y ' s A S P ) . Meanwhile
the rest of t h e lost souls are
d e t e r m i n e d to forget t h e revolutionary spirit w e o n c e had, and
follow McGovern i n t o the valley
of d e a t h .
WHO T H E H E L L IS P R I N CESS ANN VAN N O A R I A E ?
Dear Ann was the only o n e w h o
applauded the night I a p p e a r e d
on the stage of the Delaware
Theater,
and
while
wearing
Saran Wrap and bug-eyed foster
granls, screamed, " I f 1 am a
crime,
I wish
lo lie committed !!" Since then we have
become the best of friends, and
visit one a n o t h e r q u i t e
frequently... Have a n o t h e r joint
dear, I think this is excellent for
only $ 2 0 an o u n c e .
YOU
C L A I MED
THIS
WOULD
I3E A
POLITICAL
COLUMN!... Yes I did, and I
assure you it will c o n t i n u e to be
so. 1 feel il only p r o p e r lo help
our y o u n g gays c o m e o u t , and
see us for w h a t we are; beautiful,
loving, laughing faggots w h o enjoy life for w h a t it is; a wonderful advent ure with flowers to
smell, sunshine to feel, and o n e
a n o t h e r lo m a k e love to. Unfor-
t u n a t e l y , we have been fouled,
and our minds fucked u p b y
those filthy straights, and d e c e n t
h o m o s e x u a l s such as yourselves.
People like you are a s h a m e d t o
p r e t e n d in mirrors and imagine
t h r o w i n g hair from y o u r e y e s ,
and singing y o u r ass off, while
feeling t h e w a r m pleasure of
sable and sapphires long before
you are 2 1 . I m a g i n a t i o n ! T h a t is
the only difference b e t w e e n y o u
and I, faggots and h o m o s e x u a l s .
In o t h e r words dear you have no
sense of t h e a b s u r d .
Y O U ' R E SICK!... N o sweetheart, I'm frustrated and disa p p o i n t e d . I find myself surrounded by a mass of apathetic,
mindless bodies, you included,
w h o I c a n ' t relate to because
n o n e of you have any idea how
painfully absurd the political
level of this c a m p u s really is.
Nixon could declare marshall
law tonight, and they would still
study for their m i d - t e r m s tom o r r o w . I get high and escape to
New York only to find thai the
people I was able lo leave behind
(by being smarl and going t o
college) those people are working as $ 9 0 a week clerks and
fulfilling their fantasies on I lie
weekends. My d a y d r e a m s ure
never satisfied because I am l o o
busy getting ahead, like y o u .
Why am I here o b t a i n i n g a master's'.' Everyone knows g r a d u a t e s
can't find jobs, and I'll be t o o
educated lo be a clerk. You
fools! There's a war o n ! This
column is tin- only outlet m y
fantasies have. It keeps me alive!
Without il 1 would not see Ihe
world as tin* absurd, pat b e l i e ,
little planet il really is. And m y
one [joal in life is l o m a k e you
realize thai not being able t o
sense this absolute absurdity is
tin 1 greatest tragedy,
women's forum
McGovern's Used Car
ALBANY STATE CINEMA
presents
I
Questions & Answers
jack anderson
Washington Merry-Go-Round
lillitlliili iisp^ilii!
Featuring a leather-clad homicidal
maniac who stalke pretty girls through
the dark byways of Rome and
polishes them off with a razor-sharp
knife, the film has the kind of shattering impact that gives audiences nightmares. The unexpected climax is u
classic exercise ill spine-tingling suspense
Certainly, precious little advance t h o u g h t w e n t into HitPresident's eight-minute extemp o r a n e o u s speech, for he took
the o p p o r t u n i t y once again to
launch a needless attack on critics of his V i e t n a m policy, those
editors, c o m m e n t a t o r s , businessmen, and others w h o opposed
the U.S. mining of North Vietnamese harbors. He asserted thai
these o p i n i o n leaders gave him
" p r e c i o u s little s u p p o r t , " adding
that " T h e most heartwarming
thing to m e was t h a t those w h o
had so much at s t a k e , those w h o
had suffered so m u c h , the great
majority of those whose husbands and hived ones are POWs
or MIAs, s t o o d by that decision,
and I thank you very m u c h . "
All in all, the performance was
negative and defensive, not the
sort of speech which might legitimately he e x p e c t e d from an
incumbent Chief Executive who
holds an u n p r e c e d e n t e d 28 percentage point lead over his o p p o nent with less than a m o n t h left
before election day.
He also took the o p p o r t u n i t y
to press his hard line against men
w h o avoided Vietnam d u t y , saying that " t h o s e w h o have deserted America will pav a price for
c o n t i n u e d from page IA
plays the blind victim of Alan
Arkin, Richard Crenna, and Jack
Weston. T h e price: 25 cents with
s t u d e n t t a x , 75 cents w i t h o u t .
This
weekend's
Midnight
S h o w s are an e x p e r i m e n t t o see
if Midnight Shows and the stud e n t b o d y get along well enough
t o w a r r a n t a series of Midnight
S h o w s in t h e m o n t h s t o come. If
e n o u g h people are interested in
the unique experience of Midnight S h o w s , IFG would line up
such films as Woody Allen's
What's Up Tiger Lily?, Peter Bogdanovich's Targets, and The Wiz
ard of Oz for future Midnights.
T h e success or failure of The
Comedy
of Terrors and Wall
Until Dark will d e t e r m i n e the
fate of I F G ' s p r o p o s e d Midnight
series.
mmm
faggotales
The Old Nixon
WASHINGTON-The
"Old
N i x o n " surfaced for a few m o m ents t h e o t h e r day when the
President addressed a gathering
here in Washington of families of
prisoners of war.
On t h e spur of t h e m o m e n t
Mr. Nixon decided t o replace the
scheduled speaker, his chief foreign policy advisor Dr. Henry A.
Kissinger. A p p a r e n t l y the subs t i t u t i o n was m a d e so hastily
t h a t even the Secret Service did
n o t have time t o do their normal
advance w o r k .
"HALLOWEEN THRlLLtKS
Times
article
sources.
view/comment/preview/comment/p
AROUND THE U.S.
Nixon
Puzzled
President
Nixon has told Republican leaders privately thai be does n o t
u n d e r s t a n d why ihe North Vietnamese are cooperating in his
election-eve peace negotiations.
T h e y m u s t k n o w , said the Presid e n t , that they are helping his
campaign
by
holding
secret
peace talks before the election.
T h e President hinted to his
friends, however, that Moscow
and Peking have quietly b r o u g h t
pressure upon ihe North Vietn a m e s e l o settle the war. T h e
President has suggested that perhaps the t w o C o m m u n i s t titans
have told Hanoi that Nixon
would be tougher lo deal with if
he is re-elected
INTELLIGENCE REPORTS
Var Wldi-ns Israel apparently
planning nmlltnrs operations
against b o t h Iraq and Libya for
their s u p p o r t of Palestinian terrorists. In Ihe past, both countries have been i m m u n e to Israeli
reprisals because of I heir dist a n c e from Israel, but now secret
intelligence reports warn that
Israel is preparing lo retaliate
against Arab nations b e y o n d its
i m m e d i a t e borders Israel is said
to be especially upset over rep o r t s that Libya has given $ 2 n
million in oil revenues t o the
Palestinian terrorists.
Right to Choose
by Diane Savcry
A l t h o u g h w o m e n have a long
way to go in achieving equal
status in this m a l e - d o m i n a t e d
world, we all recognize t h a t women have already accomplished
a great deal since the start of the
m o v e m e n t . In the 1920's, a mere
fifty years ago, w o m e n were
granted
suffrage.
The
equal
o p p o r t u n i t y act of the (id's was
passed lo help insure for w o m e n
an equal c h a n c e in the w o r k i n g
world. Most recently w o m e n are
uniting a m o n g themselves to
raise consciousness and change
a t t i t u d e s In seventy year's time,
a great deal of social and political change can c o m e a b o u t , b u t
the process of evolution takes a
mil I en i urn. C o n s e q u e n t l y , women will remain o p p r e s s e d by
their own bodies, virtually forever, as a result of their biological function.
Abortion
is o n e
method
through winch w o m e n can escape their enslavement to their
own physiology. It is my right as
a w o m a n , lo c o n t r o l my o w n
b o d y and to receive an a b o r t i o n
whenever I decide it is right for
me. My reasons can range from
career involvement to the preservation of my health. T h a t is
u n i m p o r t a n t . What is i m p o r t a n t
is that I will be the o n e so
crucially
affected
by
nine
m o n t h s of physical drugery,
c o u p l e d with the e m o t i o n a l and
psychological anguish of bearing
an u n w a n t e d child. 1 will bear
t h e pressures of social disgrace
because I am an u n m a r r i e d , but
pregnant w o m a n . C o n s e q u e n t l y ,
I alone deserve the right t o m a k e
any decision about an a b o r t i o n .
Men cannot
possibly
fully
com! rehend Ihe severity of a
w o m a n ' s position since the possibility of an u n w a n t e d pregnancy is not a reality to t h e m .
Th ere fore,
I resent
ma I edominated legislatures restricting
my freedom. I also resenl religious factions imposing their
values on me by law when my
right to religious freedom is
guaranteed by the firsl amendment. 1 want the power to control my own physical being.
Perhaps, in the future, w o m e n
will be so liberated from t h e
prisons of their bodies thai abortions will become an o u t d a t e d
issue. Contraceptives t h a t are
100% effective have yet to be
developed. Different m e t h o d s of
artifical insemenation and prenatal growth in vitro could provide that ultimate liberation.
However, both advances in technology and changes in a t t i t u d e
will have to occur before those
o p p o r t u n i t i e s become available
and those ideas accepted.
In conclusion, I see my biological function as the strongest
force oppressing me. When I no
longer have t o worry about the
personal sacrifices I will have t o
m a k e for the preservation of t h e
species then I will be satisfied.
Until then I see any m e a n s t o
bring me closer t o t h a t goal as
n o t merely a possible alternative
but as o n e of my f u n d a m e n t a l
rights.
WStVS/V.V
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE 3A
view/leisure/preview/leisure/previeleisure/preview/leisure/preview/leis
<
11
Calendar
U {
Friday, Oct. 27
Records:
WSUA640
"Truckers Favorites"
Puzzle
Special this Week:
Saturday, Oct. 28
Sale:
Marson
Galleries, f r o m
11
Cross
Country:
Albany
by Greg S h a w
Alternative Features
Invitational at
am—5 pm in the CC Main Lounge.
12:40 pm
Horror Film: sponsored by Colonial Quad
Synchronized Swimming: fall conference
Board f o r Halloween, at 8 and 10 pm in
performance at 8 pm in the University
LC-2.
Pool.
Free w / Colonial t a x ; $.25 w / o u t .
Telethon:
sponsored
by
Students
for
Concert:
McGovern f r o m 8 pm—12 midnight in the
Guy"
CC Ballroom.
Gym.
>
cert
Symphony
featuring
Orchestra: in a con-
Findlay
Cockrell
of
SUNYA,
conducted by Julius Hegyi at
the T r o y
Music H a l l , 8 : 3 0 p m . Student
tickets available at $2.00.
Louis
Falco
standing
8:30
Dance Company:
evening
pm
in
o f modern
the
"Junior
Wells
and
dance, at
Theatre.
$2.00
at
the door,
new time
$3.00 general
Sunday night
public.
Quad
Halloween
Party:
music,
Board for Halloween at 8 and 10 pm in
LC-2.
Free w / Colonial tax; $.25 w/out.
India
Assoc.
Procol Harum
Film:
"Mother
India"
at
7:30 pm in LC-7.
Free from
cert
Symphony Orchestra:
featuring
wine, cider, d u n k i n g for apple, costumes
SUNYA,
optional. In the State Quad flagroom at 9
the
pm.
tickets
Free w/ State quad card; $.50 w / o u t .
Findlay
Chaplin
Film:
also
a
Cockrell
passes for
of
available
at $2.00.
Henwway's:
ern
with
tickets for
Halloween
Chicago Concert
Sports Schedule:
special,
dance
Saturday at
" T r e k " , peer, extras, $1.00 all you
can d r i n k , in the Indian Quad U-lounge.
$.75.
Listen
to all the action
Live coverage begins at
Maya
Mexican
2:30
de Ruben
dance
pm in
troupe
the
Duarte:
will
noted
perform
PAC Arena
at
Halloween Party: sponsored by the Colo-
Theatre.
" T r e k " , beer, soda, f r o m 8 - 1 2 pm in the
Tickets $1.00 for students; $3.00 general
Colonial Quad flagroom, free w / C o l o n i a l
admission.
tax; $.50 w / o u t .
over
with
Cafe:
fine
folk
featuring
music
Mike
at
9
&
Sunday at
Henway's:
folk
donuts
with
in
"Roger
Madison Ave. (between Ontario & Quail).
coffee,
the
Free!
U-lounge. $.50 cover charge.
&
Indian
3. St. D o m i n i c ' s Preview ( V a n
Morrison)
WSUA.
4. Everybody's in Show Biz (The
Kinks)
5
I
Quad
There will be an open
"The Old Dark House"
Fri: 7:15, 9:45 in LC-25
I
Towne (783 5539)
Delaware (462-4714)
Cine 1234
"Slaughterhouse Five"
"Sterile Cuckoo"
Fri&Sat: 6:45, 10:00
Fri&Sat: 6 : 4 5 , 9 : 2 0
Fri: 8:20; Sat: 7:40
Know About Sex'
" P l a y it A g a i n S a m "
"Bad Company"
Fri&Sat: 8 : 2 0
Fri:
"Comedy of Terrors"
"Play Misty For M e "
Fri: 12 midnight in IX 18
Sat: 8 : 3 0
F r i & S a t : 7 : 1 5 , 9:1 i
5:50,
Cinema 7 (785-1625)
Colonie Center (459-2170)
"Funny Girl"
6:45,
10:00;
Sat:
9:20
" F i d d l e r oil t h e Ruul
Circle Twin (785-3388)
"Dr. Zhivago"
Fri&Sat: 8:00
"Skyjacked"
Fri&Sat: 7:30
"Bob& Carol, led A \l«
Drivin' M a n " in h i s best Gene
Vincent t o n e s , t h e result is a
fantastic a n d impossible combination of styles. I t ' s a blend
which reaches t h e u l t i m a t e in
"Truck
Stop
Rock,"
which
could n o t have existed before
Cody b u t s o u n d s right o u t of
some old M e m p h i s j u k e b o x .
There are t h r e e m o r e trucking
songs o n this a l b u m , including
the classic " M a m a H a t e d Diesels." I t ' s o n e of t h o s e slow,
mournful,
cryin '-in-your-beer
n u m b e r s , telling t h e s t o r y of a
family where b o t h t h e father,
and later t h e fatherless son, gave
their lives t o t h e big rigs, leaving
the poor brave lady in t h e middle to crack from the pressure. If
this o n e gets heard in Nashville,
it'll turn a few heads.
Besides t h e diesel ditties a n d
two little Richard
numbers,
Truckers Favorites is notable for
a lovely c o u n t r y s o n g called
" K e n t u c k y Hills of T e n n e s s e e , "
a m o o d y rocker titled " W a t c h
my . 3 8 , " a n d a really fine version of t h e o l d Cajun t u n e ,
"Diggy Liggy L o . " T o t o p it all,
Cody himself m a k e s a a p p e a r n c e
at the mike t o sing " I t S h o u l d ' v e
Been M e . " This early ' 5 0 ' s R &
B standard h a s never s o u n d e d
bettor, and it could b e t h e hit t o
follow " H o t R o d L i n c o l n . "
ft. Martial law w a s proclaimed by
President Park C h u n g Heo in his
c o u n t r y of: a) I n d o n e s i a ; b )
Thailand; c) S o u t h Korea.
"Kansas City Bomber"
Fox Colonie (459-1020)
Fri&Sat: 9:15
"Fat City"
"2001: Space Odyssey"
"You'll Like My Mother"
Fri: 7:10, 9:30; Sat: 6:50,
Fri&Sat: 6 : 0 0 , 7 : 4 5 , 9 : 3 0
9:20
"Godfather"
Fri&Sat; 9:15
6. More than 1 0 0 planes joined a
s q u a d r o n of 10 military aircraft
to search along t h e Alaskan
coast for a missing plane carrying: a) H o u s e D e m o c r a t i c leader
Fri&Sat: 8:00
4A
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
9AV,
OCTOBER 27, 1972
be
8. Big Bambu (Cheech & Chung)
9. Carney (Leon Russell)
10. Superl'ly (Curtis May field)
Hale Boggs; b ) Alaska Senator
Mike Gravel; c ) former cabinet
member Walther Hick el
7. T h e United Stales and the
Soviet Union signed agreements
railing for: a) Russian repayment of (he American wheat
sale; l>) Russian repayment of
$ 7 '2 2 - m i l l i o n
in Lend-Lease
d e b t s , c.) mutual
inspection
rights of nuclear arms.
H. Before adjouring, t h e 92nd
Congress: a) overrode the veto
by Pres. Nixon of a $2l-billion
water pollution bill; b) passed
Pres. Nixon's extensive legislation t o deal with water pollution; c) defeated the water pollution bill.
9. Saigon was the location for
five hours of ronlVrenn-s be
tWeen: a) President Thieu, Gen.
freight on Ah rams a n d Henry
Kissinger, b) President Thieil,
Henry Kissinger and representatives of t h e NLK, c) President
Thieu,
Henry
Kissinger and
Ambassador Ellsworth Hunker.
10. T h e Nobel Prize for literature was w o n b y : a) Norman
Mailer, an American novelist; b )
Aleksandr 1. SolzheniUyn, a
Russian Novelist; c) Heinrich
Boll, a German novelist.
Puzzle
•o oi 'a (i '« -tf 'q l 'B*0'a
y 'a '\f 'q •£ 'o *g *q • i :waMttuv
the
Albany
solutions will be drawn at random until three
correct solutions have been chosen.
Each of the three winners will be entitled to a free dinner
for two at the Patroon Room in the Campus Center (not
including
liquor
and
tips). Dinners must be
claimed
within two weeks of notification.
No one working on or for the Albany
Student Press is
eligible to win.
Sorry, only one entry per person will be accepted.
Since 1 first saw t h e m , I've
been trying t o c u r b my impulse
to over-analyze t h e significance
of Cody's sensational p o p u l a r i t y .
To m e , t h e y ' r e like a glimpse
into t h e reality of t h a t 1 9 5 5
Tennessee m a d h o u s e m y mind
has conjured u p over t h e years
whenever 1 heard o n e of those
fine old Southern rock records.
But t h e kids w h o b u y C o d y ' s
records m o s t likely never heard
of Carl Perkins, and t h e only
explanation
is t h a t t h e old
rock& roll style really does have
the intrinsic irresistability I've
always believed it t o possess. I t ' s
nice t o be vindicated, a n d i t ' s
even better t o have this kind of
music around again. Long live
rock & roll!
ASP Crossword Puzzle
•
1
2
1*
3
5
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•
18
22
|
26
•• •
31
Contest Winners
October 20, 1972
Ann Burns
Karen C. Wulffruat
Cait Young
(Solution t o last w e e k ' s puzzle)
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to
Monday, 12 noon
Name, address, phone number, and social security num-
12
7. Rock of Ages (The Band)
submitted
(CC 334) by
ber must appear on your solution.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE
must
Press office
following the Friday that the puzzle appears.
Fri&Sat: 7:15
"Bird with Crystal Plumage'
MadiSOn (489-5431)
3. In a s t a t e m e n t filed in Federal
District C o u r t , t h e Justice Dep a r t m e n t called
for: a) t h e
b r e a k u p of G e n e r a l M o t o r s ; b )
the b r e a k u p of IBM C o ; c ) antitrust legislation aimed a t all
major c o r p o r a t i o n s .
•I. At a m e e t i n g with union
officials in Los Angeles, Ken.
McGovern
characterized the
Nixon
Administration
as: a)
"un-American;"
b ) "sland e r o u s ; " c ) " t h e m o s t ruthless in
history."
Fri&Sat: 8 : 0 0
Fri&Sat: 6:45, 9:20
Sat: 7 : 3 0 , 10:00 in LC-18
(45'IHWH
" E v e r y t h i n g Y o u W a n t e d u>
Company"
Sneak Preview
SUNYA Cinema
2. President A n w a r el-Sadat of
Egypt pledged t h a t his nation
would d o its u t m o s t t o i m p r o v e :
a) Egyptian-Soviet relations; b )
Egyptian-Isrneli
relations; c )
Egyptian-American relations.
"Bad
Fri: 8:30
Lake &
1. A c c o r d i n g t o military spokesmen in J e r u s a l e m , d o z e n s of
Israeli planes a t t a c k e d guerrilla
positions in: a ) J o r d a n a n d
Syria; b ) L e b a n o n and Syria; c )
Egypt and L e b a n o n .
listeners to call in. (7-644 3)
Off Campus
Hellman (459-5300)
(Emerson,
(i. Class Clown (George Carlin)
telrph"in- inn
Movie Timetable
IFG
Real truck music is usually
sung by guys with a deepthroated Paul Bunyan kind of
voice, b u t when Billy C. steps t o
the mike a n d belts o u t "Truck
News Quiz
Basket lull t ...uii
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
On Campus
Trilogy
ter)
l//y",
for
If the title d o e s n ' t give it away,
the portrait of a giant semi truck
on t h e cover a n d t h e lovely
c u t o u t s o n t h e back—like o n e of
those old King truck-driving albums—is a sure tipoff. Truck
songs always h a d mure vitality
than t h e rest of c o u n t r y music,
and this is largely a collection of
Cody's trucking favorites.
7:30
Dr. Sauers.
Kurt
pm, 8 1 0
2. Close t o t h e E d g e (Yes)
1:25.
This week's guest will be SUNY
Baxter's
1. Never u Dull M o m e n t ( R o d
Htewurt)
Sports Line:
nial Quad Board, dance to the music of
g r o u p in t h e world playing rock
& roll t h e w a y it s o u n d e d back
in 1 9 5 5 w h e n y o u n g S o u t h e r n
c o u n t r y musicians were experim e n t i n g with t h e beginnings of
w h i t e rock & roll. F o r t h a t
reason I wish they h a d more
songs like " B o p p i n ' t h e Blues,"
" G o o d Rockin* T o n i g h t " a n d
" G i t I t , " instead of less effective
Little Richard oldies, b u t a
whole a l b u m of rockabilly will
undoubtedly
be forthcoming
and anyway, Hot Licks,
Cold
Steel <£ TruckeFavorites (Paramount 6 0 3 1 ) is 'ready a theme
a l b u m of sorts.
Top Ten Albums
1:30
Albany vs. Pace
Sunday, Oct. 29
Ballet
Asleep A t T h e Wheel (recently
signed t o United A r t s t s ) is a new
outfit which is folio wing in
Cody's f o o t s t e p s a n d seems destined t o r e v o l u t i o n i z e c o u n t r y
music, b u t Cody is still the only
Hamburgers
Bus will he
Beatles'
7:30 and 9 : 0 0 p m . Admission
MacDonald's
conducted by Julius Hegyi at
Palace Theatre, 8 : 3 0 p m . Student
short, sponsored by Students f o r McGovat
WSUA:
in a con-
provided to Palace Theatre.
Charlie
11:15
This week:
Horror F i l m : sponsored by Colonial Quad
Albany
State
If it d i d , of c o u r s e , t h e r e
w o u l d n ' t b e m u c h left. Commander C o d y is t h e b a n d t h a t
took c o u n t r y m u s i c o u t of t h e
hands of t h e L a u r e l C a n y o n
dilettantes, giving y o u n g folks
their first glimpse of t h e real
balls a n d i n n a t e h o n e s t y in t h a t
kind of music—and even did t h e
same for t h o s e C o u n t r y &
Western fans l u c k y enough t o
give t h e m a t r y . B u t t o d a y ' s C &
W is as far r e m o v e d from its
roots as rock is, a n d a l o t of
people d o n ' t realize h o w raw it
used t o b e .
Discography:
sponsored by UCB, at 9 pm in the
Tickets are $1.00 w/ student t a x ; $2.00
w/out.
am)
Buddy
an out-
PAC Main
pm-4
Tickets: $1.50 in advance w / tax &
ID;
Albany
Free tickets and albums
(11
Service
Commander Cody may be on
his way t o s t a r d o m — i n d e m a n d
all over t h e college a n d c o n c e r t
circuit, w o r s h i p p e d in E u r o p e
and heard r o u n d t h e world—but
his music h a s y e t t o lose a n y of
its small c l u b , s a w d u s t - a n d - b e e r
quality.
"Turn Back the Hands of Time"
being given away.
solutions
Student
Saturday Night of Gold
Print
Crossword Contest Rules
•
3 6 ^j y ^ ^ ^
46
51
"
"
•
By EDWARD JULIUS
ACROSS
1. Narrow Waterway
7. Mongolian Tribe
12. Harem
14. Peaceful
16. Short Saying
17. Surroundings
18. Depression
19. Chopped Down
21. Against (abbr.)
22. Looks At
23. Greek Giant
24. Constrictors
26. Soviet Division
P l a n (1924)
27.
28. E u r o p e a n C a p i t a l
cy.
Indian Seaport
29.
30. Fuse Together Again
3 1 . T h r e e - l e g g e d Stand
33. G e o m e t r i c Angle
34. Race Horse Type
35. Vegetable
36. FairleB
37. Understand
•>» Check
41. Prevaricatos
42. Recipient of Money
Huntz
^,. German Pronoun
i»5. Landed Estate
4 6 . "Mr. C h r i s t i a n "
47. C a u s i n g Vomiting
50. Londing a t High R a t e s
52. Strauss Opera
53. Legislators
54. French City
55. Death
DOWN
1. British-Indian Soldiers
2. Legal Term
3. Prices
4. Turkish Tltlei Var.
5.
de France
6. Cheapskate
7. Famous Square
8. Dry
9.
Aviv
10. Black Cuckoo
11. English Abbey
12. Bank Items
13. Brsakfast Dish
15. Swore (slang)
20. ExiBtsd
23. Brother of Moses
24. Cries
25. Pointed Arch
27. Cheats
26. Weighty
29. AspectB
30. "Canterbury" Storyteller
31. Charm
32. Split
33. Turned Backward
3«. Plghts
35. Southern Streams
37.
Jacinto
38. Prohibitions
39. Entloa
40. Wish Wall to
42. Steps
43. West Indies Country
45. Imitate
46. Unit of Weight
48, Biblical Prlaat
49. fielding Character
51, French Number
PAGE 5A
view/arts/'preview/arts/preview/arts
Procol Harum to Play the Palace on Thursday
by Bill Brina
Buffalo Festival P r o d u c t i o n s
will bring Procol Harum t o t h e
Palace T h e a t e r n e x t T h u r s d a y ,
November t h e 2nd. Opening t h e
s h o w will b e t w o Irish singers,
L e o O'Kelly a n d S o n n y Condell,
b e t t e r k n o w n t o t h e world as Tir
Na Nog. Tir Na N o g plays t h e
m u s i c of t h e Irish gods, filtered
t h r o u g h their e x p e r i e n c e s o n t h e
road a n d s h a p e d b y t h e i r o w n
personalities. Also featured will
be Steeleye
Span, an English
folk band specializing in songs of
a r d e n t m e n a n d easy ladies, invested with ringing h a r m o n i e s
a n d given sparkling coloration
from electric fiddle, dulcimer,
bass, guitars, a n d m a n d o l i n . I've
h e a r d t h e i r d e b u t album—Below
the Salt ( t h e title refers t o t h e
a n c i e n t English p r a c t i c e of placing expensive, i m p o r t e d salt, a t
t h e c e n t e r of a long trestle table.
T h e g e n t r y s a t a b o v e it, t h e
c o m m o n folk below^—and it's
excellent. Their version of " J o h n
B a r l e y c o r n " easily c u t s Traffic's
version, a n d t h a t ' s saying a lot.
Usually, w h e n an agency pushes
o p e n i n g acts o n t h e t o u r of a
bona fide star t h e o p e n e r s usually prove t h r o w a w a y s , b u t this
package t h a t Chyrsalis Records
assembled promises t o be really
fine.
Heading u p t h e s h o w will be a
band t h a t paid its dues for far
t o o long, b u t d o e s n ' t have t o
pay
them anymore.
Procol
Harum's been a " C u l t g r o u p " for
nearly as long as there's been
such a thing; beloved b y a few
cognoscenti a n d ignored by t h e
rest of t h e concert-going public.
Finally, their " L i v e " a l b u m with
the E d m o n t o n S y m p h o n y Orchestra a n d t h e single from t h a t
album,
"Conquistador,"
gave
t h e m t h e public recognition they
so richly deserved. T h e band
t h a t will a p p e a r a t t h e Palace is
that same b a n d with o n e exception—guitarist Mick Graham has
replaced David Ball. Chris Copping h a s really flowered as an
organist since bassist Alan Cart'
wright joined t h e b a n d , a n d t h e
d r u m m i n g of BJ Wilson just gets
stronger and stronger.
T h e focus of Procol H a r u m ,
t h o u g h , has always been on lyricist Keith Reed a n d singer/
arranger/pianist Gary Brook er,
Keith is o n e of t h e b e t t e r - k n o w n
enigmas of progressive rock;
a d m i r e d , discussed, b u t never
u n d e r s t o o d . Gary Brooker is t h e
man w h o t u r n s KeiLh's c r y p t i c
lines i n t o deeply felt, strongly
articulated vocals - t h e kind thai
remain soulful w i t h o u t becoming embarassing. Catch t h e m
t h e ethereal t h a t y o u w o n ' t w a n t
n e x t T h u r s d a y n i g h t ; t h e y lay
out a rare blend o f the basic and
t o miss.
Sebastian Shines in Concert at the Palace
E y e E x p r e s s , " " Y o u n g e r G e n e r a t i o n , " a n d "Magical
by Sue L e b o f f
audience, small as it w a s , w e n t with h i m from t h e
T h e J o h n S e b a s t i a n c o n c e r t at t h e Palace Theater
start, clapping, h u m m i n g , b o u n c i n g , a n d s h o u t i n g
reviewer missed
M o n d a y night was a w i n n e r , b u t it started out all
requests. A h a r m o n i c a
six-seven y e a r s , a n d if S e b a s t i a n ' s sick o f t h e m , i t ' s
w r o n g . T h e stringer g r o u p , Elf, w e n t o n 45 m i n u t e s
followed, and proved t o be a highlight in a concert
l a t e , a n d p l a y e d miserably
unfull
that was so evenly e n t e r t a i n i n g that t h e highlights
He a c c o m p a n i e d t w o n u m b e r s o n t h e a u t o h a r p , a
their first n u m b e r , Elf's e q u i p m e n t
were hard t o s p o t . Before t h e Lovin' Spoonful a n d
folk i n s t r u m e n t that d o e s n ' t t u r n u p in m a n y b a n d s
h o u s e . After
t o a decidedly
tune called " R u s t y T r a i n "
Can KUNYA s u p p o r t t h e blues
oven ill Starvation Prices?
" A n Evening of the Blues" will be presented S a t u r d a y , O c t o b e r 28,
1972 at the C a m p u s G y m , 9 ; 0 0 p.m. Admission is low. Advertised as
" s t a r v a t i o n blues freak p r i c e s "
IT IS just that ill $ 1 . 5 0 advance
and $'2.(){) a't t h e d o o r l o S U N Y A s t u d e n t s with ID and Lax cards.
With a low ticket price, a full evening o f good music by traditional
bluesmen — Buddy G u y a n d J u n i o r Wells Band plus o t h e r s , there is
no reason this s h o w should n o t be packed. Yet, blues s o m e h o w have
always been u n d e r - a p p r e c i a t e d in t h e U.S. Such American greats i®
J o h n Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters and Muddy G u y have long enjoyed
much more acclaim in E u r o p e than at h o m e . Until t h e Rolling
S t o n e s did " L i t t l e R e d R o o s t e r " of " S p o o n f u l , " h o w m a n y of the
middle American teenagers h a d ever heard ol Chicago's Willie
DixonV
Wells and G u y , while of traditional Chicago blues vintage, are
considred " i n t h e vanguard of t h e newest blues style
visual,
s p o n t a n e o u s - stretching t h e limits of t h e once rigid form toward
jazz, toward r h y t h m a n d b l u e s . "
Mississippi-born Wells learned to play h a r m o n i c a from the mi
m o r t a l Sonny Boy Williamson, and t h a t influence s h o w s o n his
version of Williamson's " S o Sad This M o r n i n g . " Wells d o e s n ' t m a k e a
record unless Buddy G u y plays lead guitar, which makes t h e SUNYA
show a rather creative c o m b i n a t i o n . " H e m a k e s blues m o a n , " says
Wells. Born in Baton Rouge, La., G u y , also, is of t h e Chicago style
" g u i t a r runs t o o fast t o hear, l o o c o m p l e x Lo grasp, or, in a sudden
c h a n g e of pace, h e will sustain o n e slow, tingling nerve end of a n o t e
after a n o t h e r . He will start a song only t o break off and begin
a n o t h e r , at limes m u t t e r i n g i m p a s s i o n e d syllables instead of words,
or e r r u p t i n g i n t o gospel like e x h o r t a t i o n . He plays his guitar one
h a n d e d , or at a r m s ' length, or b e h i n d his back or over his head, and
he is as likely as n o t t o e n d a set by leaving his band onstage,
w a n d e r i n g off into t h e a u d i e n c e , trailing t h e long electric cord
b e h i n d h i m , ecstatically singing and playing his way through t h e
c r o w d and o u t t h e exit d o o r , clear o u t of sight, while t h e
d i s e m b o d i e d frenzy of his music still billows o u t from t h e
loudspeakers."
" S o m e teenage, so-called ' S u p e r s t a r s ' could well take n o t e . And of
c o u r s e , m a y huve. With a bright colored w a r d r o b e , sex appeal of
y o u t h , a n d a slick h i t record w h i c h m a n y times is a direct c o p y of a
b l u e s m a n ' s classic - t h e y o u n g superstars a t t r a c t huge c r o w d s a n d
m a k e fortunes. While Amoriea'a classic b l u e s m e n , t h e ones w h o
s t a r t e d it all go, for t h e m o s t p a r t , u n n o t i c e d . "
A good t u r n - o u t o n O c t o b e r 2H m a y find Albany State opening i u
d o o r s t o a d d i t i o n a l c o n c e r t s with a music-cultural significance.
Besides good m u s i c , y o u m i g h t just find y o u reully like " T h e B l u e s "
after all.
PAGE 6A
lierttltu
liiikfr,
a well-known
area songstress, will entertain at
the .S Step f I I Wlllelt S i . ) t o n i l e
anil t o m o r r o w evening.
Xebec
holds forth at Uncle Ray's with
then hard edged rock and roll
The liynU will be at Sliulnuire
t o m o r r o w for t w o shows o n e
and four in t h e a f t e r n o o n . As far
as we can tell, guitarist Clarence
White will be with t h e m , con
trary to published reports that
he'd split.
AND N K X T WKKK: Chicuttu is
bringing a half a million dollar
s o u n d s y s t e m , c o m p l e t e witli
d o z e n s of razzle dazzle in nova
lions, t o t h e Tuesday & Wednes
day nite c o n c e r t s a t the RPI
Armory S o u n d engineers will
spend h o u r s aligning t h e system
to t h e A r m o r y ' s quirks, so t h e
s o u n d s h o u l d be good. Concert
Hoard please take n o t e : If firstrate e q u i p m e n t can make t h e
RPI A r m o r y s o u n d decent, it
would m a k e t h e SUNYA gym
s o u n d like t h e Fillmore East.
T h e A r m o r y has got t o bo t h e
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
understandable.
b r o k e d o w n , a n d while it was getting fixed, t h e guy
fame h a p p e n e d t o J o h n S e b a s t i a n , he played har-
b u t should t u r n u p m o r e . F o r t h e rest, h e a l t e r n a t e d
monica for other p e o p l e ' s a l b u m s . N o w t h a t he's a
b e t w e e n a c o u s t i c guitar a n d h e also whistled a b i t .
couldn't
Elf has an album
star himself, his h a r m o n i c a can gel t h e full a t t e n t i o n
He h a s an enviable perfect-pitch w h i s t l e . Whistling
c o m i n g o u t this w e e k . N o b o d y w h o was al that
it deserves. Additional high p o i n t s included a solo
expressed beautifully t h e image Sebastian p r o j e c t s -
sing, a n n o u n c e d
that
c o n c e r t s h o u l d b u y t h e a l b u m . T h e groups's second
by the d r u m m e r , Charlie S h a n a h a n , in o n e of t h e
that o f t h e carefree lovable c o u n t r y b o y t o w h o m
n u m b e r , a l o u d , hard-driving s o n g w i t h some inter-
louder, less c o u n t r y - s o u n d i n g n u m b e r s , " B l a c k Satin
it's n o t an image, b u t t h e w a y S e b a s t i a n really is.
esting p i a n o , was n o t b a d . . . n o , I'm n o t going to even
Kid," "Dixie C h i c k e n " a funny bluegrass ballad that
When h e sings "Nasville C a t s " h e m e a n s every w o r d
p r e t e n d t o b e e v e n - h a n d e d . F o l k s , Elf is awful.
was o n e of t h e t w o songs in t h e p r o g r a m Sebastian
of it. Nashville permeates his songs a n d his singing
didn't
now just as it did in the Lovin' Spoonful d a y s . He
T h e n J o h n Sebastian " a n d friends" strode in, and
m a d e e v e r y t h i n g all right
- m o r e than all right.
write, and a s o m e w h a t
hoarse
h u t very
moving rendition of " S h e ' s A L a d y . "
k n o w s h o w t o husk c o u n t r y corn d o w n t o some-
T h e y m a d e e v e r y t h i n g a n d e v e r y o n e in that theater
Sebastian's voice started falling d o w n after a b o u t
feel, as it says in S e b a s t i a n ' s lyrics, "like it was
ten songs, and he tried t o cut t h e concert s h o r l , but
raining
there was no w a y t h a t ' t h a t small b i n d e t e r m i n e d
s h a d o w e d , b u t their
talent, audience response, and magic thai goes int..
audience
zation were excellent, and they certainly belonged
m a k i n g an u n f o r g e t t a b l e
Sebastian's
daisies."
everyone
sensed
The combination
concert
of charisma.
was there, ami
it. Elf's literally had vibes were
f o r g o t t e n . Sebastian was king for a night,
First h e sang " S i t l i n o n T o p o f the World." T h e
thing line and personal.
Sebastian's
was letting go of him so s o o n . It is lo
credit
that
he came
hack
and sang
three
friends
v. ere
mainly
playing a n d vocal
over-
harmoni-
in t h e show. Sebastian said that after playing in a
several additional n u m b e r s , even though his voice
suing
was hurting, lie did n o l get a r o u n d t o singing several
change. I h o p e it was nice e n o u g h to draw h i m back
ol the old favorites the a u d i e n c e r e q u e s t e d . " R e d
again soon.
of e c h o i n g
gyms,
t h e Palace was a nice
Mayall Still the Master
S.U.N.Y.A. Concert Board
WELCOMES
lo begin with a n d years of tour-
by Bill Brina
ing have worn it d o w n t o perhaps half that, b u t t h e feeling is
In all t h e countless t o u r s thai
veteran
At left, G a r y B o o k e r a n d Keith R e i d o f P r o c o l H a r u m .
Above, Steeleye Span.
B o t h g r o u p s will play t h e Palace T h e a t e r o n T h u r s d a y , N o v e n b e r 2 n d .
What's Up for the Weekend
..Lots of things t o d o ; t h e
noted Mexican dance t r o u p e Hal
lei Maya
de Ruben
Dtuirte
c o m e s into t h e Performing Arts
Center
Sunday,
Monday, &
T u e s d a y . T h e r e will be rain
dances, fire dances, a n d a repres e n t a t i o n of h u m a n sacrifice!
Tickets available at t h e PAC box
office.
Louis
Falco's
Dance
C o m p a n y gave a lecture demonstration last nite and an informal
lecture this m o r n i n g . Their main
p e r f o r m a n c e will be Lhis evening
at t h e PAC d o n ' t miss " t h e
dancer's
Marshall
McLuhan."
There's a set of classes being
given by t h e m S a t u r d a y down at
the PE Building, Loo.
m o s t . B u t t h o s e songs go b a c k
whom I'll have t o call t h e vocalist, even though he
English
blues
master
n a r d e s t hall t o d o s o u n d for t h a t
Lhis writer's ever seen.
*****
On T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r Ml, t h e
University-Community
Symp h o n y - O r c h e s t r a will perform its
first c o n c e r t of t h e year in t h e
m a i n t h e a t e r of t h e PAC. T h e
program will include Weber's
Overture to " D i e FreischuU," a
Handel O b o e c o n c e r t o featuring
Rene Prins o n t h e o b o e , a n d
Elgar's massive " E n i g m a Variations. "
Mr Prins, a g r a d u a t e of t h e
Juilliaid School of Music, has
been a faculty m e m b e r here at
S U N Y A for just a few years, b u t
has left his impression on t h e
entire
Albany
c o n e r t going
a u d i e n c e through his Alhany
S y m p h o n y a n d Albany S t a t e
a p p e a r a n c e s . He is praised for his
clarity of t o n e a n d his technical
mastery.
enough.
D r u m m e r Keef H a r t l e y , veteran
In fact, e v e r y o n e received an
enthusiastic
response.
The
audience that did show that eve-
.of s o m e of the earliest
Mayall
ning was a real Mayall a u d i e n c e ,
h a n d s , provided a n o t h e r referant
and provided J o h n with an ex-
coupls of shows moved as m a n y
for t h e "Mayall s o u n d " with his
cellent o p p o r t u n i t y t o showcase
times as his O c t . 15th appear-
steady, tasteful s u p p o r t ( m a r r e d
his jaz.z.-blues fusion b a n d . Many
ance
only
an
w a s , b u t there
couldn't
b y an over-ambitious at-
t e m p t at a solo).
English
rock
musician has
used Mayall's t o u r s as a stepping-
Mayall's oilier musicians added
stone lo personal s t a r d o m • Eric
w h o y o u lalked t o , either t h e
a distinctively different
.?rd or 4 t h site planned for t h e
tion t o t h e e n s e m b l e . T h e line-
Bruce, most o f F l e e t w o o d Mac,
half t h e h o r n m e n in t h e British
show,
which
is a m a z i n g
coloia-
Clapton,
Mick
Taylor,
Jack
when
up wasn't that radically different
drawing
an i n s t r u m e n t a t i o n from t h e cir-
Isles, and assorted o t h e r s turned
power as an acl a n d his sterling
ca ' 6 8 Bluesbreakers featured o n
their
professionalism.
the "Live in E u r o p e " LPs, b u t
good a d v a n t a g e . Hopefully, lhis
he was at 1 0 : 0 0 P.M. ( t h e first
the
lour
show was cancelled because the
brought
you
consider
John's
Anyway,
there
feeling
these
musicians
to J o h n ' s
music w a s
provide
some
exposure
R o b i n s o n , Victor
John
to
badly
to
Freddie
G a s k i n , Blue
refreshingly
that
Freddie Robinson eschewed t h e
Mitchell, a n d Fred Clar,. T h e y ' v e
T w o s h o w s c u r r e n t l y a r e on
e x h i b i t in t h e arL gallery in t h e
C a m p u s Center at S t a t e University of New York a t Albany.
T h e r e is p h o t o g r a p h y in black
and w h i t e a n d in color by J a m e s
Poscilico which will r u n until
Nov. If) in t h e s e c o n d floor
gallery
" L a r g e S c u l p t u r e Recently E x e c u t e d a t S U N Y A , " an
e x h i b i t i o n of seven pieces, will
be s h o w n through Oct. .'10 in t h e
Patroon Lounge.
T h e r e is n o admission charge
Visitors are advised t o call
157-6923 for viewing hours
cellent
black
high-volume
been
POETRY
PRESS
Jr. Wells
Band
$1.50
$2.00
*"J f l f l
vO.UU
musicians
and
Novembers
ANY S T U D E N T Mending either junior or senior college ii cligiW.' "> mlnnii
liis verse. There is no limitation as lo form or theme. Shorter works are preferred by the Ho.iu! ol Judges, because of space limitations.
Lach poem must be TYl'ED or PRINTED on a separate sheet, ami must
bear die NAME and HOME ADDRESS of the student, and t h e COU-iiTiE
ADIJItESS a s w e l l .
MANUSCRII'TS ihouKi lie senl lo the OFFICE OF H I E PRESS
NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
LOS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
playing
some d a m n
he veiy different from all of his
favor
overlooked al crucial p o i n t s in
influenced
very
louring
careers
because
at a n y
Mayall.
Victor Gaskin, playing a stand-
given lime they werent't
from
up acoustic bass, provided a veiy
whatever
familiarity
John
himself,
came
the
bluesy,
h o n k y - t o n k p i a n o , the i h y t h m i c ,
playing, a n d the
vocals
their
John
The
harp
style, a n d hassinan
a n d yet
familiarly
bouncy
of a sweeler. m o r e jazz-
shows
John's
vocal
lange was only an octave in so
warm,
vivid
lone.
Trumpetei
able.
was c u r r e n t l y
Perhaps
the
relaxed, rolling syle. leaving t h e
college audiences lo these m e n ,
Hash lo c o m e from s a x m a n l-'red
I'm sine that's what J o h n would
Clar,
wan I.
whose
s t a c c a t o solos re-
A
R
M
A
D
Jitterbugs
* °'
All General Public (Proof of 18 yri or
College ID Required)
Digits
by Willie Smith
OCTOBER 28th
albany
Campus Gym,
9:00 p.m.
troy
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
]
(Warehouse)
M J
Denims $3.99
_|j
Corduroys $5.95
NATIONAL STUDENT PRODUCTIONS, INC. ( 2 l i ) JU 6-OW>
association
with Mayall will turn on white
with SUNYA ID plus Ta» Cards
ai th c , o
doing
fasion-
Blue Mitchell played iu a veiv
Fairisle Sweater
Advance Tickets at Campus Cenlnr
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
fine
earliei
Produced in Cooperation with
Anrjeies, C a l i f .
of
music for m a n y y e a r s , only t o be
SPRING COMPETITION
T h e closing date (or the subnmiion of manuKTipU by College Su.Jeiii;. »*
pyrotechnics
white English blues guitarists in
fronting a show that managed lo
foghorn
AND GUEST ARTISTS
four ex-
Guitarist
will
needed
with
a band
featured
mellow.
exposure
audience was so sparse), leading
announce! ils
3210 Sclby Avenue
and that's
*****
COLLEGE STUDENT'S POETRY ANTHOLOGY
The N A T I O N A L
there,
audience r e s p o n s e .
there must have been at leasl a
nic Coliseum w a s , d e p e n d i n g o n
T h e UCSO will b e playing an
a w a y game in Cobleskill t h e
night before, a n d would like to
r e t u r n h o m e t o cheering c r o w d s
on Halloween night. And besides, there's good music Lo be
played. You might as well go.
You'll enjoy it.
still
ceived an e x t r e m e l y e n t h u s i a s t i c
John Mayall has under his belt
have been t o o m a n y T h e Colo-
The Blues" This Weekend
C o n n e c t i o n " b e i n g the t h r e e t r a d e m a r k n u m b e r s t h e
A
PAGE 7A
Resident
general
in
Assistantshlps
interest
'73'74. A
Trick
m e e t i n g w i l l be h e l d
LC7 on Sunday,
November
12th,
o r Treat
Halloween.
for
UNICEF
this
F o r information
call
Claire 7-4503.
cants.
f o r all ' 7 3 - ' 7 4
It should
applicants
also
must
noted
The
junior
Lipsky
will
Society
for
Wayward
hold
first
meeting,
its
N o v . 6, Fireside L o u n g e , 7 : 3 0 P M .
will
night
PEACE
^
_
_
&
-
_
POLITICS
^
—
—
—
^
^
—
Semi-Annual
—
American
Meeting
Association
a meeting
and
for
mation
Come
Friday
O c t , 2 7 , a t 7 P M in t h e Physics
Big Sister
be w i t h
us. T h e Zen
Group
Re-Elect
the President
meeting
Hudson
November
Valley
Chapter,
Place
S U N Y at
4 , 1972
program.
call
school
5 206
child
For infor-
463-3178
N«.
or c o m e t o
M.
Pearl
Street
interested
those
i n t e r e s t e d in w o r k i n g
for
students are i n v i t e d t o a t t e n d . S p o n Middle
German,
in H e a d S t a r t - a
zazen n i g h t l y at 8 P M . 3 7 0 - 5 9 5 9 .
All
of
info,
V o l u n t e e r as a teacher, B i g B r o t h e r
or
development
Bible
Prayer
Building Lounge (129). All
of the
of Teachers
be
ror
that
be o f at least
Singing
accepting
f o r publication,
p h o n e A n d y at 4 3 4 - 8 5 6 5 .
Students
There
Sciences/general
is n o w
R.A. appli-
be
status.
Study,
the Social
journal,
articles
at 7 P M . A t t e n d a n c e at t h i s m e e t i n g is
mandatory
AEGIS
-interest
sored
b y InterVarsity
Christian
Fel-
T h e first
issue of Phoenix
Earth
o r those
been p l a c e d
lowship.
tively
scheduled
who
haven't
is t e n t a y e t , please c o m e t o
the
f o r release o n
Ten Eyck o f f i c e o n D u t c h Quad,
Tuesday
7:30
in CC 3 7 3 . F o r f u r t h e r
i n f o call D a n D u n c a n at 4 8 2 - 2 2 8 0 .
Albany,
Hall
Sponsor
man,
Sanford
elation
,
R o s e n b l u m , Student
Lawyer,
S A
h a
will
be
Office.
Campus
Center
November
Assembly
Department
o f Ger
COWRS
S U N Y al A l b a n y
Asso-
available
CC346,
Nov,
in
volunteer
from
h
7 p m - 9 p m o n T u e s WW n i t s .
o
w
to d o
p e f
clerical
work
^
^
Service.
LCB
W
Community
M
k
(Caucus
Rights-Students)
six
^
on
will
1 at 6 : 3 0 P M
Women's
material
on
second
meet
inHU18.
Wed.
Future
meetings w i l l be o n N o v . 2 2 a n d Dec
^
3 0 - A or
13,
Anyone
attend,
who's
interested
or call M a r i a n n e
please
462-9834.
more
years?
sented
An
w e take
open
b y URPE
Radical P o l i t i c a l
Oct
Can
four
discussion
IThe
pre
Union
Economics!
A
of
Blind
people
C o m 3 C )
Friday.
need
C u m m u l l |
Presidency?
Lewis
v
,,
S l
v : u )
A critical
t o t h e US
d . s c u s s i o n Tus
carora 1 0 7 . S u n d a y n i t e 9 0 0
W j ) ( | |
( ( |M
^
y Q u r
M
e
m
„ /
December 6 t h
C
B
been
Sing
on
Our f i r s ! rehearsal w i l l
^
f
^
^
T u l B r i n g
ihe
Dutch
you1
For
Quad
^
^
,„„,
,,„„,
information
3(), 3 P M in t h e CC C a f e t e r i a
Holy
celebrated
' ' H'li' 1 ,
aci o n f i l i i ]
get an earfull
of Pioneer stereo
95
at $249.
dime
over
and
a cup
practice
of c o f f e e
Conversation
table
youl
at
Spanish
day
t h e Spanish
niv-tnl
Center
C.le-.j,,.,
of Community
Ser-
location
I
will iimii
•'
rJ.»•
Communion
at B A M
is t h e e n c l o s e d
.1 B n i l
I'M A l l
,..-„ I i e l w e e n LC 38.4
Student
tea. h
Central
Council
am
Rep.
In- in live C...i " „ I . r . .. i.It
i4h .,„ Mi..,.!..*
„ , now
office
LCB30A
A
' .
I
People w h o
are
is n o w
f hi-I
• unrulier is
interested
,ng a s y l l a b u s , or
who
<jsk q u e s t i o n s a b o u t
m
,usl
fund
to, a Free
Choice.
.ttjKtionlaw
m i . Avenue
UM
H,.„,
Washing
t j , a t l W h W 3
in
t h e p r o g i a m , • an
^^-,—
*"<""»
' '-"''•
Strike,,L
^"'
).-[i*''
' ] ! "
"'
v l
Ih,
• 'iiYou
. Ie.|r.»- of v.,.
Kn<>w A b o u t Pre-Med,
6.30PM
Pro-Dent
i '
l
(
/ • '•
love
but
it ain't
due
response
Wit
in.mi's
wir
Bad,"
t o lack
wish
those
^
Bio 248
"
V , /
'"'"" '" " ' ' "
* '
M
'
1
'
'"' " • ' • ' ' '
I'
1,
, k
'
f H l | f W<
• ' " ' '•"'
" '
' ' - '
i
If y o u
use
"
w
"
,
"l"'
l l f
'
,
1
" ' " ' "
*1'
sjovembei
IMP
India
him
wlin
showing
fin
r J ubli(
5e1.es,
"The
color
PM.
Snydet,
Assembly
has linen
offered
$2 0 0
28ih
Nighl
IO.TII
as
tui
Get
Istudeuts)
Sing
(here
Bnnga
for
November
ap.plii
30,
364.
is .1 coed
Wednesday
C
deadline
is M o n d a y ,
evening
I ib
3 1 . at
i overs local .
horn
,. lemu
nui
issue f t .
,,mpus W o m e n ' s I i b e o i t m i i
The
Newman
e n d of
Tor
Association
November
information
Eastman
Sing
volleyball
every
al /PM
in Gym
Tower
The Song and
participation
songs, d r a m a t i c
the
340
her
Fmkari
Jewish
tea a n d
29th
cake
is
bO u a i t
%\
OOloi
the Lyric.
House
Road
at 7 3 0
An
A l l are i n v i t e d
Jim
457-8751.
poetry
lJ M
to
Holi-
29 a l 9 0 0 PM i n the
Lowei
meeting,
you
rehearsal
Come
winning
Lounge.
to the
still
group
If y o u
organizational
can
join
this year's
Everyone
welcome
Intercollegiate
3 0 at
Physical
at Ihis
sing w i t h
Irtteresi
Oclobar
the
entry
Basketball
Meeting.
/PM
Monday,
m Room
Education
12b of
Building A l l
i n t e r e s t e d persons are asked t o a t t e n d
or call Miss P a l m at 4 5 7 4 5 3 8
of the
Center,
on Sunday,
is p r o v i d e d .
' o r Cenler
will
program of
Cominunily
Whitehall
UUubei
friends
readings a n d
Coffee
3-5
call
Tower
corne
Women's
and
is spon
w i l l have their f i r s t rehearsal
couldn't
Inend
Sherer
Center
s o n n g a r e t r e a t at D i p p i k i l l the week-
Team
Jessua
'76, Monday
i n Campus
i n v i t e d t<
Pre
I here is ,) Newspaper
o l v.ew
are
all
for
31b
on Sunday. Ocl
at
ioniums
or
'1? at 7 P M u
AM
t h e Class of
at 7 3 0
of
in working
pre
Colfee.
Admission
members
and
11 m m e m b e r s
Judy
ler
Hay
will
Ordained female
be speaking a b o u t
letalnin
t o the
3(1 <n
/ 30
Bible
m
Ihe
the
minis
women
Monday.
u
Ocl
A
As:
ssembly
A/omen's
by W
o
Sponsored
Hall
Liberation
I ui ilJmJ by S A
Parsec
ma< i / i n
(.,11
p a l m -.il
isy
HI
H,,
,ind
',/•',
lirtion
t o o l .bullous11
pose
*oa
o
Salads, we make our own
si ren H
ISUNVA's
'1 want 1 , y o u '
ii h n i i and
{ p i l l i| oi .yin.il s< Kir.i e
A M
323 Ontario Street
Corner of Morris Street
Reopening Season
A l l>any
class,
30
The
Holiday
Ihen
t h i r d na-
O'Donnell
lie a m e e t i n g
interested
Iheir
winn.nt
India"
$1 5 0
will
Oct
day
starring
Nieecker
(). Inbei
Out
Oct
(others!
present
Speak
will be
Champion
Russell a n d c u r r e n t
freshmen
attend
s t o r y , S si he
Snatcher/'
m i luesrl.iy.
award
oui
Halloween
Library's
1 uesday
Body
al SUNYA
"Mother
Admission
audience
you
Foil
at I 3 0 i n
b y Gary
7, B 0 0
movie
presumed ,.l H a r m . j n u s
••••
Featured
national
t i o n a l w o m a n fencer A n n
Fresh meats, cold cuts, and imported cheeses o f all kinds.
Avenue
gymnasium
Robert
International
Boris K a r l o t f a n d Bela L u g o s i , w i l l be
Women
with a
m t h e Dance S t u d i o of
APA
e l student
i u express
A spine i hill.IK] h o n u i
view:,
will sponsor a
combined
here
schools
Association
sents
bPM i n C C
Allj.iny
Club
exhibition
w i l l speak
BARE SKIN FURS
98 Central
Fencers
fencing
" ""> -
with the same low prices
as two years ago
Antique Fur Coats
$10 A N D UP
Sheepskins
$8 A N D UP
Line of new Fur coats
Used Leather Jackets
and other Fur items
1 BSR 31 OX turntable
SUNYA
fencing clime
COUNTRY DELI
complete component system
O n S u n d a y . N o v . 12 at 1.00 P M , t h e
be
your
There
iioo*.
(or
Call
invited
Reading
Albany
1'ff
''•i-
All
Saturday,
cancelled
..ihofi.ti
'Hm
Tuesday,0<1
to d o
u i mind
Hl'M
Always Wanled i n
We.e A f r a i d t o Ask
states
r h e p r o d u c t i o n of J o h n I laser's "ft
ain't
Club
demand.
of c u r r e n t )
bullettin
o n Grad
Poetry
Artists
having
/ v l
'
' i f l "Til-
1
school
I C7
•ary
obtain
i](j so I I I S S J / b
r v»*r y t h i f u j
or Talented
experiment
449 5 5 0 7
nail
Coalition
wan'
for
altered
ijuled
a n d sign
a 2nd
Students
1**1 fit
For i n f o call 4 5 7 4 8 0 1
Studies
Nov
',.,"•!
'•'A'-'
'*'
save
Peace
Wed
,.
MM, win) w o n ' t be h e r e please c o m e I D
M,I. i o n t a c l
Day
I nday I.-H.I m 11 M
' " J aiinouined
lounge
should
will
i n Chapel
imsfiei
i.ii ••..•I . W . i i i n i ' i
lo.iitnnd
" CC
vice Registration aw Nov 1.2.3.6&?
the
Marl
A Commuter
/.HI
Dates
Art
T u e s d a y s at 3 110
PM „ , Hid C a m p u s
Notice
i'."
Association
Study
li
b y popular
1000
Hall, Campus Center.
with
''"'
back
printed,
t o include
R o n K u r t / , Editor
today
needed
i i l e i c s t e d are w e l c o m e 1
poetry
forget
Shorties U n i t e ! TheMunchkfn
is
Audrey. 7-5191.
Room
Monday
r h i ; Newman
and
t o be
a p e n n a m e please s p e c i f y
contact
1
All
prose
likely
name a n d p h o n e n u m b e r
grad
House o n All Saints
w i l l hold a Coffee
Oct
infor-
Community
INTERESTED FOLK
on
Phoenix
Center
Prose w o r k s o v e r
less
Don't
HA229
MAJORS & MINORS
Hour
i n the
Campus
the
prose,
3 0 t h at 7 P M i n
7944
Protestants:
Club
all
for
your
F l a g r o o m . We need
more
J i m at 4 5 7
he
Conversation
are
typed.
Service. L C B 3 0 - A . 4 5 7 4 8 0 1 .
rtie Russian
submitted
Leave
and artwork
m a t i o n desk.
meantime,
tormer
school a c t i v i t i e s . C o n t a c t
and
the
the
W ( j
v s
has
L
be M o n d a y . O c t o b e r
h o | p
,„,
M
,
p
group
f o r m u l a t e d to sing at Holiday
. . ' . . .
Fidler
Quad
hand
30-A at 4 5 7 4 8 0 1
2 7 . 2 P M . Ed 120.
Can we elect
,
a helping
Dutch
be
o n the
words
and
457-4801.
Islixonomics.
may
issue.
poetry,
box
15, In
|
' - . lOiplty
ph
le
Dead'
, No,
Kill
II ere
WiH
pOtitn „
1)1" •!
,
•
Home baked pies daily
uu
M-lll lat.
Hot and cold sandwiches t o go
Homemade spaghetti sauce
t
Millet
,•
'"'
'
N<u t-tte
Dein
Harold
psyi h o i o . j y
prof
Any
esle 1 pl< ise smri
Barbecued chicken every Thursday
ion
Hi ' H i
Ice cold beer and soda
1 i,
bit/
(,en er
Open 11 am to 11 pm
lor Judyt;
]()/-.>/
1' •rn.il onal
.0 O e
?.> W i l l . i l l
>vil
Si
if
nv
' '
ill
PM
SUNDAY
10 pm to 2 pm 6 pm to 10 pm
OFFICIAL
CLOSED TUESDAY
IH.-70H2
NOTICE
, , , , , _
There will be an Important meetinq
of all those interested in working for the
1 Pioneer SX 424 receiver
2 Lafayette - Criterion 50 -
Freshman Class of 76
2 way speaker systems
Mon. Oct. 30
7:30
CC. 315
ademic
Wide Assortment of Fine Wines
1970 Petit Chablis
$1.99 |
1966 Ch. Bellville
$2.99 I
1967 Ch. Belair
$4.99 |
.'-•Mi
advisement
Ih.ui
Mi.-,
. ,io
tratton
$4.99 |
,.,.ider
till* U r u v . ^ s . l y
Visit Any Or All Of Our Six Stores - Located To Serve Youl
MFGS. LIST
PRICE $298.80
COLONIE
NorthwtyMtll
ALBANY
70 Cnir.l An.
SCHENECTADY
141 Erl. Blvd.
GLENS F A L L 8
707 UpMr Olan StrMI
PITTSFIELD
42 Sumimr UraM
AMHERsf""'
MACC
1970 Dom Scharzhofberger
$3.99 |
to
msu'ii
tlay
ih,.'
are
438.|.ll«|
u.(i Ii
11 (tui advise'
l o t l r n w elass cards
urged
dod
itigis
l*.i- ' )
ol
Hie ' . - s ' d.iy
duled
l o meel
ihe
one
sluilenl
prwn
' .IL
to i i u i u
.luden's who
Ihn I /r.ivursily < irlluge
with
as possible
thai
blodent'b
20Mi.wi!S£lM^JS
hy
Hugisha'
U ' ire
Piu
a l | i1 >l •<•' i .i
NovMinbn. I
as soon
Liquor at Discount Prices, Too!|
rite
' >/ '•
d r a w i n g , lass • , m h " i W . - I M . M lay.
are ddvisod by
We need help to make our class known
on this campus
Make the Class of 76 an active one
- ;
. 1 . ,.••
UMH'HMi e puOI.-.hml
loi
sp'
I- ,,-. , (.,.,•. , , , o | ,
,v. I h u, >v\
mum w i t h
1966 Morey-St. Denis
fot
then
wfiuk
lie si he
m advance
iniln,ili>d
advise'
I I ts r«i o i n m e n
appuimmtml
period
lor
ol
the
dltiw
irMi.'ltlssf.irds
••WMMMMBW*
NOW $249."
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
AI.bANY STUDENT PRESS
PAGE NINE
Promotion, Tenure Examined; Weaknesses Revealed
Continued
from
page
two
B u t President
B e n e z e t end o r s e d t h e r e p o r t writing in a
position s t a t e m e n t on J u n e 20th
in w h i c h h e s t a t e d : " I n general,
both
promotion
and
tenure
s h o u l d b e increasingly t h e responsibility of d e p a r t m e n t s or
Schools. R e c o m m e n d a t i o n s up
t h e line w h i c h go past t h e D e a n s '
level s h o u l d b e c o m e increasingly
p r o c e d u r a l a n d less s u b s t a n t i v e ;
t h a t is t h e p a t t e r n f o u n d in
m a t u r e university faculties." He
said r e d u c i n g t h e
University
C o u n c i l ' s role " w a s j u s t i f i e d "
a n d t h a t s t u d e n t s a n d junior
faculty s h o u l d play an undefined
"appropriate role."
S i r o t k i n c o n t i n u e d : " I n my
judgement,
the
recommendat i o n s c o n s t i t u t e a measurable
i m p r o v e m e n t of o u r existing
p r o c e d u r e s . " S t u d e n t s , however,
w e r e n o t q u i t e as thrilled with
the c h a n g e . L a m p o r t pledged to
b a t t l e t h e bill s t r e n o u s l y o n the
S e n a t e floor if it was ever released for a c t i o n .
B u t it never was. Instead, the
E x e c u t i v e C o m m i t t e e of the
S e n a t e d e c i d e d t h e plan was not
sufficiently
"action-oriented,"
a n d it was tossed t o a new
s u b c o m m i t t e e for rewriting.
T h i s s e c o n d s u b c o m m i t t e e rep o r t as r e w r i t t e n was released to
1. M o y e r Htmsberger, Dean of the College of Arts a n d Sciences.
T h u s Benezet kepi his promise
of " r e f o r m " hut ;it the same
lime did mil alienate powerful
faculty, deans and d c p a r t m e n l
chairmen. Kxtenl of s l u d e m involvement would have d e p e n d e d
on h o w o n e defined " a p p r o
priate."
Vice-President I'hilip Si nil km
was even m o r e enthusiastic He
wrote a m e m o r a n d u m lo I he
KxeeutlVe C o m m i t t e e of lllc
Senate dated J u n e I'.J, 1972 lh.il
began " T h e S t u d y (Jroup is to
he highly c o m m e n d e d for the
excellent way il approached an
exceedingly difficult task within
a very limited period of lime
the Kxeculive C o m m i t t e e of the
Senate Wednesday. Generally,
the report tries t o s u p p o r t de
centralization while allowing the
disputed cases t o c o m e up lo the
Council level. Il gives no guar
an tee of consislcnl s t u d e n t in
volvcmcnt Iml at least allows lor
the present level of involvement
through t h e Council
assuring
thai in controversial cases, a I
least, s o m e s t u d e n t mvolvemenl
will occur 11 is jus! about as
" g o o d " as Ihe present syslem.
T h u s , I w o a t t e m p t s at reform
on Ihe S e n a t e level have yielded
little in the way of increased
student power
SlsEBEEESEEEEEEEEEEESEEEtals
13
13
19
13
13
13
13
13
LAST CHANCE!
Applications for
tai
El
El
El
151
El
El
El
| HOLIDAY SING |
|
are due
1
13
I
13
1
El
OCTOBER 30
at 5 pm in CC 364.
13
13
EBEEE
13
^Mandatory
Songleaders'
H November 1 7:30 pm
El
EJ
El
Meeting®
LC4l
® questions?
13
13
Call Gary 7-4728 or Jeanne 7-4760
151
1
El
1
®
El
El
Funded by Student I u x E l
B u t ^he greatest fault of the
p r o m o t i o n and t e n u r e system is
n o t t h a t t h e d e p a r t m e n t chairm e n and dean exercise an u n d u e
a m o u n t of power in t h e differing
levels of b u r e a u c r a c y ; o r t h a t t h e
system neglects t o b o t h e r with
significant
student
opinion,
t h o u g h established bylaws recognize its w o r t h ; or t h a t promised
reform is at worst, retrogression,
a n d at best, m a i n t e n a n c e of the
status quo.
T h e greatest fault is t h a t guidelines guaranteeing s t u d e n t s a
significant role in t h e entire
system have been written, discussed a n d a d o p t e d b y the
S e n a t e — and arc virtually ignored,
A little k n o w n r e p o r t called
" R e p o r t of Ad-Hoc
FacultyS t u d e n t C o n s u l t a t i o n Guidelines
C o m m i t t e e " was d r a w n up beginning in the Spring of 1969
and released in D e c e m b e r of that
year, T h e g r o u p was chaired by
Virgil Z i m m e r m a n and lias some
rather interesting s t a t e m e n t s to
make
about
f ac u I ty -stu do n I
interaction in the* p r o m o Hon and
tenure procedure.
lis philosophy is mirrored in
the goal thai " s t u d e n t s and
faculty together will guide the
course and shape ihe destiny of
the university."
Its suggestions, according lo
[he preamble of the report will
help the university community
carry o u t a d e c l a r a t i o n of policy
passed earlier In 19(1'.) hy the
S e n a t e , a declaration that affirmed " s t u d e n t s are entitled to
be c o n s u l t e d and their o p i n i o n s
and desires weighed in the form a t i o n of decisions o n academic
matters.
T h e report does not m a n d a t e a
u n i f o r m policy lor s t u d e n t cons u l t a t i o n , but does give individual
academic
departments
" primary
responsibility"
for
drawing up a s t a t e m e n t
of
policies
and procedures
and
passing on the s t a t e m e n t t o t h e
Vice-Chairman of the Senate.
T h e s t a t e m e n t will, in the words
of the repori, " m a k e explicit the
circumstances and manner in
which s t u d e n t opinion will he
o b t a i n e d , the -subject m a t t e r s
scheduled for discussion, live
machinery to be e m p l o y e d lor
selection of s t u d e n t representatives, the greviance procedure
and such o t h e r procedures as
may a p p r o p r i a t e l y h e m a d e a
m a t t e r of r e c o r d . "
Specifically, the policy " a s
s tires''
a iietj u at e
St u d e n l
D e p a r t in en t
c o i i s u 11 a 11 o n
through meetings and says "re*
presentative s t u d e n t s m a y b e
i n c l u d e d " in faculty m e e t i n g s
a n d c o m m i t t e e s . I t s t a t e s formal
student
organizations
"may"
m e e t occasionally with faculty
officers a n d c o m m i t t e e s a n d t h a t
j o i n t faculty and s t u d e n t councils responsible for m a t t e r s of
m u t u a l c o n c e r n " m i g h t " b e established. It s t a t e s m a t t e r s of curriculum, a p p o i n t m e n t , p r o m o tion,
degree
requirements,
course
scheduling,
grading,
library and l a b o r a t o r y policies
a n d teaching m e t h o d s a n d proc e d u r e s are l e g i t i m a t e s t u d e n t
areas of interest a n d t h a t their
opinion "should be solicited." It
even backs a s t u d e n t greviance
p r o c e d u r e " t o assure justice
t h r o u g h a fact finding a n d mediation."
A n d finally, it s t a t e s the following in section 7: " E l e m e n t a l
n o t i o n s of ' d u e p r o c e s s ' d i c t a t e
t h a t s t u d e n t s be advised of the
policies and p r o c e d u r e s w h i c h
have been a d o p t e d t o assure
t h e m the o p p o r t u n i t y to be con-
S o the potential p o w e r remains
u n u s e d , largely ignored s i n c e t h e
day it was granted, t h a n k s t o a
combination
of
departmental
and
a d m i n i strative
inaction
c o u p l e d willi s t u d e n t ignorance
and a p a t h y . It is just this sort of
lethal c o m b i n a t i o n t h a t has let
the s y s t e m c o n t i n u e as it is,
largely u n k n o w n , a m a t t e r for
student
concern
only
when
popular faculty are eased o u t of
non tenu red
positions.
Outing Club Sponsors
Hikes and Canoeing
by Harry
Schwartz
This r e p o r t e r was e x t r e m e l y
impressed with w h a t I saw and
heard at the o u t i n g c l u b m e e t i n g
I a t t e n d e d Wednesday night. Before tonight I had never heard of
t h e m and after t h e m e e t i n g 1 h a d
wished I had. T h e entire set up
of the club is very informal;
when I asked t h e president of
the club w h o c o u l d be a m e m b e r
of O u t i n g Club, he r e s p o n d e d ,
" E v e r y o n e is a m e m h e i of outing c l u b . " This refers to Ihe fact
t h a t the club, like m a n y o t h e r
o r g a n i z a t i o n s of this c a m p u s , is
funded hy the M a n d a t o r y Stu
d e n t lax...He indirectly is inviting a n y o n e w h o is interested in
Ihe club to a t t e n d a n d lake part.
As Ihe n a m e implies, the outing c l u b has t o d o with the
outdoors
Basically the
club
plans trips t o different recreu'
lional ares of the N o r t h e a s t ,
including areas of the nearby
A d i r o n d a c k s , V e r m o n t and New
H a m p s h i r e , just to n a m e a few.
( F o r various lengths of t i m e w e e k e n d s , a f t e r n o o n , even week
ly excursions). T h e i r activities
include fall m o u n t a i n biking,
THIS WEEK AT
HENWAY'S
HALLOWEEN SPECIALS
SAT. Oct. 28
Dance with
"TREK"
Dancing, Beer, Extras
$1 .00 - "All you can drink"
SUN. Oct. 29
Folk with
"ROGER & IZZY"
Coffee, Donuts
sulted o n m a t t e r s of c o n c e r n t o
t h e m a n d t h e right t o impartial
c o n s i d e r a t i o n of p e t i t i o n s for
the redress of greviances."
In o t h e r words, it s t a t e s t h a t it
is t h e o b l i g a t i o n of e a c h d e p a r t m e n t t o inform s t u d e n t s of t h a t
r e p o r t a n d t h e existing d e p a r t m e n t a l s t r u c t u r e . B u t few stud e n t s have ever heard of it.
Benezet has been given the
r e p o r t at least twice and, according t o L a m p e r t , " h i s r e a c t i o n
has usually been s i l e n c e . "
$.50 cover
cross c o u n t r y skiing,
winter
m o u n t a i n hiking, a n d c a n o e i n g
T h e i r activities are o r g a n i z e d in
o r d e r of difficulty. T h e y have
trips for beginners in w h i c h the
activity is gearec' for t h e "in
e x p e r i e n c e d , " As o n e gains experience, he or she can eventually u n d e r t a k e u m o r e difficult
activity such as winter m o u n t a i n
hiking. T h e whole idea of selling
up different categories of difficulty s t e m s from t h e fact t h a t
safely is their most p r o m i n e n t
c o n c e r n . T h e Club has a line
record in this area, since their
existence (which dales back to
the o p e n i n g of the d o w n t o w n
c a m p u s ) they have no record of
any serious a c c i d e n t . A n d some
of their activities can be quite
d a n g e r o u s ! (('limbing il s n o w e d
bank m o u n t a i n s i d e ) ! In o t h e r
words, the people w h o go on the
set trip m u s t he qualified to go.
A n y o n e m a y organize a t r i p or
activity as long as he or she is
experienced
in
the
activity
These people are k n o w n as
" l e a d e r s " T o he a leader all you
have lo d o is to have gone on the
activity you wish t o o r g a n i z e as
we|| as gain Ihe c o n f i d e n c e of
the people going with y o u Kven
if you are n o t a leader, y o u may
suggest to a leader of a trip or
activity, and w h o knows what
may h a p p e n ! ! T h e leaders teach
the beginners the basics and
what e q u i p m e n t t o bring along
Most of the heavy e q u i p m e n t is
supplied by the club itself, and
t r a n s p o r t a t i o n to and from the
activity is supplied by Ihe club,
at no cost to the person going
Booters Surprise Hawks
With 0-0 Tie
by N a t h a n Salant
When N e w Paltz c a m e t o t o w n
Wednesday t h e y e x p e c t e d another easy win in w h a t was t o b e
their m a r c h t o t h e S U N Y c h a m pionship. T h e y were c o n f i d e n t .
T h e Danes c a m e in with a 1-7
record a n d t h e H a w k s let Albany's b o o t e r s k n o w it with
some pre-game t a u n t i n g . When
the game was over, it was t h e
Danes w h o were c o n f i d e n t . T h e
game had e n d e d in a surprising
0-0 tie, a n d s o h a d New Paltz's
title bid.
T h e D a n e s ' play was s u p e r b .
John T h a y e r h a d his first great
game in t h e n e t this year. Larry
Merzog c o n t i n u e d his m a r c h t o
All S t a t e a n d possibly All American rating. Mark S o l a n o starred
at the left fullback spot, and
Cliff Walzer t u r n e d in a n o t h e r
superb p e r f o r m a n c e o u t on the
wing. Coach Wingert said after
wards, " E v e r y o n e played a great
game. 1 c a n ' t n a m e o n e particular
guy w h o was o u t s t a n d i n g . We
simply l o o k e d great out there
against t h e n u m b e r two SUNY
team.
One m a n did s t a n d o u t in m y
opinion because he saved Ihe
game on a crucial, goal preven
ting play. Late in the game, a
New Paltz b r e a k a w a y resulted in
a drive t o w a r d s an e m p t y Al
hany net. It looked e x t r e m e l y
dismal for the Great Danes' fans,
w h e n s u d d e n l y , from n o place,
supposedly slow Leon Sedefian
c a m e leaping across the net just,
in time t o kick t h e ball away. T o
q u o t e Coach Wingert, "Sedefian
has the potential to be a great
player next year. He's a superior
ball handler, and at his best on
defense. We'll probably d r o p
him hack to the fullback position, and with a little m o r e
speed, he could he all SUNY
next year."
Chalk a good game up for the
refs. They made a good call that
could have won the game for
Albany. A shot was taken, hit
the crossbar, bounced straight
d o w n , and was then battled out
by the Hawk's goalie. Twice this
year, the Danes had goals scored
against us on this type of play.
In both cases, the refs were o u t
of position, but g a v e t h e h o m e
team ;> goal.This time the ref did
not signal goal
an excellent,
although unfortunate cull for
Albany.
ICarly in the game. Ueorge
Keleshian was robbed of a goal
via a great sliding tackle by y
New Paltz fullback
A few
m i n u t e s later, Albany was rob
bed of C.enrge Keleshian, who
was ejected from the game for
having 3 consecutive penalties
against him. The loss of Kele
shian might have h a d a serious
effect o n t h e game, b u t fortunately Albany lone injury ,short
of having to p u t their s u b s t i t u t e
goalie i n t o t h e game.
Minor injuries have c o n s t a n t l y
plagued the Danes all year.
Bruce Michaels, s t a r t i n g sweeperback, re-injured his k n e e , and
had to c o m e o u t of t h e game.
Next, J u b e r t h u r t his let a n d also
took a seat. When Gregg McMillan was floored by a kick in
the knee, t h e Danes were d o w n
to a total bench strength of o u r
sub-goalie, Steve Carlson.
This was a really big game for
the Danes. New Paltz is a vastly
superior learn when c o m p a r e d to
our c o m p e t i t i o n in n e x t weekend's t o u r n a m e n t . Now, there's
more than h o p e for a Dane
sweep of the t o u r n a m e n t . This
game has lifted a sagging morale,
and may be the big lift t h e
hooters needed all year.
T o d a y , 1 I f> people gave u p
'As T h e World T u r n s " a n d "MilIon the M o n s t e r " lo s u p p o r t
their team. The team r e s p o n d e d
with their second best game of
Ihe year
Who k n o w s w h a t
would
happen
if 5 0 0
fans
showed u p f'<»r n e x t w e e k ' s tournament'' R e m e m b e r , "...We always play belter in front of a big
c r o w d . . . " What are you doing
next Friday?
Batmen, Netters & Golfers Look To the Spring
BASEBALL:
9-4
(1 1
SUNYAC); s w e p t Utica, I I .r>
and 10-9; s w e p t P o t s d a m , 1 0
and 7-0; split with Siena, .'17 and
3-2; split with L e M o y n e , 4-3 and
0-4, lost t o O n e o n t a , 2-6 and
0-5; sept New Paltz, 6-2 and K I),
h e a t C C N Y , 2-0.
Coach Bob Burlingame has a
solid Leam and a 1 1 c o n f e r e n c e
record Lo take i n t o the spring
197:) half of t h e split schedule
Junior r i g h t h a n d e r Kevin Quinn
(Westbury) had a 4-2 record
with a 2,54 E R A , while senior
righty Ken L a R o e ( S c h e n e c t a d y )
was ;M „nd I.SHI. Leading hit
ters included senior catcher Jack
Leahy ( N e w p o r t ) , ,HK9, 12 runs
scored, four doubles, and five
K b T s , junior outfielder Terry
Kenny (Albany Cardinal Me
Clo.skey), . 3 8 1 , seven RBl's and
seven runs scored, and senior
outfielder
first baseman Hay
Angrilla (hVllmorc). 37H. nine
RBl's and live runs scored The
Great Danes had a respectable
.'.'.Ifi halting average .Ls ;i learn
and a solid 2 :. I team Kb A
O n e o n t a ami Springfield lied for
the championship in the ram
shortened
fall
tournament
Albany lied lor filth.
TKNNLS I 1 in dual m a t c h e s ;
beat Oswego, 5-4; beat Buffalo,
5 I, heat PlalLsburgh 7-2; lost t o
O n e o n t a , 2 7 ; beat C o r t l a n d ,
I) :t; second in S U N Y A C Championships.
Boh Lewis, w h o was 10-0 as
interim coach several years ago,
had his unbeaten string b r o k e n ,
but has a strong and e x p e r i e n c e d
team ready for n e x t spring. T w o
n u n won singles titles in the
SUNYAC
tournament;
Chris
Burke ( S c h e n e c t a d y ) , w h o sue
eessfully defended his c h a m p i o n
ship in the second flight, and
Sieve Lem m e r m a n (Al turnout),
who won the sixth flight last
year a n d the third this fall. T w o
other players lost in the singles
finals, as did t h e N o . 1 d o u b l e s
team,
and
Albany
finished
second
lo O n e o n t a by t w o
points. In d u a l m a t c h play,
Stephan T a y l o r (Pearl River)
won all five m a t c h e s in the N o . 5
slot a n d Leo S t e r n ! t c h t ( P o r t
Jefferson) was 4-1 as N o . 6 m a n .
Both are s o p h o m o r e s . Hal F o r e s t
(I'atchogue) was 2-3 in No. 1
singles, as was Burke in No. 2.
L e m m e r m a n was 3-2 in third
singles
and
Jon
Weinberg
(Flushing) was 0 5 in fourth
position.
I'' o rest- Burke
and
L e m m e r m a n - W e i n b e r g each w o n
four of five d o u b l e s m a t c h e s
G O L F : 6th of 6 in Cardinal
Invitational ( P l a t t s b u r g h ) ; lost t o
ItPl, 3 4 6 - 3 6 6 ; 8 t h of 1 9 in
Brooklea Invitational; 3rd of 11
in S U N Y A C T o u r n a m e n t ; 10th
of 22 in ECAC Fall T o u r n a m e n t .
* * ••*-••<
Wondering how much a HEN WEIGHS?
I ,,„| ,„„
| K|. N I G H T
O C T . 27
INDIAN Q U A D U U)UNC;K
Wh,,,
STUDENTS IOK McGOVI-RN
Live Music
I
All t h e b e e r J
V "
">" <lrillk
arc having a
*
l ( ) ( l
t
Pre-Halloween Party
ils £ u t o t h e M c ( i n v e r t i
J u n i o r Jeff Katz, a transfer
from Nassau C o m m u n i t y College, had the low average, 8 3 . 0 ,
for the fall. He tied for medalist
in the S U N Y A C T o u r n e y with a
7 3 , which Coach Dick Sauers
called " o n e of the best c o m p e t i tive rounds ever s h o t by an
Albany golfer." Senior Werner
Kolln ( K i n g s t o n ) was n e x t at
84.0;
followed
by
freshman
Dave Steele (Colonic), 87.'I;
senior Jerry
Monusky
(West
Hempstead), 8 9 . 5 ; and freshman
Joe MCCoy (Albany Cardinal
MeCloskey), 9 1 . 5 . T h o s e five,
plus junior
Bill
Strasbourg
( L o c k p o r t ) , a transfer s t u d e n t ,
will c o m p r i s e the varsity golf
team in the spring. Sauers believes his y o u n g , relatively inexperienced t e a m "will gel b e t t e r
as we go a l o n g . "
campaign
university concert board presents
So if you are o n e of those
people like myself w h o c o m
plains about the a t m o s p h e r e in
the Albany area, why d o n ' I you
get yourself down t o o n e of the
meetings of the club T h e y meet
every Wednesday night in Cain
pus Center 315 Just d r o p in,
they welcome a n y o n e , and possi
lily if you've gol an interest in
Ihe o u t d o o r s you can get yourself
out i n t o the m o u n t a i n s and
clean air It all seems t o me an
excellent o p p o r t u n i t y for all stu
d e n t s to take advantage of. Out
ing Club is here fur y o u r use,
you ure paying for it. See you
Wednesday!!
Jim Dawson •• Mary Travers
in a blanket concert
November 5th
SUNYA Gym
Doors open at 9 pm
$2.50 with tax and ID
$5.00 with ID
gG]sggggg[3gggggE]eiE]ggsiG]!3!3g§]
PAGE TEN
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
PAGE ELEVEN
Harriers String Snapped By Colgate
by Ken Arduino
The Albany cross-country
team was beaten soundly by a
great Colgate team in Colgate,
last Wednesday. The 39-20 loss
was only Albany's second duel
meet loss this year. Albany's
record is now 10—2.
Colgate, one of the top teams
in the State, went out to blow
Albany off the course and succeeded. Five Colgate runners
went out in mass and only Jim
Shrader was able t,o run with
them.
Shrader put on on outstanding
performance battling-urider the
pressure of five runners. With
400 yards to go, Shrader started
to pick off the men ahead of
him, one by one. He moved into
second only six yards behind,
before the Colgate runner pulled
away to win by twelve yards.
Coach Munsey, in explaining
the loss gave credit to the very
strong Colgate team. In comparing them to Army, he cited
their superiority over Army In
the middlemen, but Army's top
runners are better.
On past performances this
meet should have been very
close. But no one considered the
extraneous circumstances which
the Albany team was up against.
Only last Saturday, the Albany
team had to peak for the SUNY
Championship. Now, they had
to be thinking about the Albany
Invitational this Saturday. They
were not able to peak on this
particular day.
This coupled by the long bus
trip, the cold, and nagging injuries, took the edge off the
Albany team. Next year, the
Colgate meet will be before the
Championships.
This Saturday. Albany hosts
the Albany Invitational. Coach
Munsey feels that the performance against Colgate will have
no effect on the meet. He says
the team is not discouraged and
is not ready to lay down and
Don't Throw Away
Your Chance
To Vote
Danes Hope to Cure "Fumbleitis"Saturday
•play dead against any of the
teams.
The Albany team will face top
competition from schools in the
East. Colgate who nipped Syracuse and then soundly destroyed
Albany is the early favorite.
Syracuse will also be here,
looking to avenge last weeks
defeat to Colgate. Albany is also
a favorite. Albany was nipped by
Army, a team that killed Syracuse and lost to Colgate. On
their own course, in front of a
hopefully large crowd, the Albany team should perform near
its peak. The times that the
Albany team ran in the SUNY
Championship would have converted to a second place finish in
last year's Invitational.
William Patterson and Keene
State are two schools which
could be long shots in this race.
Two top schools in the East,
C.W. Post and Springfield are
entered, but their appearance at
the meet is in doubt. If they
should show up they would also
have to be considered good
choices.
Along with the Varsity race
which starts at 12:40, there is a
Junior College race at noon and
a J.V. race at 1:20. Last year's
champion in the Jr. College Division, Johnson and Wales are
again favorites to take the title.
The State University at Albany
football club, still unbeaten but
no longer unblemished, will take
a 4-0-1 record into a 1:30 p.m.
game at Pace College, Saturday
(Ocotber 28); The Great Danes
literally fumbled their chances
for a perfect season last weekend, losing seven bobbles to
Brockport in a 13-13 tie.
Pace is 1-3-1, having beaten
Fairleigh Dickinson, 27-14 , last
weekend. The Setters have lost
to Kings, Hartford, and St.
John's and played a scoreles tie
with Siena. Pace is basically a
running team out of an Iformation. Its best runner is
halfback Jack Owens, who goes
both ways, also playing defensive end. Albany scouting reports indicate defensive tackle
Ralph Zanfordino is the Setters'
top defensive player. The Danes
beat Pace, 28-0, in Albany in last
season's final game.
League 1 Standings
League II Final Standings
KB
9Lh Floor
BPS
Freaks
Fragile
ALC
League III Playoffs
Most politicians would bo happier il you
didn t vote Disappoint Ihom! Don't lei
complex ABSENTEt voting prucoduitiS
keup you liorn voting Hero s how to
do it
H your voting address is not youi school
address, an absentee ballot form lias to
uu requested (torn youi homo County
Board ol Eludions or youi County or
Town Clork In ordor lo volo lor Prosiduru your application must b o received
by OUobor 31 Tho deadline is o.trltor loi
local uluc;tions in many status
b STEPS
1 Tear Qui the form bolow and fill il oul
2. Havu Ihtt lornt notarized At>k school
officials lor hulp with notarization
3 Mail this form lo your county or town
Clork or your Courtly Hoard ol Eloclionb
A When you racewu live atisonlou ballot
Pluyoff Results
ind ol iho ballot ilsell. Id
riKMlialuly Havu thorn nola
tUQti
5 Miint Ihem
IF YOU ARE REGISTERED TO VOTE AT
YOUR SCHOOL ADDRESS, GO TO
YOUR ASSIGN! 0 POLLING PLACE ON
NOVEMBER 7, HHO VOTE'
W
B
8
6
6
4
3
0
1,
1
1
5
5
6
8
10
T
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
PTS
19
17
12
12
8
6
0
W
9
7
6
2
1
1
1,
1
2
2
6
7
8
T
0
1
2
2
2
1
PTS
18
IB
14
6
4
Division A
G.M. Boys
Jung e Rot
1st Place
2nd Place
G. M Boys 33
Jung! 5 Rot-13
Division B
GDX
Johnson Hall
GDX-6
Johnson Hall-0
Championship Game
Juntile Rot vs G.M. 3ovs—Sunday Oct 29, 1:30 p.m.
Officials Meeting (Mandatory)
Tues. Oct. 31. B.A. 364, 7:46.
Any questions call Dave 7-8716
or Barry-489-7985.
Captains Meetings and Roster
Deadline
Lg. IV, Mon., Oct. 30—CC315
3:30.
Lg. Ill, Tues., Oct. 31—Assembly
Hull, 3:30.
Lg. II, Weds., Nov. 1—CC 315
3:30.
Any questions cull Denny Elkin at 7-6978 or visit the intramural office CC 3S6,
II you IH'IMI as: l.ii
con-tart your local
oihoi < iiinpaign
McGovtfin Nixa
Sludi'nl National
hoaikguarto'S 0'
n. 1201 I6lh SI ,
Eilui alion Asaoe
N W Washington D C 20036 Tul 202833 -y.>27
HALLOWEEN
TIM STUDENT NATIONAL EDUCATION
ASSOCIATION HAS SUPPLIED THIS
INFORMATION BECAUSE THEY WANT
YOU TO REMEMBER THAT IF YOU
HON T VOTI YOU DON T COUNT'
Bewitching by
ALABASTER
Home Next
Saturday
PICKIN' THE PROS
by Tony "The Turk" Espejio
JETS OVER PATRIOTS
Puts' line no! giving Jim Plunketl
enough time to throw
CHIEFS OVER CHARGERS
The Chiefs were afraid to use
Mike Livingston Now they're
skeptical about having Leu Daw
son at starting QB.
VIKINGS OVER PACKERS
How come Fran Tarkenton is
receiving the blame for the mis
takes of the speciality squads?
EAGLES OVER SAINTS
The buttle of losers.
BENGALS OVER OILERS
Oilers made a lot of trades this
week. So what else is new?
RAIDERS OVER RAMS
It's about time for Onklan
show sonic leadership in
AFC West.
REDSKINS OVER GIANTS
No happiness in Yankee Stadiui
this Sunday
CARDINALS OVER BEARS
Cards should be able to contan
Bobby Douglass.
Pups Drop Another
by Steve Kalz
Last Tuesday the Albany State
J.V. soccer team was overwhelmed 8-2 by the J.V. powerDOLPHINS OVER COLTS
house of Oneonta State. The
Each team pits new quarterbacks
Albany hooters were no match
for the ski)) and hustle of the
against each other. Miami's runOneonta team and the game
ning game gives them the edge,
quickly developed into little
though.
more t ban a showcase of
Oneonta's offensive and defensive skills.
BROWNS OVER BRONCOS
This was one of those games
Broncos will probably be all
where the spectator soon distired out after last week's big
cards almost all feelings of team
loyally and simply marvels at
win over Oakland
how well the game can be played.
FALCONS OVER FORTY'NINERS Oneonta displayed a rare blend
of soccer skill and all out deWhatever happened U those pre
termination that was a pleasure
dictions that San Francisco
lo watch. Albany defensemen
would take it all this v
were drawn oul of position
many limes by Oneonta's acSTEELERS OVER BILLS
curate [Kisses and well-aimed
head halls. More than once
S h a w S : mpson-i
Oneonta's players threw themclick this A'eek
selves at the hall in an attempt
to prevent an Albany player
Recycle9Recycle*Reeycle
<>!\' A l l QUADS
Bundle papers & magazines, bring to
the dorm TRASH ROOM
FREE: Admission, Beer (with costume) |
Apple Cider, Donuts, Apple Dunking ;
Put cans only in MARKED BARRELS, please
(Signature)
(NOTARY PUBLIC AND SEAL)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a
ELECTIONS, OR APPROPRIATE ELEC
TIONB OFFICIAL.
THE FEDERAL DEADLINE
/s OCTOBER 31.
„
Tuesday, HALLOWEEN from 9 pm until ?
c
Campus Center Ballroom
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help needed... call 157-3913 or 457<85tt» ::
funded by student tux
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PAGE TWELVE
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
Defensively, Albany again
stopped several drives deep in its
territory and caused four Brockport turnovers: two fumbles and
two interceptions. The Danes
have intercepted 16 passes in
five games. Particularly outstanding against Brockport was
freshman linebacker Ken Schoen
(Bellmore), who was in on 30
tackles, one short of the Albany
record. He also caused a fumble
and was named defensive back
of the week. Honored in the line
was defensive end Ron Gardner
(Great Neck), who participated
in 13 tackles and caused the
other Brockport fumble.
Gridders
Lg. 1, Thurs., Nov. 2-CC 315
3:30.
Monster Mash Dance Contest with Prizes
TO VOTE BY MAIL IN THE NOVEMBER
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, TEAR OUT
AND MAIL THE ABOVE FORM TO YOUR
HOME COUNTY CLERh, BOARD OF
Ford credited the offensive* line
with playing its best oame tc
date. Sophomore tackle Mike
Basla (Syracuse) who left the
infirmary to play, was named
offensive lineman of the week.
agEgggaeagrBEKageagaeaEEaeEaaEaaBMBgaeaBgEagBgaagEaaBEgaaaBBagagm
campus center governing board presents
October ,1972
Dear Sir:
My duties as a student require me to be absent Worn my residence In
(county, town, address)
continuously through election day.
Pursuant to the 1970 Voting Rights Amondment (Public Law
91-286) please send an absentee ballot, and/or application
therefor, to me at my school address:
(Print Name)
rushing for the. day, both new
school records. Additionally, he
is within 86 yards of the school
season rushing mark of 488.
Albany's 313 yards rushing total
also was a record. Coach Bob
Despite setting several team
and individual rushing records,
Albany was frustrated by its
inability to hold onto the ball
against Brockport. In addition to
the seven lost fumbles, there was
a pass interception and a wind-
AMIA-Football - Notes
GDX
EEP
APA
Spuce Rangers
STB
TXO
blown, on-side kick recovered by
Brockport.
On the bright side, freshman
halfback Marvin Perry (Syracuse) broke an 81-yard run from
scrimmage and totaled 191 yards
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
from gaining control.
The entire Oneonta soccer program has been an enormous success this year with the varsity
compiling a 9-1 record and the
J.V. team boasting a 4-1-1 record. O n e o n t a blasted the Dane
Pups in the first half, scoring
four goals in the latter part of
the period. Each goal was the
result of crisp passing and good
ball-handling. At the same time,
Albany had trouble mounting
any serious offensive threats in
the face of the tenacious
Oneonta defense. The offense
was able to manage only five
shots in the first half, one of
them being a goal by Wilhad
Reuter on a shot from the right
side at :in:20.
The second half strongly resembled the first half in that
Oneonta's offense and defense
continued to dominate play. Albany was able to take only four
shots on goal while the Oneonta
hooters peppered the Albany
goalie with a total of fourly
shots. Oneonta's relentless attack netted three more scores in
the second half. The second Albany goal was the result of
another line shot by Wilhad
Reuter at 13:20 of the second
half.
Albany played a hustling, determined game as always but il
was not enough in the face of
the vastly superior Oneonta
team. The inexperienced Albany
hooters met a skillful, aggressive
learn at the top of its game and
the result was not unexpected.
Considering the strength and
skill ol the Oneonta J.V. team,
one can only shudder at the
thought of the talent of the
Oneonta varsity team that was
ranked no. 2 in the state before
being upset by Cortland 4-0.
;
LARGE NATIONAL J
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PAGE THIRTEEN
Swim Chib
*~>
\J
The SUNY A Synchronized
Swim Club will host the 17<h
Annual Conference of the Association of Synchronized Swimming for Colleges and Universities on Friday, October 27 and
Saturday, October 26, 1972.
The SUNYA club is the 1972-73
President School of A.S.S.C.U.
and has elected the following
officers to serve the association:
Beverly
Schmidt—President;
Debra Swalm—Secretary; Sylvia
Case—Treasurer; Irene Skidmore
—Conference Manager. The
faculty adviser is Mrs. Pat
Rogers.
This year's conference is to
take place at the SUNYA Physical Education Center and is entitled, "Getting Together." Over
200 men and women from 20
colleges and universities will
participate in workshop sessions
Friday evening and all day Saturday. Maude Baum of the
SUNYA faculty will conduct the
first session on Friday evening in
"Dance and Creative Movement."
Saturday's program will begin
with "Land Conditioning and
Music Interpretation" by Bonnie
Prudden and Lenna Payton of
the Institute for Physical Fitness. Participants will then move
to the pool for a conditioning
m RASHES
library
"Almost-instant" subject listings of library materials became
a reality in the library at State
University of New York at Albany. On Saturday, Oct. 21,
Community-University Pay,
President Louis T. Beneiet activated the terminal linking the
library to the SUNY Biomedical
Communications Network computer. The latter stores more
than 600,000 bibliographical
items online and more than a
million offline.
The new service, considered a
revolutionary development in
library service, will initiate a new
service for SUNY faculty and
students and a new era in bibliographical services at the library.
Presently the service will be
valuable especially to those
working in biomedical and related areas since the major portion of the present data baso
consists of articles from more
than 2,300 journals indexed
emphasize primarily biomedical
subjects, such related areas as
anthropology,
education,
sociology, psychology and technology also are given coverage.
The system is suitable particularly for searching articles
concerning the relationship of
two or more specific subjects ', for
example, heart diseases and
smoking. When a properly formulated request is submitted to
the terminal, almost instantly it
will type out a list of 10. recent
journal citations dealing with the
subjects requested. Additional
citations can be sought if
needed.
At the library the new service
will be provided by the Bibliographical Services Unit of the
Reference Department. The department is a part of the Library
Reader*' Service division, under
Anna May Lilly.
w*. Another
"Jlreaaon
WDDwe-rethe
V /NoI
k
U-ietectrlc
outlet.
freshman. All residents in Van
Cortlsndt Hall.
Some 20 students participated
in the tournament, the first of
several competitions to be sponsored by Van Cortlandt Hall this
year. Plans are being completed
for a second chess tournament
and a table-tennis tournament.
Jeff Passe, Resident Assistant,
is in charge of arrangements.
and warm-up session conducted
by Dottle Sowars, Coach of the
Town of Tonawanda Aquettes
"A" Team and pool workshops
conducted by the Aquettes.
Also, on the program are presentations on "Lighting Techniques for Show Production" by
Barbara J. Jordan of Wellesley
College and "Sound Techniques" by Barbara J. Palm of
the SUNY Albany faculty.
The conference will conclude
Saturday evening with a banquet
and the "Presentation of
Routines" by the Tonawanda
Aquettes, the S.U.C. Oneonta
Synchronized Swim Club and
the SUNYA Synchronized Swim
Club.
The public is invited to attend
the conditioning program lead
by Bonnie Prudden at 8:00 a.m.
on Saturday and the Saturday
evening performance at 7:50.
Allen Center Ends Academic
Repetition by Combining Grades
by Kathy Eckerle
Grod School
For Minorities
A new program designed to
help the nation's graduate
schools seek out potential students from minority groups is
underway this fall.
Called the Minority Graduate
Student Locater Service, the
program is offered by Educational Testing Service. ETS estimates that about 10,000 to
15,000 students could initially
use the new service which is
offered free to both students
and institutions this year.
According to J. Bradley
Williams, ETS director of the
project, "One of the problems
facing graduate schools seeking
to increase enrollment of students from racial and ethnic
minorities is that of identifying
potential students."
New Form Will Help
Now, students will have a
chance to voluntarily complete a
special 17-item questionnaire as
one step towards entering graduate school.
Information about the academic interests and goals of Black,
American-Indian,
AsianAmerican, and Spanish or Mexican-American students who wish
to pursue graduate level education, will be available to those
institut'ons seeking to bolster
minority enrollment.
Admissions officers may then
contact students directly and
invite the applications of those
whose particular interests could
be served by their schools'
graduate offerings.
The locater service will be used
first by graduate schools in
December.
According
to
Williams, some 300 schools are
expected to join this year with
more offering the program later.
Nearly 2,200 counselors at
undergraduate schools across the
country have received information about the program and can
supply questionnaires to interested students, whatever their
racial background.
The student response form is
also available with information
bulletins describing the Graduate
Record Examination (ORE). Bui
ETS said GRE scores are mil
included in the locater service
and that a student need not take
the exam in order to participate
in the locater service.
Chess
Philip Doyle, a freshman from
Purdy Station, New York, won
the single-elimination chess tournament conducted by Van Cortlandt Hall, Dutch Quad, during
the past five weeks.
Doyle, exhibiting considerable
experience on the chess board,
easily defeated another freshman, Chris Daniele. Tied for
third place was Jerry Lewis, a
senior, and Mike Froelich, a
You get something
extra when you buy
our $59.88 portable
FM/AM radio.
A built-in
cassette
recorder.
And a microphone, and a 4-inch speaker, and a
pre-recorded cassette, and batteries included!
Ours is Panasonic's Hillcrest (Model RQ-435S). And it
works on house current as well as batteries.
All for what you'd expect to pay (or just the quality
radio: $59.88 at Center Stage.
Come and try it. And be ready to take it home - or
wherever else you're going.
After 11 th grade the studen t
enters the University and, when
Brubacher Hall reverberates
he successfully completes the
with a younger sound this year.
first year, receives his diploma.
It hears a quicker step, a louder
Eliminating a year of repetilaugh and, perhaps, feels the
tious study is only part of the
pulse of a greater enthusiasm
educational philosophy of the
than in previous years. For BruCenter. Their main goal is to
bacher Hall houses the James E.
best prepare the students "for
Allen Jr., Collegiate Center...the
useful and rewarding lives as
Center that has brought the
citizens and as persons by massenior year high school student
tering specific problem areas
to the University.
through an inter-disciplinary
Too often the high school curapproach."
riculum coincides with a typical
freshman year course load. The
Allen Center has eliminated this
Man and fits Institutions is the
duplication by combining these area the first group of 61 stutwo grades and relating the high dents are exploring. It "applies
school-col lege learning ex- the social sciences to a study of
perience as a continuous process. the institutions which shape con-
Basically, the report dealt with
shortening the high shcoolcollege experience from eight to
seven years. The Allen Center
chose to combine the last-first
. years. Binghamton, for1 instance,
has the student complete his
senior year at the high school
while supplementing his study
with courses at the University.
Other campuses are experimenting with cutting the graduation
requirement from 120 to 90
credits.
Admission to the Allen Center
is more stringent than for the
usual .senior year applicant. The
same academic criteria is applied, but the maturity of the
student must also be considered.
Recommendations, a studentwritten essay and an interview
hopefully measures the student's
ability to handle a college workload.
Are these students part of the
ii n i versily? Technically, yes.
They share our teaching staff
and faeilil ies, will receive their
B.A.f from SUNYA and can take
elective courses uptown. After a
year, they can even transfer Lo
another program (switch their
maiors) as many University students do. Vet, in another way,
lhe% are not part of the Univer-
Thc Allen Center is more of a
small specialized college within
the large University. II is isolated
from the hub ol the campus, has
a specific interest student body
following a specialized program.
The Allen Collegiate Center eliminates ;i year of repetitious stuuy
by combining the 12th grade of high school with tin- freshman year
of college. Classes are usually small and informal
Some of these students see this
as an advantage. Since Lhe number ol participants is small, there
i.s a favorable student-teacher
ratio. liven more, the student
doesn't battle the huge lecture
room mob but meets with a
Located in Brubacher Hall (above) is the Allen Collegiate Center.
the o p p o r t u n i t y to benefit from
"University L i f e " . . . a maturing
experience never found in the
classroom.
The small college within the
University concept was the initial idea behind Lhe James E.
Allen, Jr., Collegiate Center. Dr.
Sefh Spcllman, director of the
Center, was part of the task
force appointed by President
Benezet in Jan., 1971 that decided to explore this possible use
of
U n i ve rsi I y
laci I i ties. The
group also wanted to carry the
idea further by integrating it
w i t h a different approach t o
education. The summer, 1971
Carnegie Report entitled "Less
Time, More O p t i o n s " provided
the answer.
As w i t h all new programs, alternate methods are constantly
sought. The advantage of a small
student body can he seen every
Thursday when the Center meets
Lo discuss difficulties. Student
suggestions are taken seriously
and the students feel that they
are Lhe Center and not just part
of it.
Next year a class of 20U students will be admitted and another inter-disciplinary " p r o b l e m " area added to the curriculum. The center will he larger,
but hopefully still an effective
alternate approach to education.
Just a Quick
Reminder
Tower East
A journey of a thousand miles
Cinema's
begins with one step.
Highlight-
SOU L
to
SOUL
The Great Electric Outlet!
CENTER MAI I
COLONIE CENTER
MOHAWK M A L L
PAGE FOURTEEN
congenial group of 61 who will
study together for the next four
years.
One girl, formerly from Shaker
High School and one of the
many commuter students in the
program, sees this isolation as a
possible problem. Aside from
the gym and Russian class she
takes at the uptown campus, she
has little opportunity to meet
other University students. Only
the handful of resident students
living in Alden Hall really have
temporary society."
Each semester during the four
year program deals with a certain inter-disciplinary topichuman development, communications or the family to name a
few. The "Empirical Methodology" section will teach the
students the technical know-how
to conduct laboratory experiments in the Education, Religion
& Morality, Economy and Government sectionsduringtheir final
two years. Field work is also an
integral part: each student will
be assigned, during their junior
and senior years, to a private or
government agency in conjunction with their classwork.
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
DOWNTOWN T R O Y
-Lao Tze
the combination of
soulful sounds
being shown
Nov. 3 & 4
wund brought to you by a KAjilNC
16,000, 600 witt sound system.
I
CAMPUS CHEST 1972
YEAR ROUND HEAD START
MORE DETAILS NEXT ASP
—
—
—
I
—
—
•
-
•
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
A L B A N Y STUDENT PRESS
F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R 27, 1972
PAGE FIFTEEN
j l
McG Gaining
PRINCETON, N.J. AP—The Gallup Poll reports that Democrat
George McGovern is continuing to gain but still remains 23
percentage points behind President Nixon in their race for the
presidency.
McGovern's greatest gains were among manual workers, where he
narrowed Nixon's lead to only 5 points—49 to 44 per cent, the poll
reported Wednesday. In August it was 63 to 28.
The over-all standings showed Nixon with 59 per cent to 36 per
cent for McGovern, one per cent for other candidates and four per
cent undecided, Gallup said.
The poll, taken from Oct. 13 to 18, was based on questioning 1,220
registered voters.
August was the low point for McGovern in the Gallup poll. A
survey then showed Nixon with 64 per cent to 30 per cent for
McGovern and six per cent either undecided or for other candidates.
McGovern has gained in each Gallup poll since then. Gallup said
the movement of manual workers back toward their traditional
Democratic allegiance explained most of the Democrat's increase.
McGovern has also picked up some strength among Catholics and
under-30 voters, Gallup said, but Nixon continues to lead in all
major population groups except blacks and Jews.
1 ^tk.
1 rggf
^ 1 V i
J M Q i
"GUESS
WHC
I H ONE
THE WARS
'
UNDER?"
by Glenn von Nostitz
Kill*
tflAVJJ
SKKOUN&V
*VVAR'3
^^* ~ —
' ... *s
A 2,100 page report by
McGovern for President Inc. of
Washington, required under a
new federal elections law, shows
Nicholas loaned the McGovern
campaign $200,000 on Sept. 1 2
and Daniel loaned another
$300,000 on Sept, 20.
Together, the Noyes are the
largest single contributors to the
McGovern campaign reported
this year.
The young men are among 10
grandchildren of Nicholas H.
Noyes of Indianapolis, 89 year
old retired finance chairman of
Eli Lilly whose wife is the granddaughter of the huge drug company's founder.
Noyes, in a telephone interview, said his grandson,
Nicholas, is a 25-year-old gradu-
The Watergate Chronology
ate of Cornell w'no refused to
serve in the armed forces during
the Vietnam war and instead put
in two years of government service as a teacher.
Noyes said the other grandson,
Daniel, is 23, a graduate of
Harvard and a congressional intern.
"I've never talked politics with
the boys," said the grandfather
who gave a reported $18,000 to
president Nixon's campaign in
1968.
Largest contributor in the
early Nixon reports was John J.
Louis Jr., chairman of the Chi
cago-based Combined Communications Corp. who gave $82,81 9
Louis, however, like other big
Nixon donors divided his contributions up among numerous
committees and his over all total
is expected to be much higher
when all reports are in.
While the reports showed the
Nixon campaign relying for al
most 50 per cent of its contributions on large donors, the
McGovern reports showed more
than 80 per cent of outright
contributions are coming from
those giving less than $100.
Republican Attempt to Sabotage 7 2 Elections
WASHINGTON
The General
Accounting Office expects to
make public by the end of this
month the results of its probe into
charges a Kepublican "sabotage
squad" sought to disrupt the
Democratic presidential cam
paign
The investigation was requested
by Hep Wright I'altnan M) Tex i
after Republican members of his
House Banking and Currency
Committee blocked efforts to
question Nixon aides about the
bugging of Democratic Party
offices in the Watergate Apart
mcnts
Palman made his request before
Nixon's appointments secretary,
IJwight L Chapin, was linked to
the affair, but GAO investigators
are believed to be pursuing this
aspect, also Chapin. who sees the
President almost daily, was
named by one figure in the case as
a While House "contact" for the
undercover campaign
Chapin denied the accusation
Other high officials who have
been linked to the covert operation, including former Attorney
General John Mitchell and chief
Nixon fund raiser Maurice Stans,
have issued similar denials
Chronology of Sabotage
From statements made public
thus far, the chronology of the
drive to subvert the 1972 election
campaign appears as follows:
June, 11)71 — Former Treasury
Department lawyer Donald II
Segretti allegedly solicits recruits
for "political espionage " Law
yers who turned him down were
assured that "Nixon knows" and
were promised "big jobs" alter
his re-election
Jan.. 11172 — Harassment dis
rupts Democratic primaries
Campaign materials are forged,
schedules upset, campaign files
stolen. Bogus telephone calls
from "Democratic officials" sow
trouble in the McGovern camp
and anger labor leaders
Feb. M — Muskies New llamp
shire campaign is torpedoed by a
letter saying he called French
Canadian voters "Canucks 'This
leads to his vote losing "crying
speech." The letter writer is
never found
April :i — A mining company
headed by Nixon's chief Texas
fund raiser sends $100,U0O to
Mexico Most of it later turns up in
bank account of Bernard Barker,
arrested in the Watergate bur
glary
April '., - The "laundered"
money comes hack from Mexico,
and u Texas oilman carries it to
Washington in u suitcase with
$(100,000 more in other secret
Nixon contributions The Admin
istration later drops a plan to sue
tlie mining company lor pollution
violations.
April II — Nixon's Midwest fund
raiser, Kenneth Dahlberg, passes
a Jis.ooo donation to Stans,
Nixon's former Secretary of the
Treasury This also ends up in the
Barker account. The donor later
PAGE SIXTEEN
receives a valuable bank charter
from the government
Watergate Bugged
May -I — Security chief James
McCord of the Nixon re-election
committee slips into the Watergate with bugging equipment
Monitoring begins from a hotel
across the street. Bugging head
quarters are visited by While
House aide K. Howard Hunt and
by G Gordon Liddy, counsel to
Nixon's fund raising committee
and a former White House aide
Wiretap logs are delivered to
Nixon's re-election headquarters
May 211 — l.iddy and McCord re
connoiter McGovern lor Presi
dent headquarters in the hope ol
bugging it too l.iddy carries a
pistol in bis attache case
June 17 — McCord. Barker and
three other men are caught in the
Democratic headquarters at
night They have burglar tools.
bugging equipment, w alkie
talkies tuned to the re-election
committee's official frequency,
and money from Hie Barker
account
June 17-22 — Republicans re
porledly shred records at Nixon
campaign headquarters
June 21 - Democratic Parly
files tl million suit against Nixon
re election committee
June 25 — Democrats ask Nixon
to appoint a non-political special
prosecutor to the Watergate case
He refuses
J une .10 — Disclosure that a pistol
and walkie-talkie were found by
the FBI in Hunt's desk in the President's executive office building
ALBANY STUDENT PRESS
I
July I — Former Attorney
General John Mitchell resigns as
head of Nixon's re-election com
inillee. citing his wile's personal
wishes She complains about
"dirty work" involved in his job
Jul) III — Lawyers lor the re
election committee ask the courts
to delay hearings on the Water
gate raid until after the election
because lhe\ could cause "meal
culabledamage" to Nixon's cam
of the Watergate affair, and sue
cessfully quash it.
Oct. 5 - Chief White House
spokesman Konald Ziegler repor
tedly told newsman Clark Mullen
hoff, himself a former While
House aide, that the Watergate
b u r g l a r s ' money came from
Nixon's re-election committee
He denies the published story
Participant Confesses
Aug. -' Hugh Sloan, treasurer
ol Nixon's re election committee,
resigns tor "personal reasons
Aug tl - Stalls reportedly tells
Federal investigators he turned
Dahlberg's $2f>.()«> over to Sloan
Aug. 2ii — The GAO reports 11
"apparent and possible" violations ol the campaign spending
law, involving $350,000 in Kepub
hcan tunds, alter probing Bark
er's bank account
Sept. II - Stans, Sloan, l.iddy,
McCord and Hunt are named
among defendants in the Demo
ct'al s damage soil
Sept. 1 r. - Hum, l.iddy. McCord.
Barker and the three other men
caught in Hie Watergate are in
dieted on charges ol burglary,
conspiracy and illegal wire
tapping
Sept. 28 — While House aide Ken
W Clawson reputedly told a
Washington reporter lie wrote the
"Canuck" letter, but denies it
when the reporter publishes the
story.
Oil. i — Republican members of
Palman's committee vote unanimously against an investigation
Oct. ti — Alfred Baldwin, who
monitored the Watergate wire
taps for the Republicans, con
fesses and implicates McCord,
Hunt. Liddy and others, saying he
was told he was working lor John
Mitchell
Oct. to - Mitchell, Stans and
Chairman Clark MacGr»gor ol
Nixon's re-election campaign
refuse lo testify for Palman's
committee.
Oct. 12 — An order to extradite
Stans. Sloan and Dahlberg lo
Florida is signed by a Miami
judge He says their testimony,
needed lor Barker's trial on local
charges, "could not be secured
voluntarily "
Oct. 15 — It is revealed that
Dwight L Chapin. Nixon's up
poinlmenls secretary, has been
linked to the undercover activities
by California lawyer Lawrence
Young, who was asked by Segretli
to participate bill refused In an
affidavit, Young told invest!
gators Segretti repeatedly named
Chapin as his White House
contact
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1972
Behavioral and Social Sciences.
The letter recommends that
Waterman not be given tenure,
and consequently no longer be
allowed to teach at this University.
It is up to Bers to make his
own recommendation by October 31st and then pass the case
on to I. Moyer Hunsberger, Dean
of the College of Arts and Sci-
she is "above average" in departmental service, having been advisor to Cathexis, Pai Chi, and
chairperson of the Undergraduate Curriculum Committee. In
"service at above the departmental level" Teevan rates her as
below average, since she has
served on no university level
committees.
Teevan admits that "continu-
The Waterman Affair - Third in a Series:
1/
w
Where the Money is Coming From
WASHINGTON
AP-Two
young heirs to a drug fortune,
grandsons to a secret campaign
contributor to President Nixon,
have loaned more than half a
million dollars to Democratic
presidential candidate George
McGovern.
The two are Nicholas Noyes of
Bloomington, Ind., and his brother, Daniel of Indianapolis.
I. Moyer Hunsberger. Terry
Geller. Melvin Bers. Susan Johnson. Richard C. Teevan. Louis T.
Benezet.
All of the above people have
something in common. In some
way or another they are all
involved in the fight to reinstate
C a r o l i n e Waterman of the
The Gauntlet
It seemed inevitable that the
Waterman case would surface
again. Three years may be a long
time, but many of the departmental objections to Waterman
survived and are as strong as
ever. But the main reason for the
sudden reappearance of the
Waterman case was the university reouirement that a professor
Who's In Charge Here?
# #
Psychology Department. This is
the story of that struggle and the
part played by each of the above
persons,
The story began some three
years ago, when Waterman was
"fired" and then suddenly reinstated.
Once again Dr. Waterman is up
for review, and her chances ol
getting tenure appear dim. True,
many of her students consider
her the "best"professor in the
department. But that just points
out one of the problems inherent in the tenure system a* it
operates at this University: How
important should the student
input be in making tenure decisions?
Which seems to be one of the
central questions in the Waterman case. As Dr. Waterman puts
it, "Who's in charge around
here?"
must undergo tenure review after teaching here for seven years.
If the professor pa/ises the gauntlet of committees and deans
which comprises the tenure review process unscathed, he (or
she) gets tenure and job security.
On the other hand, if the professor is so unlucky as to be
stopped somewhere along the
line, he is officially out the door.
As of this writing it doesn't
appear that Waterman will he
able to successfully run the tenure gauntlet without a lot of
help. She got off to a rather
inauspicious start when her department recommended by a 9
to H vote not lo grant her
tenure.
Department Chairman Richard
Teevan was then req ui red to
write a recommendation, or "letter of transmittal" to Melvin
Bers, the Associate Dean for
ences and his Faculty Personnel
Committee.
Teevan's letter of transmittal
reads very matter-of-factly. It is
intentionally written in an impersonal manner and sounds
very objective.
The letter describes Waterman's performance in regard to
the five criteria for tenure and
promotion listed in the Faculty
Handbook: master of subject
matter, teaching effectiveness,
scholarly
a bility
university
service, and continuing growth.
Teevan reels that Waterman's
mastery of subject matter is
"about average," but that she is
"below average" in her ability as
a scholar, since she has written
only six articles in five years, "or
little more than an article a
year."
As far as her University service
is concerned, Teevan says that
The Long Road To Peace...
Hie deadline set by the North Vietnamese as the dale to finalize agreement on a peace pact Tuesday,
Paris time
has passed without a treaty being signed and with Hanoi accusing the United States of "bad
faith" and deliberate stalling. The chief Viet Cong negotiator, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Itinh, vowed at a news
conference thai the Communists will fight "until total victory" unless the Nixon administration forces
Saigon to accept the U.S.-North Vietnam draft agreement.
Meanwhile, a North Vietnamese broadcast quoted North Vietnam'), vice-premier and foreign minister
as saying responsibility for the delay in signing "rests entirely with the U.S. side." He warned that "the
agreement can never be signed to end the war and restore peace in Vietnam if the United Slates does not
stop stalling."
Hut the Viet Cong said they were willing to go ahead with the peace talks later this week American
officials remained confident an accord would he signed, and soon. Presidential aide Henry Kissinger, who
said a final meeting was necessary to iron out details, was reportedly still in Washington
Elsewhere, there were these developments in the complex and continuing search for peace
Nh'W YIJHK
Hie New York limes quoted South Vietnamese foreign minister Iran Van Lam as
saying the North Vietnamese peace plan was unacceptable to Saigon and that his government would not
accept a cease fire agreement that does not include withdrawal of North Vietnamese forces from the
South and reeslablishmenl of the demilitarized /.one.
SAHiOh
Official Saigon radio accused the North Vietnamese of trying to gel a quick settlement
from President Nixon " in return lor a lew ballots" and went on to reiterate that any signed American
agreement "would he worthless" unless South Vietnamese President Thieu signed also.
SAHiON
The National Liberation Front, political arm of the Viet Cong, issued a radio broadcast
appealing to South Vietnamese people and soldiers and lo the Soviet Union and China to demand that
the United States sign the agreement and end the lighting
SAKiON
Viet Cong forces attacked with increased intensity, launching ovei one hundred ground
a t t a c k s lor the tilth straight day, in an apparent move to lorce the Nixon administration In sign the
cease fire agreement
(illl.l'' Ol- TONKIN
The United States removed much of its powerlul Seventh I Icel us a gesture of
good will aimed ai a cease-lire Meanwhile, Defense Secrclury Laird confirmed suspension ol all United
Stales air strikes above the twentieth parallel. All off-shore bombardment above the line has also been
quietly halted.
I'HKINCi
Foreign Minister Chi Peng.lei of China and British Foreign secretary Sir Alec Douglas
Home agreed their countries were ready to take part in anyinlernalionalpcacc conference in Vietnam.
BOSTON
Sen Ldward W. lirooke, R-Mass., commenting on a private briefing by President Nixon
and oilier top administration officials, said he did uol think the cease fire agreement would be signed by
Election Day.
More Vietnam details on Panes •! and B.
ing growth', is a "very difficult
thing to assess." After some discussion he arrives at the conclusion that Dr. Waterman's
scholarship "is not up to par for
a tenured position at a University center."
The Department Chairman
does admit that Waterman's effectiveness as a teacher is high,
and he rates her as "one of the
best undergraduate teacher* in
the department."
Not Everyone Happy
There are a lot of people on
this campus who disagree with
what Teevan's letter of transmittal Bays about Waterman. Most
of them are students. There are
others, mostly faculty members
and administrators, who do
agree. They don't feel Waterman
has done a very good job. The
students do.
Waterman disputes the contention that her "scholarly ability"
is questionable. While admitting
that she has written only one
article a year, she stresses the
quality of the works and not the
quantity. She claims that the
reviewers didn't look at quality
"closely enough."
Teevan felt that her service on
University Committees was not
adequate, but she claims that her
"readiness" to meet with her
students at any hour and her
"genuine interest" in her students' interests is the "highest
kind" of university service, and
more important than serving on
committees and councils.
Almost everyone so far involved in the Waterman case
agrees that she is a good teacher.
She was a semi-finalist for the
outstanding teacher award last
year. And her student evaluation;, were extremely favorable.
The evaluations are made on a 1
to 5 level, with one being the
highest and 5 being lowest. The
lowest average score Waterman
ever received was a 1.6, and on
occasion she has earned a 1,0.
continued on page 8