Friday, April 5, 1968 Page 16 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS APA Scores Over Potter, Vote For President In Choice '68 VttttC Voting In the National Collegiate Presidential' Pri­ referenda questions. Because the CHOICE '68 ballot ballot are: (Soc. Worker), Mark O. Hat­ mary, CHOICE '68 at the University Is scheduled was printed several weeks ago, names of candidates field (Rep.), Lyndon B. Johnson (Dem.), Robert F. Ken­ Cops Commissioner sCup for today, tomorrow and Wednesday, April 22, 23 not now running remain listed. nedy (Dem.), Martin L. King (whose name cannot be SUu and 24. The polls will be open from 10-4 p.m. on all Foreign students are asked to punch the "foreign removed from the computer punch card), John V. Lind­ three days in the Campus Center Lobby and 4:30- by Duncan Nixon With Denny Elkln tossing in IB student" box on the ballot and not to punch any party say (Rep.), Eugene J. McCarthy (Dem.), Richard M. 6 p.m., Monday and Wednesday In the dinner lines on preference. This Identification Is for statistical purposes Sports Editor and Bill Moon 11, APA I roUed Nixon (Rep.), Charles H. Percy (Rep.), Ronald W. Rea­ to a decisive 44-35 win in the all four quads. only. gan (Rep.), Nelson A. Rockefeller (Rep.), Harold E. finals of the Commissioner's cup All students enrolled for credit at the University, Stassen (Rep.), George C. Wallace (Am. Indep.) including graduate .professional and part-time students', The CHOICE '68 ballot, composed by the national The ballot is formulated so that first, second and Tournament last Tuesday. committee, Includes a list of 13 candidates for the Albany State's spring sports schedule this year Is The game was a complete re­ are eligible to vote irregardless of student tax pay- third choices for the Presidency will be recorded. The men' • The student activities and validation card presidency and three referendum questions. really quite Impressive. The baseball team Is faced with versal of the League I champion­ first choice will be tabulated for election purposes and will be punched for identification purposes only. The national CHOICE directors, taking note of the the second and third for statistical analysis. a tough eighteen game schedule, but Coach Burllngame's ship game, which Potter won 44- 28. APA played a harassing man Ballots are computer punch cards and squares next comments of major newspapers professionals on stu­ Of the three referendum questions, two deal with crew promises to be one of the most successful nines to man defense, and on offense, to candidate names and proposition choices must be dent participation in the primary, feel the nation's current Involvement In the war, In recent years. Third baseman Andy Chrlstlanwas the moved the ball slowly and de­ punched out with a pen, pencil, or another sharp ob­ that "effective, articulate expression of political opin­ and one with the priorities of government spending In ject. The ballots will be tabulated by the Sperry Rand ion by students, combined with their active participation confronting the urban crisis." only starter to graduate, and last year's freshmen In­ liberately, waiting for good shots. This stategy paid off, as APA division of UNIVAC. in the political process, can significantly affect the The University will receive results for this campus clude some fine prospects. With a seven man pitching jumped into an early lead, and outcome of elections and the shape of American poli­ along with a national summary a few days after vot­ staff of Tom Egelston, Cas Galka, George Webb, Rich maintained a 5-9 point lead Write-ins may be made only for first choice Presi­ tics." ing. Results will be announced nationally the first week dential preference. Write-ins cannot be accepted for Candidates for the Presidency placed on the CHOICE in May, on most all of the major television networks. Patrel, Tom Piotrowskl, and sophomores Rich Barde- throughout the first half. Elkln had ten and Moon 7 as APA schewskl, and Rich Spiers, Burllngame has by far the led 23-14 at Intermission. deepest pitching staff In quite some time. Potter closed the gap to three early in the second half, Elkln's The next Hitting was the team's major weakness last year, but quick baskets gave APA a com­ fortable lead that they held the this department will, hopefully, be Improved consider­ rest of the way. George Webb THE ALBANY regular Issue of ably, by the further development of the returnees, and led Potter with 13, while Gary by the addition of sophomores Jim Sandy, Tom Decker, Torino turned in a fine defensive effort for APA. STUDENT the A.S.P. and Steve Flood. Jack Slnnott, last year's leading hit­ In the consolation game Potter ter, returns, as do Denny Elkln, George Webb, Jim Mur- II gained an early lead and main­ PRESS will be on ley and Paul Leonettl. tained It throughout for a 49- 40 win. Potter used Its bench Tht to full advantage, running subs May 3rd The prospects for golf and tennis, the other two var­ in and out, and wearing down sity level sports, are some what uncertain. The golf their opposition. Ken Wilkes led STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY Potter with 15, while Dave ASP team has a fine four man nucleus returning. Craig Luth- Wheeler was high man for the or, Brian Hill, Ray McCloat, and BUI Prendergast are Barons with 12. ALBANY,NEW YORK DAY, APRIL 22, 1968 VOL. LIV. NO. 22 all experienced golfers, but after them the team Is APA In Finals Easily lacking In experience and depth. The tennis team has In order to reach the finals Residences Office top returnees in Ron McDermott, and Marty Bergan, APA has to get past the Fly­ ing Jabones, the League IV but the team is pretty thin overall. Change Plans University Strike champs, and Potter II, who had POTTER'S JOE LAREAU HAD A HOT HAND torly in the surprised KB I In the first round After Protests Besides these sports, Albany State will also be com­ second half, but APA's shooting proved to be too much for of the tourney. Rich Spiers dump­ After receiving mass com­ ed in 21 and Bill Moon contri­ plaints from the student body peting in three club sports, two of which are entirely The Club. buted 10 in APA's 64-26 win over Here This Friday new, and one of which Is In its second year. The track over the two new proposed meal the Flying Js, who simply did plans, the Office of Residences and field club, under the direction of coaches R. Keith not have the tire power to handle has announced a new food plan. by Ed Silver day teach-in to be held from a League team. Munsey and Brian Kelly, Is an expansion of last year's "A" Team Edges Siena, Aside from Individual students, p.m. to midnight on Thursda On Sunday APA rolled over A one day strike by University April 25, and 9 a.m. on Frlda track club. Due to a years head start, and some fine the residence office received students and faculty is planned Potter II by a 58-40 count. APA complaints from LAAC and Cen­ The teach-in will feature two da; cross country runners, it looks like the club will be jumped Into an early lead and for this coming Friday, April of lecture, discussion, and cu Team Falls To RPI tral Council. 26. The strike Is part of an strongest In the track events. The 880, the mile and the Albany State's first team scor­ practice, looked like a well-drill­ was never serious challenged. The new proposed plan will be turally oriented actlvlties(fllm. ed team as they jumped into an Spiers had 15, Moon 12, and international action sponsored by poetry reading, etc.). two-mile look especially strong, with cross-country run­ ed a close 57-55 wtn over Siena brought before these two student the Student MobilizationCommlt- B on Wednesday, while the second early lead on the shooting of Jack Jack Slnnott 11 in leading APA's bodies this week for consider­ Participants shall include ners like the Myers brothers, Mike Attwell, Larry Fred­ Slnnott and George Webb, but balanced attack, while John Rog­ tee(SMC). number of Albany and RPI facull team dropped a 63-54 decision ation. At these times students "International Student Strike their shooting cooled off late In ers had a hot hand for Potter, will lie able to make any members as well as a larg erick, and Paul Roy leading the way and once againBasil to RPI B. „ Against the War In Vietnam, In the Albany A team's game, the half and RPI's Chi Phi team tossing In 25, mostly on outside recommendations concerning the number of outside speaker: Morgan should be outstanding In the sprints. Most of came on strong to edge ahead Jumpers. plan. LAAC meets tomorrow • Racial Oppression, and the These Include such natlonall the start was slow and sluggish Draft" Is the official theme of the field events are still unsettled, but it looks like the as neither team could generate 32-31 at the half. Potter reached the finals by night; Central Council will meet known men asDwlghtMacDonalc outscorlng Potter in 51-27, and Thursday evening. the SMC strike call. critic for New Yorker Magazin broad Jump, and the javelin may be strong points. much of a offense. Albany mov­ In the second half Chi Phi Hundreds of academic com* ed to a brief five point lead, but the Barons 49-47. Ray McCloat Under the nmv plan all under­ and a prominent war critic. Jumped Into an early lead and hit 16, George Webb 12, and munltles across the The theme of the University' Siena came back to tie at the held on to a lead of a least four graduate resident students must will see similar peace-striko Of the two new sports, lacrosse and sailing, lacrosse halftime mark 24-24. Albany's John Soja 10 in the Club's easy contract for board. The present strike as well as of the teach-li throughtout. Pat Reed's aggres­ win over their League in team. activities on this day. Internation­ Is based on the End the Wa: probably has the greater appeal. A fast moving and rug­ scoring was well spread, as Ed sive board work kept the Albany waiver of board policy for al student actions are planned Cole led with 5. Jerry Legglerl hit 10 for the dietary, rellgous and work con­ clause of the National Moblllza ged sport, lacrosse is an ideal spectator sport, that Is squad in contention, but Chi Phi's losers. as well in Great Britain, Ger­ tion call. The End the War theme The second half was a different organlration and shooting simply flicts will continue. JEFFREY MISHKIN, SPEAKING for the student body, de­ many, most of the countries of from the spectator's point of view similar to ice The Potter-Barons game on It Is planned that the Food was decided on by the striki story entirely, as both teams got proved to be too much. livered an eulogy at memorial services for Martin Luther King. Western Europe, Japan, Mexico hockey. Coach Joseph Silvey is quite optimistic about the hot, and shooting duel developed Sunday was a real cliff-hanger. Service Department will prepare organizers at the University ii Over 800 people attended the memorial held in the new gym. and other Latin American the spirit of SMC intentions, coming season, despite the fact that this is a first year between Albany's Ray McCloat Jack Slnnott led the scoring for The Barons jumped into an early 20 meals, breakfast, lunch and nations. and Denny Elkln, and Siena's Albany, dumping in 15, while first half lead, but Potter came dinner Monday through Saturday For more pictures and stories turn to Page 2- The three part nature of the team sport. He seems to feel that the team Is capable Reed hit 12 of his 13 In the sec­ back strong to tie 22-22 at Inter­ and breakfast and noon dinner on At the University, the strike call is meant to leave room foi Hank Debbln and Joe Mullln. The is to be supplemented by a two of turning in an excellent season. The Sailing club only lead switched back and forth ond half, mainly on short Jump­ mission. In the second half EEP Sunday. participation by groups other then those of strictly antiwar started practice this last weekend, and sailing is a sport early In the half, but about mid­ ers after offensive rebounds. started to control the boards and Each student must contract for way through the halt McCloat Chris Lynch was high for RPI, moved out in front, but the Bar­ 14 of the 20 meals per week nature. At Black schools, for that takes a lot of know-how and teamwork, but the team hit two quick Jumpers and then as he tossed in 22 mostly on out­ ons fought back and were only at a cost of $280. The student Council Sends Mishkin To Thome example, major stress of the Is boldly moving Into competition with some excellent fed Elkln on a fast break and side Jumpers. down by two with five seconds may select any combination of strike will fall on the Racial left, but Terry Baxter's Jump Oppression Clause. schools, and by the end of the season it should be able Albany led by six. meals to equal 14 meals per week. In both games Albany was play­ shot at the Buzzer was short. Since the meal choices are The University's strike and to make a good showing. For the remainder of the game Siena was forced to play desper­ ing against teams that had Baxter led the Barons with 20, open the Office of Residences To Attempt Change Of Meal Plan teach-In organizers are spon­ ate catch-up basketball. With Deb- played together all year, and al­ while Dave Wheeler contributed anticipates the missed meal sored by several student groups. bin leading the way Siena did cut though both Albany Teams work­ 13. Once again Potter displayed factor would be eliminated. The These include: Student-Faculty One major problem that will arise, in regard to by Vic Looper tion six of the LAAC Food Poll this confusion makes student ad­ Comm. to End the War, Free­ the gap to two with less than a ed the ball reasonably well, they a well balanced attack, as Jim cost of the meal plan may be a of last December which 85 per reporting spring sports is the schedule. For three weeks lacked the cohesion that comes McVey and Pat Reed hit for 12, few dollars more or less than is Central Council passed a state­ ministration of the policy vir­ dom Council, S.D.S., suppres­ minute left, but Gary Torino hit cent of the students wanted should tually impossible. two clutch foul shots to up the from playing together all year. and McCloat threw In 9, expected, and the price of food ment expressing its strong dis­ sion, and Tri-Cltles Students Alli­ now there have been no varsity sports events to report, have been Included In the plan, MYSKANIA asked for a $2,000 ance. Supporters of the teacli-ln lead to four, Siena closed to two for second semester next year approval with tho Food Plan and This would have allowed the stu­ however between now and the next issue of the ASP, will be adjusted, If there Is the empowered the President, Jeff programming line to hold a fresh­ also Include over 50 University again, and then regained control dent his choice of 14 meals. man class orientation program, which will be May 3, the varsity tennis team will play with seven seconds left, but their need. Mishkin, to express Council's professors who have signed sup­ opinion to Dr. Clifton C, Thorne, Breslln replied by stating that an orientation program for SA port statements. Many will also half its schedule, and baseball and golf will have com­ last desperation shot was off the The general Increase in price officers and an Increased num­ mark. of meals Is clue to two main at Its Thursday, April 4 meeting. this plan could be easily costed cancel Friday classes. pleted most of their schedules. This unfortunate develop­ wrong, would take two months to ber of 'faculty-student dialogues. Anyone Interested In learning Leading scorers for Albany reasons. First, there has been Two plans offered to the stu­ They will also use the money for ment is a result of a last minute change In the spring a twenty dollar Increase caused get the trend, and due to the more about the strlkeshould con­ were McCloat with 15, 11 of them dent were: a 14 meal plan con­ missed meal factor would cost whatever needs to tie done that tact Edward Silver 489-1240. recess which resulted in a host of athletic contests in the second half, and Elkln by the rising cost of living. sisting of breakfast, lunch and can not be forseon at the pres­ Second, since this new plan will almost as much as the three- Those Interested in the teach- being scheduled for times when there will be no one with 14, 10 In the second half. dinner Monday - Thursday and meal a day plan, ent. The lino was granted. The in can receive information by Debbln hit 14 of his 18 In the (Continue,/ on Pat/e J,.) breakfast and lunch on Friday Solicitations Policy Is now being here to watch. Thus there is little we will be able to do Neil Brown, director of Stu­ contacting Dr. David Harvey second half, while Mullins got 7 and a 20 moalplan with break­ revised to take care of these and (English Dept.) 457-8437 at his but pick up the respective teams at the half-way point, of his 11 after halftime. Assassination fast, lunch and dinner Monday- dent Activities and the Campus similar problems. Council also Center, stated that it was always office or 732-2032 at home, or and follow them from there. Albany's second team, playing Saturday and breakfast and dinner approved a policy statement of Ruth Fish 457-7700. without a single game ore-game Sparks Memorials on Sunday. his opinion that It was never Community Programming Com­ too late to appeal to the presi­ Speakers at the Friday teach- mission to grant recognition of in shall Include Albany and RPI President Evan R. Collins ad­ Studonts on the Food Commit­ dent. temporary groups. tee were told that If they were faculty and local speakers. It dressed 600 students on Fri­ will be held from 9 A.M. to noon day, April 1, in memory of Martin given too many choices the board Mishkin was directed to speak cost would be Increased by a to Thorne about a 10-meal plan In the Campus Center Ballroom, Luther King at a vigil, held In SELF-NOMINATION and from noon on In Lecture Northway Taxi For All Your Taxi Needs the new gymnasium, large amount. which would be lunch-dinner, Monday-Friday, FORMS Rm. A silent vigil was held in Paul Breslln, a member of ' atitfaction — 24 Hour Service Central Council Local speakers include Hal downtown Albany all night Thurs­ the Food Committee and LAAC Council passed a resolution Levin, former Peace Candidate day and Friday April 4 and 5 In said that Food Service felt that 20-0-2 requesting that appropri­ LAAC for Congress In Brooklyn, Peter Unlike Any Other Service - Prompt, Dependable, honor of Dr. Martin Luther King. If they gave too many options ate state administration and-or Supreme Court Pollak, editor of the Albany Present throughout the day at that they would lose money, es­ state legislative action be taken Campus Center Into Desk Liberator; Father Paul Smith Reasonable pecially the option of room and to allow the students of each unit the downtown vigil were mom- Brubacher Hall Info Desk of the University's NeumanClub; board. of the State University system Rev. Carlisle Dickson of N«w - Located at 1533 Central Ave. Northway Exit #2 tiers of the Brothers, a Negro Forms must be in no later organization In Albany, students He stated that under the to determine a system of man­ Schenectady and others, Y ou Can Reach U» at 869-8850 from neighboring colleges, and three meal plan the cost would datory student assessment fees. than 4:00 p.m. Saturday The Peter Schombrauii film on large gatherings of students from be almost the same as the two As stated In the resolution April 27. "Vietnam, How to Get Out" will this University, meal plan due to the missed meal the present syslem of voluntary ELECTIONS WILL BE also be shown throughout the LACROSSE IS AN ACTION PACKED SPORT THAT com­ factor. student assessment fee is sub­ day, bines the contact of football with the speed of soccer. /Continued on /'at/a £) Duncan Nixon felt that ques­ ject to large scale confusion and MAY 1-2-3 (Continued on I'III/C !)l Page 2 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Monday, April 22, 1968 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Page 3 King Vigils Held DeadNegro Leader In Academy Park, Scholarship Fund University Gym Extoled By Collins (Continued from Page J) The small gathering, number­ At the uptown vigil in mem­ exercise of the Intelligence. To In Memory Of King ing at times from 20 to SO peo­ ory of the murdered Martin Luth­ us, it is important that King ple, stood silently In Academy er King Jr. President Evan R. was a thoughtful man, a man of Graduate assistants of the assistants that the Ad Hoc com­ Park, across from the State Collins delivered an address that real learning, an informed stu­ Graduate School of Public Af­ mittee will enable the drive to Capitol Building. compared the characteristics of dent as well as an agent of fairs (GSPA) have Initiated a reach most of the students, fac­ the University Community to the change,.. drive to establish a scholar­ ulty, administration and person­ Some were holding posters ad­ ship for a qualified, but under­ vocating an end to violence In Ideals of King. The following "He led the common people; nel at the University. It enough are excerpts from the pres­ privileged, ghetto resident who money is collected, the ad hoc memory of the late Dr. King, his road lay where people llv- wishes to attend the University, while others were holding ident's speech the day after the ed and worked; his hand was committee hopes that the scholar­ posters of a more militant type. assassination. outstretched in service. His mes­ An ad hoc committee has been ship could become a continuing "As a University Community, sage was familiar, but he lived formed to oversee the scholar­ grant. Those present Friday after­ we are a community of youth, it; his courageous insistence on ship drive. The committee, call­ Donations should be sent to noon participated In a- type of Identifying with the qualities of true racial equality; the convic­ ed the Ad Hoc Committee for the Campus Center. portest march to the arrest of youth which will characterize tion that every man merits not Martin Luther King Jr. Memor­ William Gibson, a member of King — the belief that things alone the right to make a liv­ ial Scholarship Fund, presently the Brothers. could be better, and an Insis­ ing but also to lead a life of includes graduate students, ad­ NEW HOURS ministrative officials, staff per­ The march started at County tence on making them so; vigor, dignity and peace, flexibility, tough resistance, Im­ sonnel, undergraduates, mem. Court House, where Gibson was "And .the triumph of unrea­ bers of civil rights groups, and arraigned and bail set for dis­ patient with things he considered son and senselessness over his to be wrong, and a desire to faculty. orderly conduct and resistance PRESIDENT EVAN R COLLINS, left, gave the major ad­ person does not shake the Uni­ Taking the idea of the drive change them, now, versity Community's convic­ to arrest, and proceeded to the dress at the memorial services for Martin Luther King* He from Stanford University, near BOOKSTORE Second Precinct Police Station, "A second characteristic of tions about sacredness of the said of King, "his road lay where people lived and worked; Pal Alto, the assis­ the University Community Is Its human Individual." tants have suggested that the pro­ A few of the members of the his hand was outstretched in services," dedication to reason, and to the President Collins continued to fessors of their school might con­ Beginning Brothers then asked If there was say, "We have three possible tribute as much as 10 per cent of sufficient support for a sit-in pro­ choices (of goals). One possible A SILENT VIGIL was held far Martin Luther King across from the capitol. Over 150 one month's salary and that Grad­ Wednesday, testing what they termed the 'Un­ President Asked To Close School choice Is to give up, to make no peoplepaid their respects to the fallen civil rights leader and his ideals there in Academy uate Assistants contribute 5 per just arrest" of Bill Gibson, choice ... cent of one month's assistant- "Some will take the second Park. April 24 The consensus of those at­ ship check. At Conference By Alliance Member choice, the easy choice, the way Teachers at the University tending the vigil was that there by Tim Keeley Collins express^ ma cuncern of violence or brutality, of child­ was no desire to participate in peared later and asked to attend have expressed their willingness The Bookstore Staff Reporter in relation to the situation, but the meeting of the Faculty Sen- ish, primitive unreason, of savag­ to cooperate with the scholar­ this, so the most of the stu­ stated, "I do not want to make ery In one form or another, emo­ dents returned to the park. At the President's Confer­ After discussing procedures Students To Conduct Survey; ship fund. Students, undergrad­ ence with Students on Monday, a hasty decision. I will discuss tional or physical, Will Stay Open of Faculty Senate for several uates and graduate, are being Later In theafternoon.persons April 8, a member of the Black this with the Faculty Senate "Or we can take the hard asked to take an active part In present sang a few social pro­ Students Alliance read a state­ (which meets Immediately after minutes, Collins extended his choice that Martin Luther King the drive. Till 8:00 p.m. test songs such as Dylan's "Blow­ ment advocating that President the conference)." personal Invitation to the gen­ personified. This is the choice of Study Albany Housing Conditions There will be a meeting in ing in the Wind»". The re­ Evan R. Collins close the Uni­ The Negro then stated "We tleman to attend. patience with firmness, of non­ For Your group about how the program Hu 132 at 7:30 tomorrow night action of townspeople to the Vigil versity on Tuesday April 9 In came to you as the President With a few minutes remain­ violence combined with unswerv­ Students have met to explore The Information gotten by for all people interested In help, was characterized by acqulscence. tribute to the slain Dr. Martin of this University. Where Is your ing, the discussion took a quick ing purpose. This is the pride a program pairing university stu­ was to be Implemented and what the students will be tabulated and Convenience Its purpose was. lng In the scholarship drive. The Luther King. power of leadership?" change to the topic of next year's in strength so real that there dents with Albany residents to distributed. "This will end the meeting will be held mainly to or­ is no need to brag or swagger. conduct a housing survey In Al­ survey," said Hamilton, "but not To this Collins calmly rejoin­ meal plans. "Minorities," he said, "don't ganize the campaign of the Ad Until May 29 ed, "I can assure that I, as "This Is the choice of Martin bany's South End and Arbor Hill the contacts you've made. Hoc Committee for Martin Luth­ President Collins assured the districts. have access to the same houses National Leaders Respond President, will make the deci­ students that the plans were not Luther King's unwavering de­ which the people who lived in er King Jr. Memorial Scholar­ sion and it will be today. First, Harry Hamilton spoke to the The students will be well yet concrete and that they could votion to Ideals, and his Insis­ them before (and have moved ship Fund. however I wish to get the opin­ tence on achieving them." organized In groups, provided be changed. upward and out of their old with transportation, maps and The graduates have already STATE ions of the Faculty Senate and To Murder Of Dr. King Black Eye neighborhood) had access to. Al­ the Information from the orien­ begun the drive for the scholar­ the Central Council of Students." ship, to be called the Martin Luth­ At this point the member of bany's housing code is good, but tation program. President Johnson: This act, "achieved nothing by lawlessness." To DiscussLiving not enforced." In addition to this er King Jr. Memorial Scholar­ Now is a time for"joinlng and working together" so that we may the Black Students organization UNIVERSITY there are no houses being built. Anyone wishing to participate ship, among the faculty, stu­ "move toward equality for all people." stormed out of the Patroon in this program may contact dents and administration of Vice President Humphrey: Such an act, "brings shame to this Lounge spitting out the word YEZZI'S InResidenceHalls Survey information will re­ Paul Ruffer at 457-3067. GSPA. nation. It will give greater strength to the cause for which he "Hypocricy." The men of Stuyvesant Tow­ veal answers to such questions BOOKSTORE It is the hope of the graduate fought." Collins cleared the air by say­ HAPPY HOUR Thursday Nights er will present the final Black as Where are the good houses? Joseph Cohen (Chairman, NAACP, Albany): "Every man, woman ing, "Obviously the gentleman Eye of the semester on Wednes. Where are the bad and de­ and child ought to "stop and think and resolve that their prejudi­ misinterpreted what I said." He day, May 1, at 7 p.m. In the cayed houses? How much money cial practices, which have been going on for many years, be stop­ went on to say that before he 10 p.m. - 11 p.m. 16th floor lounge of the tower. does one need to live In the bet­ ped. Hatred will produce nothing but hatred." made a decision which would In­ Starting with the topic "Co­ ter areas? What people want Gov. Rockefeller: Dr. Martin Luther King "gave his life In the volve the faculty and the student habitation — Now" the group something different, and what Virginia (D and Frank(r)are: Pitchers of Beer $1.25 courageous fight for fundamental values of all humans." body, he wanted to get the gen­ will proceed to discuss the var­ do they want? eral concensus of the groups. A. Interviewing an African couple. B. Visiting a Nigerian University. Govt Reagan: "This "act of violence solved none of our prob­ Bottle of Beer .40 ious forms and ramifications u The Urban Center Orientation "It Is only when those In­ C. Exchanging Ideas with Nigerian University students. lems." He urged California to remain calm. Mixed Drinks .60 this type of resident living and program will provide the ques­ FITE, Rochester: This "Is Indicative of the evil which exists volved are consulted that this whether It would be advisable tionnaire In addition to a brief' Actually, Virginia Blount and not only in the south." day can be one of significant Sodas .20 for the university to experiment lng on what to look for when a Frank Ogden are doing all these Sen. javits: Dr. King was one of the "greatest leaders produced" meaning to the University com­ In this area. One form of co­ surveyor enters the home be­ I things. As members of the 500- in recent nlstory. munity." habitation to be explored will ing "inspected" and how to ob­ I student World Campus Afloat- CORE: "This could be a catalyst to create violence In the streets The representative of the 297 Ontario Street be that outlined In Rlmmer's tain the correct Information. I Chapman College, these two and It probably will." It Is Indicative of the "ugly racism preval­ Black Students Alliance reap­ "The Harrad Experiment." Students and residents will re­ j college students had the ent." . Although various students,fac­ ceive Information from the Ur­ I opportunity to talk with students Sen. Robert Kennedy Dr. Martin Luther King "stood for love ulty, and administration have al­ ban Center during the orienta­ i at the University of Ife, Ibadan and justice between fellow human beings." ready been Invited, the Black tion classes as to how those sur­ I branch, Nigeria. Dr. King's philosophy professor from Boston University: "No Eye cordially extends an Invi­ veyed may get information about 1 With the help of Nigerian matter where he went there was the possibility that a crazed man tation to the university commu­ Jobs and Job training. I students and professors, the Amer- might take his life." nity at large, "As people from the white I leans compared religions, art, Mayor Lindsay spent the day In Harlem seeking to lend a calm- The Black Eye philosophy Is middle class go down to the In­ I anthropology,educational systems, lng Influence. that unstructered dialogue will ner city," said Hamilton, "they I economic developments, geog- Martin Luther King: It Is how well you live that Is Important, A Medical Answer For give everyone an opportunity to will talk with and meet people | raphy, drama, music, and dance of not the longevity of life (accepting the Nobel Prize): In honoring express his views on the topic. they have not come In contact < the two countries. This is the me, "you honor the struggle against man's Inhumanity to man. To encourage this the faculty with before." regular course work aboard Chapman's shipboard campus, the s.s. Ryndam. Genuine brotherhood and peace are more precious than diamonds, MUSCULAR Is asked to make no special ad­ In addition to obtaining mean­ or silver or gold. I have a dream," that one day, "Black and vance preparation and do not Virginia and Frank transferred the credits they earned back to their home colleges, ingful and vital Information, this Arizona Stale University and Northern Arizona University, and are going on for their White, Jew and Gentile may Join hands and sing, Free at Last, give a formal presentation. To (project) will help to eliminate Free at Last, Thank God Almighty we are Free at Last." further encourage an Informal baccalaureate degrees. Chapman College Is currently accepting enrollments for the some of the problems, prev­ 1968-1969 academic year with the World Campus Afloat program. Low Back Run attitude, refreshments are serv­ alent today. "You will be glv. ed during the discussion. InK and getting information." ITINERARIES Promptly Relieves Pain Fall 1968: Dep. New York Oct. 10 for Dublin, London, Copenhagen, Rotterdam, Lisbon, Rome, Athens, Haifa, Catania, Barcelona, Las Palmas, Freetown, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos COLLEGE GIRLS So Stiff Muscles Loosen Up and EUROPEAN GROUP FLIGHT Aires, Montevideo, Punta Arenas, Santiago, Lima, Acapulco, arriving Jan. 29. Spring 1969: Dep. Los Angeles Feb. 3 for Honolulu, Tokyo, Kobe, Hong Kong, Bangkok, You're Back Jnto Action $259.00 round trip from Now York Kuala Lumpur, Colombo, Bombay, Mombasa, Durban, Cape Town, Dakar, Casablanca, Cadiz, Lisbon, arriving New York May 27. 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- •• .*IMl«**ftMtfiiflito Monday, April 22, 1968 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Page 5 Pag* 4 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Students Protest Budget Halstead: Withdrawal, Black Rights Fred Halstead, Socialist Work­ "The , is one of the namese people have the element* ers Party Candidate for the Pre­ most unjust and brutal wars In ary democratic right to deter­ Of Maryland State Colleges sidency, has certainly pulled no world history. It Is not In the mine their own affairs and the punches about what he stands for. Interests of the American people UjS. has absolutely no rights to (CP8) — Student leaders from be closed downuntU after its Eas­ One suggestion was that this fol­ He Is as he states, "the only whose sons, husbands and friends ter break, on April 16. He has be in Vietnam." 10 Maryland state colleges and low-up action should take the candidate who calls for Immedi­ are dying on the battlefields In "We believe with millions of universities are organizing a since authorized $355,000 in ad­ form of an "indefinite" boycott ate withdrawal of U.s. troops Increasing numbers; and It Is ditional funds for the school, how­ Americans that the only effective state wide protest against the of classes. from the Vietnam war and offers more certainly not In the In­ and just way to end the slaughter governor's "austerity" budget ever, and has agreed to meet The delegates agreed that the a socialist alternative to this terests of the Vietnamese people with the president of its student of both Vietnamese and Ameri­ for higher education, and against protest should be aimed at get­ capitalist system which breeds who have been bombed, burned, cans Is to bring the GIs home his shut-down of Bowie State Col­ government. ting substantial Increases in next war and racism." tortured and starved by the The Maryland student leaders now. We are thereby the only lege In Bowie, Maryland, year's budget rather than at try. He and Ms Vlce-Presldentlal hellish destruction of the U.S. candidates who genuinely support About 60 delegates, most of have not decided What form their ing to get additional funds this running mate urge military machine. budget protest should take, al­ the welfare of the GIs themselves. them members of their respec­ year. that Instead of voting for one of "Of the announced or prospec­ "At home we stand unequi­ tive student governments, attend­ though a one-day strike Is being the choices under the "Priorities tive candidates for President In considered. They were reminded, though, vocally on the side of black people ed the planning session at the Un­ that Agnew had made substantial in urban spending" question, stu­ the 1968 elections, only Paul In their struggle for Jobs, better iversity of Maryland's campus. According to Jerry Fleischer, cuts In the budget requests from dents write-In "black control of Boutelle and myself are for the treasurer of the student govern­ living conditions and the right to Although the meeting was or­ the state's schools this year. One the black community" on this Immediate withdrawal of Ameri­ control their own communities iginally called to consider what ment at the University of Mary­ example cited was that of the Uni­ portion of the ballot. can military forces from Viet- land's College Park Campus, the and call upon the American people students could do to protest Gov­ versity of Maryland system, On the Issues before the elec­ nam — and from every other to defend all black victims of of­ ernor Spiro T. Agnew's "aus­ delegates, to the meeting decided whose request for a $9 million torate today, Halstead has said, country In the world. The Viet­ that'. If a One day protest has no ficial and unofficial racist terity" budget, the delegates budget increase was cut back to attacks." agreed that they should protest effect on the governor they will $3 million. his closing of Bowie State as well. organize a longer-term action. Agnew ordered the small pre­ dominantly black school shut . down after more than 200 of Its students held a sit-in at the Mary­ This year Campus Carnival FRED HALSTEAD land State House to dramatize OVER THE VACATION *• Campus Center Cafeteria their appeal for more state aid. is 3 days long had carpeting installed. The bright orange rug is to increase The governor ordered all the Hatfield- Rep. Dove, Domestic Liberal the appearance of the room and decrease the noise* protestors arrested, and an­ MarUlAtilkr AO. UalMaHatfielMd tIos (haDannMLthe Republl ' tnringr nnlUUpoliticsc . HU.e M/iareceivel uurdl tilhies 1B.A3 A . .ne ..Vietna. . m war. -Hatfield'...... s views nounced that Bowie State should THURSDAY • Outdoor Buffet & Jazz can Senator of . He was at the Oregon college of Willa­ are not limited to criticism of elected to the mette In 1943. His education was Vietnam. He has also proposed Concert In 1966 following a remarkably then Interrupted while Hatfield definite plans for Vietnam. This New Board Plans Include Choice successful political career In served during World War n. He plan would take part In three FRIDAY • May Day + 2 Oregon politics. What set apart finally received his Masters In parts: First, substitute Asian this election for the Senatorshlp 1948 from Stanford University. troops for Americans; second, Of Any 14 Out Of 20Meals A Week AI Do FRIDAY: Experiments Films of Oregon was Hatfield's sur­ Hatfield then became an associa­ create a Southeast Asian common prising move of making Vietnam tive professor of political science market; third, call an all-Asian (Continued from Page J) Tickets may be purchased from When rooms are picked by the From 11 A.M. to 2 P.M. a major campaign Issue. This and dean at his alma mater of conference to end the war with decrease the number of missed the FSA Contract Office, students they will be able to break could very easily have put Hat­ Willamette College. China included. He has further meals considerably, more food Information Desk, Campus Cen­ their housing contract if they do in the Campus Center Ballroom and on field probable victory Into Is considered gone on to state that he would will be consumed by the students ter. The pro-rated meal ticket not wish to participate in the new The Graduation Field danger. Despite this Hatfield was one of the promising young re­ not support someone for the pre­ than under the present 14 meal for September will cost $36.50 meal plan. fairly well assured of a victory publicans many people feel are sidency who was opposed to find­ plan. and for October, $75.75. Room and board costs will, as SATURDAY - State Fair due to his fine record In Oregon. necessary to revitalize the party. ing a peaceful solution to the war. Under this new plan students The new meal plan also In­ In the other proposed plans, be Upon his entering politics Hat­ He Is one of the new republicans Although Hatfield is known for will be allowed to eat In any cludes guest meal rates for the listed separately on the bill and 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. field was elected as a State Re­ whose views seem almost Indis­ his outspoken views on Vietnam contracted dinning room. That four meals served by Food Ser­ In official publications. presentative. tinguishable from those of his this does not mean that he has is when using the meal plan the vice. They are as follows: Regu­ He followed this Initial victory democratic liberal counterparts. some very definite opinions on student will be permitted to eat lar Breakfast, 85 cents; lunch, by being elected to, the State He has long been considered the other Issues of importance In at any quadrangle but not at the $1.10; dinner, $1.75. Senate, the Secretaryship of State leading republican dove on the this country. As with his Viet­ Campus Center. In Oregon, and two successful political scene. This position nam views Mark Hatfield Is very A contract meal card will be A kosher meal option Is avail­ SATELLITE TRACKING SYSTEMS terms as Governor of his state. might afford Hatfield a promts. liberal on his stands with domes­ Issued on a monthly basis and able at an Increased cost of Mark Hatfield had also enjoyed Ing career should the country tic topics. $70.00 frozen dinners, labeled will entitle the student to 70 per EARTH STATIONS FOR COMSAT a successful life before his enter­ continue to find disfavor with MARK 0. HATFIELD cent (14 of 20) of the meals pro­ with the "0"-"U" symbol, signi­ vided for that month. For ex­ fying certification as kosher, will RARE EARTH PHOSPHORS ample, 43 meals will be served be served when standard meals Johnson: Deescalation, Urban Spending are served. VIDEOTELEPHONES In the month of September. The from the blight of obsolescence student Is entitled to 30 meals. These kosher dinners will con­ Lyndon B. Johnson, President of North Vietnam, continuing the of the United States, and respon­ bombing In only that Dortlon of and despair. .. there Is no time Each time a student eats a sist of the entree only. As wide MICROWAVE CARRIER SYSTEMS variety of food as Is available sible for both foreign and domes­ the country adjacent to the de­ to lose." meal In a contract dining room, tic policy, began his residence In militarized zone. Johnson has He proposed active Involve­ one of the 30 numbers will be for purchase will be offered. COLOR TELEVISION Students participating In this plan the White House with the death ordered only 13,500 more men ment of private enterprise In a punched. If a meal card is lost LASER RESEARCH of John F. Kennedy on November to Vietnam In the next five ten-year effort to thwart the urban It will not be replaced. If a will be offered the regular salad, beverage and desert on the menu. 22, 1963. The former Senate months, far fewer than have been problem. Johnson went on to card Is damaged, It will be re­ CABLE TELEVISION Whip, was re-elected by a land­ sent In recent months. He has advocate the construction of 26 placed upon the surrender of the Since the plan will not be made official (assuming no major ob­ slide In 1964 when he swamped also Indicated the movement to million new homes, 6 million to be damaged card. ELECTRONIC SWITCHING EQUIPMENT former Senator , re-equlp and Improve the paid for by the federal govern­ Commuter and off-campus stu­ jections by the student body) no earlier than Friday, students are the ultra-conservative Republl- efficiency of the South Viet­ ment. His spending schedule for dents may purchase at a pro-rated FLASHCUBES can candidate. Though eligible for namese forces. the project for fiscal year 1669 charge the meal ticket upon asked not to select a meal plan on their housing cards. re-election to another term under With the peace talks now re­ Includes $4,580,000,000; $2,180,- presentation of their ID card. MISSILE TRACKING SYSTEMS the constitution, he has declared cognized as official by the North 000,000, war on poverty; $750 ENERGYSTORAGE that he does not seek nor will he Vietnamese Johnson commented million, urban renewal; 190 mil­ accept the nomination of his party that "We shall be trying to work lion, mass transit; $20 million, Advertisement BLACKBOARD BY WIRE TEACHING SYSTEMS for the Presidency. out promptly a time and place for to foster research Into promis­ On the major Issues presently talks." ing urban Innovations; and $1 billion for experimental model- Fred Halstead, SWP candidate* Tor president, Is tito only oholao on the INTEGRATED CIRCUITS before the electorate, President To meet the "urban crisis," ballot to advocato unilateral withdrawal from Vietnam. Only he wants to Johnson has spoken often In de­ the President has proposed city projects which had provided brinft the GIs home alive, now. INCANDESCENT AND FLUORESCENT LAMPS fense of his administration. Most several "poverty programs," "the tools to carry forward the recently on Vietnam he announc­ housing laws, Job programs and nation's first comprehensive, Son. McCarthy thinks American troops should remain for as long as five SEMICONDUCTORS ed what he calls "a unilateral step other measures. Most recently, concentrated attack on neighbor­ years aftorthe shooting stops. Sen. Kennedy thinks they should stay as hood decay." long as neoossary. Neither man has Indicated Uiat the Vietnamese ought toward deescalation." He has In­ he has said, "If the promise of to decide. Or the GIs-. ELECTROLUMINESCENT DEVICES dicated his plans to halt all UJ5. the American city Is to be recap­ TELEVISION PICTURE TUBES aerial and naval bombardment tured, our cities are to be saved Mr. Halstead, advocating self-determination for all people, would pull out the troops and let Uio Vietnamese doctdo. RECEIVING TUBES LYNDON B. JOHNSON Some protest that thoUJU.ought to rebuild Vietnam, to undo the damage. ELECTRONIC SHIELDS If wo can ever undo the damago, it would be possible only at the requestor tho freoly eleoted government of Vietnam (not North or South), and If It were done in such a way as tho Inauro tho continuing autonomy of Vietnam. MISSILE LAUNCH CONTROL SYSTEMS Kennedy Gives Vietnam, Urban Solutions Foreign aid is all too often a club to use on other nations, a violation of work can make a significant con- self-determination only a bit more subtle than bludgeoning. INDUSTRIAL CONTROL SYSTEMS l\umiv/ujRobert F. Kennedyr , x^i.wwUnited rRober t Kennedy has ,called , wortrlbutlok cann makto e themselvesa significan, t contheir. States Senator from New York, time and again, for a complete families and the nation." Senator Mr. Halstead may not win. Hut where Is tho logic of voting for people DATA TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS for three years served President reappraisal of our foreign policy. Kennedy sees the riots as "not who disagree with one's view, just beoausothey will win? Under that rea­ He has made It clear that he soning, a vote for Nixon Is equally rational for antiwar activists. Votos Kennedy as both Attorney- simply an aimless burst of for Mr. Halatoad will have more impact thanwlll votes for either RFK or AIRPORT LIGHTING General and his closest adviser. does not accept the John Foster savagery nor the product of out­ McCarthy beoausethoy will express a gonuino protest, Nothing could bo Since January 1965 as the junior Dulles concept of International side agitators. It is brutal evi­ more futile than to vote for a continuation of dm same policy. LHJ did not politics. dence of our failure to deal with get us into Vietnam; Iko did. LHJ did not begin tho buildup of our Inter- senator from the state of New vent ion; JFK did. Hefore that, Truman's administration paid Tor 805. of York he has initiated and sup- As Attorney-General and today the crisis In urban America — the French effort.This war fs a product ofthls system, not of any one man, ported programs that have bene­ as candidate for President, Ken­ and of our failure to bridge the and votes for any member of the system are votes to continue it, ami tho nedy gives the black community wars It produces. fited every section of the state. widening gap between the affluent On the Issues that confront hope for change: "Negro Ameri­ and poor, black and white Ameri­ us In crisis year — 1968, Ken­ cans have been told to cast down cans," McCarthy and Kennedy aru very .nuch purt of tlm system. Neither are nedy has often spoken out. He has their buckets for work. But even In the wnr-rldden Middle East genuinely liberal. Hoth of thorn have poor records as far as civil liberties now, In the midst of the longest are ooncornod. Mo Cart hy voted for every House contempt motion during the been for the past three years Sen. Kennedy calls for "recogni­ (Joe) McCarthy witchhunt. RFK was Joe McCarthy's chief counsel. at vocal critic of our Vietnam period of sustained expansion in tion by all of the right of all policy. "What we must seek at our history.Negro unemployment nations to exist in peace, Inde­ Neither acknowledges his indebtedness to the antiwar movement, Tim And you still call us a phone company? any negotiations Is the self-deter­ continues at over twice the white pendence and security. It would antiwar movement, and parteilitrly the mass demonstration of April 15 and We really don't mind. mination of the people of Vietnam rate. Negro Americans have been be better If all arms shipments Oct. 21, has, besides our setbacks in Vfentam, been tho biggest builder told to cast down their buckets to the Middle East were eliminat­ of antiwar opinion in tho nation. ItFK and McCarthy owo their big oliauco Alter all, It wasn't that long ago that we were just in the telephone business. But —Including not only the present now to those thousands of ponplo who took to U*> streets. Where were they government, but also those many for an education, but equal edu­ ed. . , But If no agreement is when wo needed them? Why have they rejected invitations to speak at mass now, because we're involved in so much more, we need bright college graduates Vietnamese, Communist andnon- cations have not been allowed possible — If, as Is now happen­ rallies? with practically any kind of degree, whether it's in Engineering or Commerce. Communist, who are not now re. them. ing the Arab nations continue to S place nt director about us T presented In It. Only when all Let us stop thinking of the rearm — then the United States Fred Halstead helped to build those demonstrations and organize tho ,™ £ ZT ™ - he misunderstood phone company at people of Harlem as liabilities, antiwar movement. A vote for him Is a veto against the war, 730 3rd Avenue, N.Y. 10017. political elements In Vietnam are must act. Therefore I suggest a able to peacefully seek a share of idle hands for whom some sort policy of support, making avail­ Htudents have asked m; wliat lie; antiwar movementdoos when tho war power and responsibility, pre- of occupation must be found. Let able to Israel Jet aircraft so she is over. Klect HFK or M'-Carthy (lot alone Nixon) and you'll find out. I us think of them Instead as valu- can defend her borders and her voted for a peace candidate In 19u4-l.fi.). General Telephone & Electronics ferably through free elections, ROBERT F. KENNEDY will there be peace In Vietnam." able citizens, as people whose people," Page 6 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Monday, April 22, 1968 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS • P°9« 7 Lindsay: Outspoken Liberal Republican Reagan Critical Of "Open Housing", was elected area. He was re-elected three observers gave the credit to Mayor of la 1965. times. Lindsay. In the two years since then the By winning the 1965 mayor's Lindsay since his entry Into In November of '66 In a race the national issues of the day, under prosecution. race he became the first Re­ 46-year-old Republican mayor politics has been an outspoken rated as "crutial" by profession­ thus, all of his stands rest on his Immediately following bis Cali­ has become nationally recog­ publican mayor of New York Liberal. During his four years al political commentators, Ron­ 1966 gubernatorial campaign. At City since Fiorello LaGuardla fornia drive to victory, Reagan nized. In Congress he sided with liberal ald Reagan bested former gover­ that time he opposed "open hous­ was asked to comment on the Born to wealthy parents in Man­ in 1945. A liberal, Lindsay has Democrats more often than with nor "Pat" Brown by better than ing" legislation and was critical been criticized frequently by con. Negro question. He said, "When hattan, Lindsay attended Yale his own fellow Republicans. He I million votes and moved onto of the growing number of people demonstrators take to the streets University* He received his B,A. servatlve Republicans for lack has said that he hopes his party the national political scene. on relief. He called for fis­ of party regularity, particularly in disorder and rioting, then you In 1943 and his LL.B. In 1948. nominates a presidential can­ Shortly after his victory he stat­ cal responblllty In government nave to invoke the law, no matter During World War n he won Ave his support of many Kennedy- didate In 1968 who is "more ed that he would not be a can­ and opposed the "bigness" grow­ Johnson Administration pro­ who is breaking it And I also battle stars for action on a de­ dove than hawk." didate for the Presidency in 1968, ing in the governmental sphere. believe this: We have to turn to stroyer In the Atlantic and South grams. Elected mayor on a Re­ Lindsay strongly supports civil but that he would consider taking Reagan, in Ms 1966 race, publican-Liberal Party "fusion" the responsible leadership in the Pacific. rights. He goes further to advo. the "favorite-son" nomination. strongly attacked the "beatniks" Negro community and ask for After the war he practiced law ticket, Lindsay has tended to cate massive federal spending as At 57 he Is a middle-of-the- at the University of California play down his Republican party their help, instead of slttlngdown until In 1955 he was appointed the essential action for solving road Republican, though many and the "filthy speech move­ at a table with the self-appointed Executive assistant to Attorney affiliation. He was named to serve urban problems. years ago his affiliation was with ment." On a nation-wide scale on the President's blue-ribbon leaders who were the ones whose General Herbert Brownell. In His supporters say that, the "liberal" Democrats, Rea­ he believes In bringing back lo­ first reaction was to take to the 1958 be officially launched his panel investigating urban racial despite his wealthy background, gan was formerly a public af­ cal autonomy in dealing with rioting. He is believed to be very streets in violence." political career by winning a seat John Lindsay has a genuine un­ fairs official for General Elec­ crime and education. The Call- While Reagan has made no In the United States House of Rep­ popular in New York City and derstanding of the "little man." tric Corporation and a one-time fornla Governor has also been has won national publicity for public commitment on the Viet­ resentatives from New York's They point out that his personal movie actor. critical of the Supreme Court nam War Issue, he is believed 17th District. It Is often refer­ his personal visits to the slums trips to the ghetto areas last sum­ In recent months he has made rulings giving what he terms un­ of New York, As of et-ly Sep­ to be critical of the Johnson red to as the "Silk Stocking" Dis­ mer helped prevent large scale very few public comments on due protection to the criminal policy. trict because it Includes much tember, 1967 New York had been rioting In New York city. of Manhattan's plush East Side spared any serious racial riots; JOHN V. LINDSAY Rockefeller Is Available McCarthy: Dem. Dove, Rights Advocate Governor Nelson A, Rocke­ selections In non-primary states. but, he faces issues squarely Victorious in the New Hamp­ 6. Insist that the South Viet­ he outlined the "new civil feller, 59, Is a graduate of Dart­ He was booed at the convention and handles them with Imagina­ shire primary and projected to namese take on greater military rights," McCarthy advocates the mouth College, He served Presi­ for pushing a series of moderate- tion, vigor and skillful leader­ have at least 88 sure votes at responsibilities. extension to all Americans of dent Roosevelt. Truman and to-liberal amendments to the con­ ship. the Democratic National Conven­ 7. Reexamine military policy "basis rights which we now hold Eisenhower inaserlesof appoint­ servative platform. If the Republican's heralded tion In Chicago, Senator Eugene 8. Press the authorities In belong to every American." ive posts. He was elected Gover­ Rockefeller was an early sup­ McCarthy la now In serious con­ pragmatism has taken hold, they Saigon to broaden their own poli­ Among these are: the right to nor of New York in 1958 over porter of Governor George W. might nominate a man who, ac­ tention for the Democratic nomin­ tical base by bringing Into the work, medical care and a chance Incumbent Averlll Harriman, His Romney for the 1968 GOP Pres­ ation. He has made his views cording to many opinion polls, government some of the civilian at good health, the right to a victory bucked the biggest Demo­ idential nomination, but now the has the best chance to win. Rock­ known on all Issues presently opposition elements which were house In a community, guaran­ cratic tide in years. Democrats latter has withdrawn. Nelson before the electorate. efeller himself Is skeptical of denied a role In the government tee to every American a mini­ gained 13 seats In the Senate, 46 Rockefeller Is not actively seek­ polls. He realizes they can change To end the war In Vietnam, even though they had received mum livable Income, and the seats in the House, and Increas­ ing the Republican Presidential overnight under the Impact of McCarthy has proposed an eight 2-3 of the 1967 election vote right to an education, . .the ed their control of governorship nomination. But, despite his con­ events over which he has no step military deescalation policy: On the question of the recent right to the fullest possible In­ from 29 to 39, In the face of this tinuous denials, he Is Indeed control and he knows also that 1. Stop the bombing and seek riots, Senator McCarthy has said, tellectual development and. . .to rampaging donkey, Rockefeller available for what he described the convention delegates who negotiation "Our response must be neither the retarded and mentally 111 In scored a landslide victory with as "the toughest Job anywhere choose the nominee may pay 2. Halt the escalation and to retaliate In anger or to sup­ our society. , .the right to de­ a plurality of 573,000 votes. In the world." His noncandldacy little attention to polls. Unfor­ freeze troop strength port Improvements as though they velop to the fullest potential of Rockefeller was then In turn re­ Is subject to change. tunately, Rocky's apparent popu­ 3. Cease attempts to uproot were a bribe to prevent further their personalities. elected In 1962 and 1966. He Is senior In point of ser­ larity among the people Is much the Viet Cong from areas they riots or, as some have stated, As a vote getter, McCarthy In 1960 he helped force In­ vice among all 50 governors. greater than It Is among his have controlled for many years as though to reward those who has been phenomlnal, never hav­ clusion of liberal planks In the For the past 10 years he has party's professionals. 5. Conduct a gradual disen­ rioted," "The alienation and Iso­ ing lost an election In his 20 Republican platform. In 1964 he dealt successfully with water and William H. Nlckerson. stated gagement In the South and a lation of the poor today Is not years on the political front. He contested Goldwater In a series air polutlon, narcotic addicts, ex­ that there is a broad commit­ ceasefire on a trial basis in some the work of a brutal few but the taught public school and college of Presidential primaries. Gold- pansion of higher education, ment to Rockefeller as an In­ areas while pressing for nego­ Indifference of many." for 10 years, has four books to water, however, had the nomina­ poverty, race and transportation. dividual most eminently quali­ tiation In his policy statement In which his credit- tion sewed up through delegate His record is far from perfect fied to be President." NELSON A.ROCKEFELLER ,...., .... . EUGENE J. MCCARTHY Military Victory, Anti-Welfare Nixon Stassen Candidacy- Fifth Try Though he Is only fifty-five There's no known cure for passing up a single opportunity beliefs remarked: "The three the problems posed by our urban 's White House to Impress the voters. was an unsuccessful candidate lor the California born Republican passions of Quakers are peace, areas but that the short-range the GOP gubernatorial nomina­ has been elected twice to the bug. He has been a candidate Stassen became worried as civil rights, and tolerance. That's problem of the riots must be for the Republican nomination Dewey continued to cut away his tion In in 1958 and House of Representatives, once why, as a Quaker, I can't be an forcefully solved without any fur­ 1966. He was also an unsuccess­ to the Senate, and twice to the for the presidency In 1948,1952, support and gain In the poll's. extremist, a racist, or an un­ ther delay. 1960, 1964, and now in 1968. Then Stassen made a mistake ful candidate for Mayor of Phil­ Vice-Presidency of the United compromising hawk." The of 1908 Is adelphia In 1959. States. His onlytwopolitical loss­ Stassen Is a graduate of the that was to be the beginning of Despite his description of him­ much changed from his political University of (B.A. the end for him; he challenged In 1964 his name appeared on es were to John Kennedy for the self Nixon Is generally consider­ appearance In 1960. Characteris­ the ballot In three primaries or Presidency In 1960 and to Pat 1927, LL.B. 1929). He was elect­ Dewey to a radio debate. Dewey ed a hawk as far as the Vietnam tic of the '68 Nixon Is a more ed Governor of Minnesota In 1939; was able to combine a lawyer's preference polls: New Hamp­ Brown for the governorship of conflict Is concerned. Our pres­ relaxed manner and an Improved shire, Indiana, and Texas. In New California In 1962. he became known as the boy way with argument with a for­ ence In Vietnam Is the "cork In appearance. wonder In politics as he was midable voice to completely out­ Hampshire he received 1,5 per When he lost to Brown, It look­ the bottle" of World War HI. He In theimportantprimary states only 32 years old at the time class his opponent. With more cent of the vote, Indiana 28.8 ed as though Nixon's political urges military victory. —New Hampshire, , of his election. In 1943 he en­ than 200,000 votes cast, Dewey per cent and Texas 3.8 per cent. career was at Its end. He said With due care and precision Nebraska and Oregon — the Nixon listed with our armed forces beat Stassen in Oregon by 9,000 In fact his name was never placed to newsmen on that occasion: Nixon Is building the Image for forces were or presently and temporarily left the arena votes and went on to win the de­ In nomination In the '64 GOP "Just think how much you're go­ himself as the foreign expert are neatly organized. In New of politics. signation of the Republican Party. Convention. ing to be missing me. You won't among all Republicans, Indeed Hampshire and Wisconsin Nixon In 1948 Harold Stassen looked 1968 offers us another presi­ have Nixon to kick around any­ Stassen served as President of the breadth and depth of Nixon's captured more than 80 per cent as If for a while he would crush the University of Pennsylvania dential election: Harold E. Stas- more because, gentlemen, this Is knowledge of foreign affairs Is of the votes cast In the GOP pri­ Thomas E. Dewey's bid for a sens once again expressed his my last press conference." from 1948 to 1953 when ho ac­ Impressive. maries. second GOP nomination. Stassen cepted a position as Mutual Se­ availability to the Republican Despite an extremely lucra­ Though he had supported civil Nixon has staked out a notably won in Wisconsin and Nebraska curity Administrator which he Party. His name was placed on tive practice as a lawyer in New rights legislation, Nixon has nev­ mobile position somewhere In and the Gallup Poll showed him held until 1955. In 1955 Pre­ the ballot In New Hampshire and York the Itch for politics soon er really sought the Negro vote. the center of the Republican po­ running ahead of Dewey through­ sident Eisenhower made him an Wisconsin; the Board of Direc­ brought him back Into public life. In his opinion present welfare litical spectrum. Supporters be­ out the nation. The two met In assistant on disarmament ques­ tors of Choice '68 meeting In Though lie has not held office for programs for the poor and needy lieve that Nixon Is the one man a Ufe-or-death struggle in Ore­ tions with Cabinet rank. Washington, D.c. decided to in­ seven years, he has frequently clude his name on the ballot for are misguided because they make who can bring together the con­ gon and, although Stassen appear­ In 1956 he unsuccessfully stumped the country for Repub­ no attempt to solve the real prob­ flicting groups within the Repub­ ed to have a head start, Dewey the first National Collegiate lican candidates, Nixon when ask­ sought to prevent Nlon's reno- Presidential Primary. lem of poverty. He contends that lican Party in the 1968 elec­ put up a vigorous campaign, not mlnatlon as Vice-President. He RICHARD M. NIXON ed to comment on his political It will take many years to solve tion. HAROLD E. STASSEN Peace, Home Ownership-Percy Planks Wallace Makes State's Rights Issue and North as well, Wallace has , former Gov­ then a Judge, then finally as a declared that ho might turn over ernor of Alabama and husband governor for four years. He has the country to the police for a Illinois Senator Charles Percy, fessor, In the election for the usually deep for a newcomer to for quite some time been at United State Senate; he won and of the present Governor, may year or two to straighten things a young-looking 48, Is frequently elective office. In his grasp of war with (lie federal government has been eyed for the Presidency foreign policy, the racial situa­ find himself In a position to out. As far as the Vietnam ques­ mentioned as a "dark-horse" over the civil rights Issue, first candidate for the Republican Pre­ ever since. tion, and education Senator Percy turn the United States political tion goes, Wallace has usually sidential nomination. Percy Is one of the leading seems to be well ahead of many scene topsy-turvy next Novem­ as governor and now through his not stressed tills referring more ber, Already he has political wife. During his early childhood In "doves" among the Republican veteran politicians. to crime. When Wallace has presidential candidates. He has Early last fall, Senator Dlrksen groups In more than half the George Wallace claims that he spoken of It he usually states in Chicago, his family lived a fifty states trying to get his does not truly advocate a segre­ while on relief. In high school he said: "We owe It to the men who announced that he would support the he would rely very heavily must fight our wars to promote his junior colleague for the name on a third ballot. gated nation. He merely asserts on the advice of military aides held four jobs at one time but was the right of each state to de­ a stralght-A studeny At 23, the peace and peaceful contact In "favorite son" nomination from If Wallace actually runs . . .When he speaks of protes­ every way we can. If we must Illinois at the GOP convention. for the presidency, lie could con­ termine whether or not it wants ters to the war he usually re­ ambitious young man was a mem. Integrated public facilities as ber of the board' of Bell and accelerate the war — as the ad­ But Mr. Dlrksen has not always ceivably win enough votes to pre­ fers to them as traitors who ministration says we must—then appreciated the aggressive Percy vent either the Democratic or well as the state's true place ought to be dealt with as such. Howell Company, At 29 he was as that of more sovereignty. Its President and a mtlllonnaire. let us also accelerate the pursuit manner which Is considered by Republican candidate from ob­ What makes Wallace such a of peace," traditionalists to be unfitting a taining a majority. In such a The breakdown of law and order,' strong possibility as the person He became chairman of the says Wallace, Is the number one who could throw the election Into Percy was one of the principle freshman senator. case, according to the constitu­ national Republican Platform tion, the election would be thrown issue In the upcoming election. the house In his dynamic person­ Committee In 1960. He made an supporters of the National Home Supporters say that Percy has Much of Wallace's support comes ality and a latent fear which ex­ Ownership Opportunities Act, a shown himself to be an Imagina­ into the Houso of Represen­ unsuccessful bid for the Illinois tatives, This body would be re­ from blue collar workers who are ists in the hearts of many Amer­ governorship In 1964; many claim measure with the aim of provid­ tive, capable business executive. afraid of riots and the general icans who claim to be anything ing private homes to low Income His political appeal plus hit quired on a one vote one state— that his defeat was due to a great basis to choose the President raise In the crime rate In re­ but prejudiced. Supporters claim extent to his support for Barry families. youthful energy and probing In­ cent years. Wallace is turning he has the leadership qualities tellect, they fell, make htm stand from any one of the five loading Goldwater as the GOP's national Charles Percy showed In his candidates. out large crowds of supporters and dedication necessary to fight standard bearer. In 1966 he chal­ first year In the Senate a wide above other Presidential candi­ where ever he goes. This means the centralizing tendency of the lenged Senator Paul Douglas, his range of knowledge about major dates. The forty-eight year old law­ yer from Clio, Alabama has ser­ that he is finding support not government today and stop the former college economics pro­ issues. Not only wide but un­ only In the South but In the West violence In our cities. GEORGE C. WALLACE CHARLES H.PERCY ved bis state as a legislator, ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Page 8 Monday, April 22, 1968 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Page 9 W« Dtswvi To Fain An Opinion: Poll OnVietnam War, Cities EDITORIAL Guest Editorial CHOICE Storing Committee

It has become evident after viewing recent events Form Part Of Choice Ballot that the phrase "Public Opinion" has some meaning. The three referendum ques­ maintain current level, Intens­ "The conservatives' chances President Johnson's withdrawal from the presidential tions placed on the CHOICE '68 ify, and use of nuclear weapons. of winning In CHOICE '68 are ballot were chosen and worded The third referendum- ques­ not as minimal as some liber­ race as well as his decision to halt the bombing and be­ tion reads: "In confronting the Housing Survey—Finally gin negotiations with Hanoi was undeniably influenced by the National Directors, to als would like to believe," the Spring represent the most Important Is­ 'urban crisis,' which of the fol­ National Directors Indicate. by this catchword. sues of the day and to give, lowing should receive highest pri­ "The politics of the right to­ had not been made to dispense this Information But just to show people that collegians have the by the choices offered, the best ority in government -. spending: day are more the politics of Each city has Its ordinances to insure that representation of opinion held (1) education, (2) Job tralnlngand Look from the walls of this dirty alabaster to established local organizations like the mental capacities to form opinions Is not enough. charisma than any other polit­ the homes within Its limits meet certain health on each of these Issues, employment opportunities, (3) ical wing on the American scene, NAACP, and Committee on Community Con­ housing, (4) Income subsidy, (5) campus and see the signs of Spring. Spread and safety standards. One can easily wonder We students should get out and vote to demonstrate One of the directors, Strobe "A glance at the CHOICE '68 out' before the onlooker is the green grass and cerns. Perhaps the City of Albany will also that we deserve to form an opinion. We should show Talbott, said that he felt the riot control and stricter law ballot would tend to Justify op­ about the strictness of the Albany housing enforcement." sunny skies, the girls studying in their bi­ be able to use the results. that the opinions we have formed have been weighed Vietnam referendum in particu­ timism. Predictably enough, the codes as he rides through the South End and lar must be "properly phrased These propositions Include liberal vote will probably be ex­ kinis, and the guys studying. Lectures are Arbor Hill districts. If the results of the survey are seriously as to their consequences. The university students as towards alternative solutions" both the viewpoints of the right tensively fragmented with no steadily progressing from being boring past considered by the city fathers and If they well as students across the nation have shown that and Indicated that a simple "yes and left among the choices as overrlddlng numerical superior­ We are glad to see that the Urban Center or no vote" would fall to regis­ well as middle of the road stands. times to being weekly occurances that must be react to these problems In a positive manner, they desire the right to have a say in what goes on in ity being enjoyed by any single Orientation Program will be conducting a hous­ ter accurately the profundity of The National CHOICE Commit- candidate or stand. then Albany's fear of a summer punctuated by their country. Ten students from the university were pro and antiwar sentiments on tee has urged both factions to take avoided If possible by student and pro­ ing survey In these areas. It Is about time "The result could be a surpris­ fessor. street rioting may never be realized. arrested because of this; and for what other reason the campus. active parts In the deciding of ingly authoritative conservative somebody did; too bad It Is not the City of "To aid the directors In en­ these Issues. The buses, that occasionally have been known Chicago has recently experienced the In­ are there groups on campus such as, Students for a victory, one that would rock the Albany. suring that the various questions It Is felt by the Committee leftists more than anything else" to run late or not at all, will probably be on ability of a political machine to cope with Democratic Society and Young Americans for Free­ were properly pointed towards that "CHOICE 68" will prob­ The Idea of using students from the Univer­ commented the National Commit­ time now winter is over and students can wait the problems of the ghettos. Albany may prove dom. achieving maximum Impact and ably either solidify the skepti­ tee on the various possible out- cism of the campus radicals or in warm weather for buses that do not have sity and citizens from the area is an equally to be a second example before the year ends, clearest Interpretation, the meritorious plan. This Idea serves the pur­ CHOICE '68 can be as important a primary as that board met with several top poll cause them to re-evaluate their to deal with the cold.Maybe. If the political leaders of this city do not re­ and survey experts before the thinking as to the actual polit­ pose of bringing the University and commun­ of any state. CHOICE '68 will not only show how stu­ The lawns'' are cleared of snow and mud, spond to the needs of the South End and Arbor wording of the propositions was ical power of the vote." ity closer together as well as providing more dents feel today, but it will be a foreshadowing of decided upon." "The ballot Is, certainly, NOTICE and the pedestrian can now cut across them workers to conduct the survey. Hill. events yet to come. This primary has the ability to Proposition One asks: "What well stlcked with leftists and and ignore the side walks. The maintenance moderate - liberals, and the Viet­ There will be a meeting Nor does It take a close look at Arbor Hill It is our hope that the city leaders will do any number of things, it could possibly catapult course of military action should crews probably will be putting the snow fences consider the results of the survey presently the U.S. pursue in Vietnam" nam referendum questions for State Fair Booth Chair­ or the South End to see the need In the very any of the nominees to a position of national promi­ with five alternatives reading should satisfy the most extreme back up to prevent the lawns from being ruin­ man at 7:30, in Humanities near future for new housing projects. With this being conducted by residents of Albany and nence, it could determine the vice presidential nomi­ in part: Immediate withdrawal, of the radicals. The current anti- ed. It Is not the crew's fault, it Is E.D. administration feeling among 109. All groups participat­ in mind the survey will attempt to discover University students. If the ma­ nee, and on the negative side it could very seriously phased reduction, maintain cur­ Stone's. He forgot that he was not building chine cannot present a responsible govern­ hurt any of the prospective candidates. rent level, Increase, and "all students would also seem to In­ ing must be represented. what type of dwellings the present slum resi­ out" effort. dicate that a leftist vote Is a Locations will be given robot tracks when he planned the sidewalks. ment to deal with these and other ghetto prob­ distinct possibility." dents would like and could afford to live in. Perhaps the most important effect of this primary Question Two concerns the out, the procedures for By Gripe lems they may find their machine broken, not course the U.S. should follow In "The one fact that Is certain This Information will be a helpful aid for any will be that of the test It will pose. Prof. John Saloma, outlined and questions will by the slum dweller or activist, but by the dis­ the bombing of North Vietnam Is that they do have a chance evolving construction projects. The usefulness a political science professor at Massachusetts Insti­ to mobilize and express them­ be answered. gusted ordinary citizen of Albany. with choices: permanent ces­ of this survey would be nil, If arrangements tute of Technology, best expresses this point: "CHOICE sation, temporary suspension, selves meaningfully and effec­ JRuth Stemfield and Vic Looper tively In CHOICE '68. '68 Is a test of the will and resourcesfulness of the Co-Chm. State Fair. Coffee Circuit young people — a test of strength between the young Due to the talented 'Sounds Unlimited' and the fore­ and the establishment. By taking a serious attitude sight of the Campus Center Governing Board, the Coffee towards this primary and by turning out In large NOTICE Eugene McCarthy House Circuit finally picked Itself up from the ground numbers to vote, students can show that they do count Since the Office of Res­ and started serving a useful purpose. Prior to this 0 as a political group." This quote by Prof. Saloma truly idences has agreed to ex­ month, the Circuit provided sluggish entertainment which brings the primary into a light that students can not plore alternative meal for President. merely broke up the beer guzzling, Jukebox playing rou­ CHOICE68' escape. It has been placed as a challenge to us, one plans and arrive at a de­ tine of the Rathskeller. that we are sure we can meet. cision by April 26: The Governing Board wisely moved the entertainment This is the chance for each student to do what he Students should not choose any board options area from the Rathskeller to the west end of the ca'?- has been claiming is his most ardent desire, namely (INTEGRITYEUGENE MCCARTHY has the courage of Take Your when they turn in their to have a role in determining his and his country's his convictions to speak out on Vietnam, awakening terla. The noise in the snack bar made listening to housing packets during future. America's conscience by backing his words with hi the performer virtually impossible. The switch might the week of April 22 to 24.' not have worked so well If it was not for the 'Sounds candidacy. Choice: Vietnam Strike On Friday At me general informa­ Unlimited' who provided the atmosphere which the tion meeting to be held in Cafeteria lacked. (Continued from Page I) include Dwtght MacDonald; each residence hall during Sondra Silverman, Political (EXPERIENCE EUGENE MCCARTHY has served in The group itself attracted a surprisingly large crowd the week of May 6-10, to The Thursday teach-in will be Scientist! Richard Mummer, Har­ Congress for Twenty years, acting on important com- each night. Their popularity by the end of the week was select rooms, students will' held either in lecture room 3 vard Chaplain; Richard Neustadt phenomenal. People sat, stood, and leaned wherever they Today or outdoors — weather permit­ Jr., Harvard; Hugo Dedau, Tufts have the opportunity to could find room. Many attended four, five, or more of ting. It shall begin at 2 P.M. University; David Mermelstein, either select the broad and last until midnight. Political Scientist from New York the shows. The group received Innumerable standing ova­ plan desired from the plans EUGENE McCARTHY has spoken out Thursday teach-in speakers City, George Heln, chemist from LEADERSHIP tions and performed encore amidst shouts of "more." Tomorrow shall include several poets: Newton, Mass.; Lewis Kampf, available or cancel their on all the important issues; Vietnam, the crisis in our National Director of RESIST; the Mitch Foster, head of the Coffee House Circuit, an­ Harriet Zlnnes, from Queens room contract for Fall cities; combatting of Inflation, education and the need College; Blnk Noll, Princeton; adult draft resistance support 1968 and select off campus nounced that the next entertainer will appear from May group, and Gordon Rhodes, draft for vital new programs in Civil Rights, Agriculture and and Murlal Rukeyser, New York housing. 6 through May 12. Wednesday City, In addition, speakers shall reslster, Public Service.

EUGENE MCCARTHY MADE VIETNAM AN 10 a.m..4 p.m. ISSUE.

EUGENE MCCARTHY WAS THERE WHEN CAMPUS AMERICA NEEDED HIM This •ipui.iul CHOICE 68 election i wus prepared and' tr the int auspices of Iho Albany Student Pri nd tl,o CHOICE 68 Steer 'i') Committee. All articles pertaining tci tliu National Collegiate Pro- I JLTIIIOI Primary were written and screened by the Commit!,-,- • :, that CENTER LOBBY EUGENE MCCARTHY DESERVES YOUR VOTE! heir non-portisan nature Mould be preserved. Where quotes appear they ore either Ihose of the candidate'. I've Got My Eye On The Man. ,.,lve-, or ol the National Dlro( tors ol CHOICI , and are '.a labloi riouncemenl //a', mode in the April cj A!>P lhal -J(Jvortl-.lht| -.Do- inaVAN HEUSEN' o/ailoble for any candidate and/or poMtion, and all adverti- Today and labled ,r. such. "417" VANOPRESS SHIRT ol this paper rtere prepared bj ih. ndltui YEARBOOK f ond bear relationship '" tin- h And what I see of my classy mate, I like, Linda It. iicnlan and John ,1, Cromlu I like! Ruggedly built, but with a cool, suave Co-Editora-in-Chiaj Wednesday look,,, just like his permanently pressed VanHeusen "417" Vanopress shirt. It's the PHOTOS Sandy I'orter William Cleveland Managing Editor Coordinator one with new Soil-Away process that washes out stains and collar soil without Signups forthe second and final round of yeai Jill I'aznik Joff Mlahkin 4:30 - 6 p.m. scrubbing. Complete with authentic button- book photos will betaken after Easter vacation, on News Editor S.A. I'resulunt Mildred PolxonHkl down collar and V-Tapered fit, In tough, the bulletin board opposite the Campus Center In­ (jury Goll turned-on stripes, checks or solids. Gee, I Arts Editor CI'C Chairman formation Desk as before. Shooting will begin on KoNemary Canla just can't take my eyes off him. Funny, Duncan Nixon DINNER LINES I don't want tol Monday, May 6. Sports EdUor Election Commissioner Harry HONH nary Hold Proofs from the first two weeks of shooting will Publicity'Vote Drive Chrm ifl Now from Van Heusen.,. I'lioto Editor be collected in CC305 starting Monday, April 29, IJnila lliriliiii ALL QUADS the scent of adventure,,. Passport 360 ThomuH Nixon and will continue through that week. Assist. Sports Ed. Publicity Chairman ... the first to last and last and lastl ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Monday, April 22, 1968 Pag* 10 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Page 11 DEAm LIST, SPRING '67-'68 COMMUNICATIONS

suggestions. upset the labor market. It Is a ilized their entire financial and College Of Arte And Sciences- Office Of The Academic Dean The letter also quotes certain Morris L. Ernst, "Jewish Self- euphemism to say that America behind-the-scenes connections to Not A Signer statements of the Vice President Segregation is Reactionary," stood by while six million died; sabotage all other effort to get for Student Affairs, Clifton Council News (New York, Ameri­ Wolkoff, Susan A. To the Editor: America might have signed their Jews out of Europe. Their haven xAbbott, Rita . Klohck, William Pep*. Alida xValenttne, Catherine xWeiss, Evelyn xWelnsteln, Barbara Thome. I have no direct know­ can Council for Judaism) May, Egan, Maureen Wolman, Rise S. A letter appeal trig for contribu­ death warrent." must be Palestine and only Pales, Abrama, Cindy xEkelund, Theresa Klueg, Richard Pequlgnot, Marsha Valentine, Sally xWest, Lester xWelsberg, Gloria J. ledge of what the Vice Presi­ 19S0, p. 2. See "What Price Yepez, Laura L. To show that you are either tine." (Cited In brief (New York Addona, Joan Erlkson, Diane Knapp, Alan Person, Christine Valvo, Rosalie xWetterau, Elizabeth Welssman, Lois tions to the Dow Defense Fund dent said on that occasion. Dr. Israel?", pp. 32-34 and Morris L. Petroskl, Patricia Young, Donald B. misinformed or fabricating, I American, Council for Judiasm) Ahlers, Robert Faden, Glenn Kobetz, Steven Vandenberg, Hendrlk White, Nell xWelker, Douglas B. was recently circulated on cam­ Thome Informs me that the quota­ Ernst, "So Far So Good," (New Koch, Jacqueline Vtekllk, Sunn White, Stuart xWellensteln, David E. Zaharatos, Daniel W, would like to cite some quota­ Jan. - Feb. 1963. Albartson, Joan Fahs, Joseph VanDyk, Albert xZawisza, Laurence J, pus. My name appears near the tion attributed to him Is sub­ York, Harper Bros., 1948), pp. Kohn, Ira Pope, Brian VanLuvanee, Carol White, Susan Wells, Gabrlelle M. tions to you from the Jewish Aldrlch, Margaret xFalsant, Nancy Zimmerman, Fay bottom of the second page of that From the abovej you can see 170-77, for a further discussion xFallesen, Karen Kolb, Catherine Poppel, Barry VanVllet, Martin xWlnner. Andrea Wendel, Lillian A. stantively Inaccurate. literature. Allen, Suaan Pound,Barbara Zukowskl, Irene A. letter. I was contacted prior to that both Jews and Arabs are of the refugee problem. Altman, Thomas Faoro, Victoria Kosnlck, Kathleen Verbrldge, Judith Wohlgemuth, Carol Whitman, Ruth M. I agreed to collect andforward In his book "The Other Side Preston, Mary the issuance of the appeal and victims of Zionism. Sabl Abullbdeh Amato, Joseph xFelnsteln, Ellen Kotuls, Jane Vllches, Theresa Wolf, Michael xWiedrlck, Marlene L. Dow Defense Fund contributions of the Coin," Mr. LUlenthal Kowalewsky, Ludmll Price,Patricia Wachna, Joan xWoodln, Gretchen asked If my name could be used Ambrosl, Sylvia xFeldbauer, Jacqueline Wlesenvelder, F.J. because I share with many people states, "It was Morris Ernst, xFeller, Eileen xKracke, Louise Prlslopski, Mary Walsh, Linda Worden, Frances xWilllams, Peggy A. as a person to receive and for­ Amedore, George Prymas, Joan in the University community a a civil-rights lawyer and well- Archltzel, Reba xFerguson, Richard Krlnsky, Renee Wanzer, John Wrubel, Trudy xWllson, Susan M, ward contributions by check to Puis, Carol x-Cumulatlve average repugnance against the use of known liberal, who drew attention Arnold, Donna Ferro, Deborah xKrotch, Sheryl Wassersteln, Gary Wyand, Linda Wlnchell, Thomas P. the Dow Defense Fund. xFerruzzl, Isabelle xKupferberg, Judith Putnam, Vlckl Welsbrod, Madeline Wylle, Norah 3.0 or above campus facilities by a company to the 'sabotage by Zionists' of Our Nation Needs Rockefeller xArzt, Judith xQuant, Susan xWlner, Jane L. I willingly consented to serve Feuersteln, Sally xKurtz, Mona that derives Its profits In part a World War II plan of President xAvery, Eugene Lalosa, David Racite, Madeline In that capacity. However, the Babcock, James Flchera, Catherine from the manufacture of a product Roosevelt to rescue 500,000 peo­ Fisher, Pearl Lambertson, Sharon xRatynskl, Maureen text of that letter contains cer­ (napalm) designed for the Balber, Stephanie xReardon, Kathleen ple from Hitler by providing a Foehrenbach, Susan Lannler, Verne tain statements concerning the destruction of human life. I plan Bancroft, Roberta LaSalle, Hilda Reynolds, Janet world-wide political asylum" be­ Barber, AnneMarle Foltz, Patrick Dow demonstration about which to contribute as generously as SUPPORT Reynolds, Noreen Ford, Linda Lasker, Alan University College- Office Of The Dean I have no direct knowledge. Ifeel cause this would open other doors Bartnlck, Kathleen Foster, Marilyn Laurlcetla, Theresa Rhodes, Paul I can to the Dow Defense Fund than Palestine. Bartoszek, Genevle Rice, Stephanie Impelled therefore to state that and urge others who share my Fox, Elaine Leedecke, Susan Lee, Anne A. Prehn, Mary E. "He quoted Roosevelt as saying xBattaglino, Diane Richards, Barbara English, Maryann M. I am not a signer of the letter xFoxman, Daniel xLeenhouts, Susan Alkman, Cola L. xLefevre, Louis H. Psyck, Barbara A, opinion to do likewise. that the projected rescue plan was Beale, Bunny Frank, Helene Leschen, Laurence xRlcker, Margaret Ambrosino, Timothy Epke, Ann L. Quattrocchl, Louise A. and that the use of my name as James R. Johnston STRENGTH & MODERATION Lefever, Stephanie A. Beck, Alexandra Lesse, Lynne Riebesell, John a signatory was not authorized. dead: 'We can't put it over be­ Franks, Larry Amltrano, Jr., Anthony A, XErdman, John P. Leggierl, Gerald M. Rablnowltz, Rosalyn Associate Professor of Becker, Diana xFrasure, Nancy Levlne, Jeffrey Rlganatl, Pamela XEsposlto, Barbara I did not see a draft of the text cause the dominant local Jewish XAmorosI, Brian M. Lennon, Gerald A, Rasmussen, Susan Education. Becher, Cynthia Friedman, Richard Liff, Judth Rogall, Carol Anagnost, Janice L. Eransburg, Eric R. Recchla, Carol leadership of America won't Rokaw, Sue xLevenberg, Susan G, until after the letter had been Becker, Rona Fritz, Claire Llpson, Diane Ancowltz, Sandra R. XEverett, Joanne Reckhow, Starr C. stand for It.* " Beckert, Dona Roscher, Marianne xLevett, Carol A. distributed. Fryc, Marguerite Lis, Donna Archey, Susan J. XFalrchlld, Lynn A. Levin, Marsha G. xReed, Maureen A, "It's impossible. Why?" ask­ xBeckerman, Jeannette Lohr, Linda Rosenberg, Amy The letter states, for example, Gallati, Richard Armao, Mary L. Falke, Ellen M. Levlne, Marcia R. xReese, Gerard F. A Lesson ed Ernst. Bell, Ira Gelt, Gary LubatWn, Michael Rosovsky, Barry XAttwell, Michael T. XFarrell, Michelle A. that "President Collins refused Royallmlnns, Renee Levy, Joyce N. Relneck, Lillian Roosevelt: "The Zionist move­ NELSON A. Bennlnger, Diane Germlller, Jean Lubltz, Leonard XAuerbach, Susan I. Felczak, Mary A. to consider any changes" in re­ Rubin, Lisa LItke, David W. Rendall, Susan M. To the editor; ment knows that Palestine Is and Benvenuto, Stephen Geronlmo, Jeffrey Luplca, Mary Carmel XArln, Laurel A, Fertal, Anne M. xLivlngstone, Mary xReuthlnger, Gary M, cruiting policy. I have no way Lupo, Paula Ruffer, Sandra In your recent off-center, Berman, Linda Gilbert, Barbara XBackhaus, George R. Feuerbach, James R, Lloyd, Deborah A. xRezen, Susan V. of knowing whether or not the will be for some time a remitt­ Bernstein, Barbara Gilchrist, Patricia Lutz, Dorothy Rugglero, Mary Jo Bagg, Richard A, March 15, you have said the ance society. They know that they Ruglno, Joanne XFlnkle, Lee J. xLokenberg, Elizabeth A. xRhlne, Leonard A. President "refused to consider" Bertrand, Raymond xGlorglo, Veronica Lyons, Susan Bain, Donna Lee XFlorenza, Mary A. xLong, Sharon E, following, "President Roosevelt can raise vast sums for Palestine Berzok, Karen Manlerl, Margaret Ryan, Michael Rich, Denlse O. any changes. My limited personal Going, James XBalmenti, Marie A. XFleet, Sheila M. Luke, Joyce E. Rlchman, Joel S. knew of Hitler's planned geno­ by saying to donors, 'There Is no Bette, Nina Goldschmldt, Douglas Marino, Noreen Ryman, Susan Barkln, Roger S. contacts with Dr. Collins have ROCKEFELLER Lynch, Arlene M. Marshall, Kim xSammartano, Susan XFolts, Jr., James D. xRlckman, Cheryl R. cide but would not allow this other place this poor Jew can go,' Btsgeler, Rlsa Goldstein, Gall XBashuk, Audrey . Ford, Susan E, xMacNalr, Wendy E not lead me to believe that he Is Bordwell, David Marten, Linda Saperstone, Jerry Robblns, Hazel D. knowledge to be publicized . . . but if there Is a world political Gordon, Francis XBaullng, Joanne S. Fowler, Gall E. Madarasz, Klnga lntractlble nor that he Is un­ Black, Ann Gordon, Diane Massonl, Donna Sassl, Joane Robbins, Jerry M. nor could he allow Jewish refugee asylum for all people Irrespec­ XBehrns, Gary M. XFrahn, Sharon L. Magln, Kevin D, willing to consider criticism and xBrandman, Frieda Gorman, Barbara Mathlas, Terry Saul, Roger XBender, Carl S. xRoberts, James N. children to Immigrate here and tive of race, creed or color they Schachne, Sydney Fry, Susan D. Mahoney, Mary E. Brethauer, Andrew Gossett, Nancy Matson, Anne XBenyo, Patricia A, Rogers, Ellen C. cannot raise their money. Schachter, Richard XFurey, Patricia R. Manchester, Katherine Romeo, Domlnlck C. xBrotman, Arlene Gossett, Nancy Mattson, Irene Bergman, Robert L. xMaiin, Paul S. for "Then the people that do not xBrown, Susan Gottfried, Betty McDermott, Stephen Schaefer, Felice XBerney, Myron H, Garcia, Richard L, Root, Christine Schafler, Dorothy XGardella, Jennifer M. Many, Lois J. want to give the money will have Budzynskl, Valerie Gottfried, Harvee McGrath, Patricia XBetts, Elizabeth M. xMarko, Michael Rose, Leslie K. Buglada, John Gozdzlalskl, Judith Meadows, Marilyn Schilling, William XBlodgett, Barbara A, Garoza, Valdls Rosenberg, Stanley H. an easy excuse to say, "what xSchmld, Robert XGates, Walter E. Marshall, Marilyn E. Burdlck, Brent xGrodson, Lucy Meeker, Mary XBock, David E. Masters, Geraldlne E. xRosensteln, Carol I. do you mean there Is no place Burns, Joseph Gurian, Amy Mehr, Marsha Schoenbaum, Linda XBonadles, John L. XGekas, Vaslllkl V. xRoss, Barbara S. Schultz, James xMattlson, Susan they can go but Palestine? They Byron, Deborah Gurowsky, Davie Mendalls, Brynn Booth, John A, Gerber, Michael S. xMattox, Judith Rourke, Pamela D, are the preferred wards of the PRESIDENT Carosella, JoAnn xHack, Diane Mlcklos, Diane Schure, Adrlenne XBordwell, David J. Gero, James F. Ruzow, Eileen A. Scura, Georgia Matturro, Richard C. world." Carrozza, Steven Hallenbeck, Ellen xMlerek, Virginia Bordwell, Linda F. Gerwltz, Carol xRyvlcker, Alan G. xSeamon, David xMcBrlen, Alan F. Ernst's detailed charges were Carter, Jill Hamtl, Robin Mlerzwa, Constance Bordwell, Robert J. Glllen, Evelyn M. MCCrann, Maureen xSaari, Duane J. Cavanaugh, Colleen Handschur, Jean Miller, Carol J, Seldel, Linda Bove, Richard A, GUmore, Susan J. further substantiated by Michael Seymour, Nina McCredle, Kathleen R, Sager, Linda M. xCerquelra, Maria xHastlngs, Deborah Miller, Carol A. Bragg, Elizabeth F. Giorgio, Veronica A. xMcEUIgott, Cornelia xSaldln, Ellen L. Astour, Yiddish language teacher Charette, Susan Henderson, Linda xMiller, Nancy Sldenworn, Sheryl XBranca, Barbara A. Slegel, Sharl Glavls, Dennis McGrath, June E. Salinger, Lynn K. at Brandeis, who in the Free- Clark, Margaret xHerc, Ursula Miller, James Brochsteln, Naomi Gnlazdowskl, Judith McKeon, Patricia M. Saltzman, Doris M. land Magazine (Sept., 1962) de­ xCleveland, Maureen Herget, Georgette xModleskl, Tanla Silver, Joan XBrown, Virginia M. Slrutls, Leon XGoldberg, Hollls Mende, Dennis W. xSamuels, Janle S, clared that he "did not need Cobb, Joan Herrlck, Theodora Moeller, Monica Brownell, Virginia A. XGoldberg, Rhode C. xMercadante, Judith A. Montecalvo, Janet Slauson, Thomas Sandberg, Karen S. Hecht's book to learn of the fatal xCole, Roberta Hertzel, Joan XBryant, Leonard W. XGoodman, Kathleen A, Mercurlo, Therese C. Saneskl, Joseph J. xComstock, Donna xMorse, Karen Sloane, Barbara role which Zionist leaders play­ Herzllch, Allan Bruck, Jane A. xGordon, Barbara J, Merkelson, Scott J. xSchaeffer, Peter D. O'lbertson, Kathleen Hockberg, Andrew xMbsher, Barbara Smith, Diana Brucks, Roberta M. ed in the '30s and '40s. Smith, Judith Gorka, Robert J. xMeyer, Lorraine J. xScher, Edward M. Culbertsuu, Margaret Hoffman, Elizabeth xMotsavage, Melva Buck, Dennis G. xGould, Rae S. Meyer, Theodora C. "Instead of doing everything Cypert, Susan Hofstatter, Ellen Mott, Carol Softer, Joyce Burns, Joseph J, xScheublein, Mary L, Spence, Margaret Goyette, Margaret T, xMlller, Karen E. Schmilowltz, Rita possible to rescue Jews, they ut­ 12,23,24 xDavls, Emmett Holmes, Karen Mrochko, Kathryn Burton, Mary M. Miller, Philip A. Muchow, Carol Speer, Alma xGroschadl, Ellen Schucher,Deborah Davis, Gary Holtslag, Karen XBush, Linda A. Grossman, Michael D. xMlller, Stephen Davis, Robert Holzer, Nerl Myers, Donald Speyer, Robert XCalro, Francis L. xSchuster, Barbara Splvak, Carrie xGruner, Doris B. Mills, Christine E. Schwartz, David F. DeLillo, Maria Honan, Carol Myers, Eugene Callfano, Judith A. Mills, Susan E. DeLucia, Linda Howard, Nancy Nellan, Richard Steggs, Howard Hagin, Julian M. xScott, Ronald L. XCallo, Louise R. Hall, Warren A. xMlshkin, Jeffrey A. Denman, Bonnie Hunt, Sandra xNewman, Ellen Stelnhardt, Doris Cardarelll, John N. xSegal, Gary E. xSterbak, Ilonka Halsey, Patricia A. Mlsiano, Barbara N. Devlne, Betty xlkler, Linda Newman, David Carrature, Elizabeth G. Mitchell, Elizabeth J. Selbst, Howard L. Dirake, Russell xlseman, Robert Nicholas, Susan xStern, Ellen Chape, Suzanne K. Hammond, Carole L. xSerapilio, Janice A. Stevens, Stuart xHarrls, Carolyn R, Mitchell, Sharon A. •I ";• ' .7 'j^'i' Dlsclplo, Richard Israel, Sharon Nicholson, Barbara Chemnitz, Emily C. Mlxson, Madeleine C. xShaffer, Charles L. Dlsplgna, Reglna Jackstadt, Kris Nigro, Anne Stevens, Thomas XChernlck, Jane V. Hare, James E, Sharf, Fern M. Straight, Kendall Hayes, Lynda M. xMolander, Henry Dobrowdski, Linda Jeffs, Deborah Nobbs, Cleo XChicone, Carmen C. xMoell, Thomas xShaplro, Barry P. xDohnalek, Stephen Jordan, BettyAnn Novak, Robert Strlck, Katharine Chrabas, Linda A. Hefner, Judith A. Sharrow, Joel D. STROMEI, Martha xHenry, Barbara L. xMontgomery, James W. Domarackl, Alan Josephson, Kenneth xNovlck, Karen XClark, Carol xMoore, Nancy A. xShelman, Barry I. xDomlngo, Frances Juckema, John Nuccl, Johanne Subik, Nancy XClark, Walter J. Henry, Gretchen A, Sussman, Barbara Morgan, James E, xSlegel, Jane F, Dornan, Ruth Juda, Gall xNuss, Harriet XClendlnnen, K. L. Henry, Richard A. Slegel, Richard L. Swindler, Nancy xHerman, Annllee xMorrlson, Vlckl A. Draper, Clifton Judson, Nancy Obadla, Lynda Coble, Allen E. xMosclwskl, Genevieve M Simon, Barbara A. Dreher,Frances Kagan, Nell Ollara, David Swinger, Debra Collea, Joseph D, Hlesclak, Susan G. Szymanski, Suzanne xHoffman, Allen C. Mowers, Carol A. xSlsca, Diane L, Drucker, Mark Kannar, Joseph Ohara, Dorothy XColetta, Suzanne H. xMoyer, Kathleen M. xSkow, Beverly C, Dubln, Robert Kanson, Robin Padrusch, Ennld Tallent, Charles Comeaux, Karen A, Holt, Carol A. Tamburr, Joseph xHolz, Franclne R, xMuller, Michael J. Slobln, Ellen I. DuBols, Diane Kaplan, Cheryl Pallay, Allen Comlsar, Linda E. xMurphy, Dawn L. xPantley, Gall Tenenlnl, Dlanne Hotallng, Carol A. xSloboda, Claudia M. xDunn, Elizabeth Kaplan, Jay XConnell, Barbara xMurphy, Patricia A. xSmlth, Carolyn E, All You Need Is Love Pash,Cherle Tlbbetts, Carol Hotallng, Kay C. Dunn, Nancy xKatz, Robert Connors, Cynthia R. xMurray, Kathryn J. xSmlth, Diane A. Dunne, Laura Passamonte, Paul Tocco, Providence Howard, Sandra L. xKeenan, Maureen Cook, Bonnie J. xMysllborskl, Judith A. Smith, Larry E. xDurfee, Marcia Klllnskl, Frances Patrick, Mary Trazaskos, Karen Houghton, Loren B. Cook, Donald M. Nadell, Marsha G. xSmlth, Marjorle A. After all, it's what makes the world go 'round in Dwyer, Mary King, Leslie Pavy, Michael Tyler, Kathy XCook, Garrett W. Humphries, Mary Turner, Marilyn xHuptlck, William F. xNestuk, Janice L. Sovocool, Letha A. Dzlark, John Klein, Phyllis Pecoraro, Carole XCook, Linda L. Nichols, Marilyn J, that wonderful, once-in-a-lifetime way. The en­ xEagen, Laurie xKllgerman, Maxlne UMva, Jacqueline Cornell, Stephen J. xlnclardl, John xSpauldlng, Larry Isaac, Carol A. xNlckerson, James L, xSpokony, Harvey gagement ring you choose says so much about Courter, Jean K. xNlxon, Duncan XCovert, Mary A. Iwanonklw, Mary E, Springer, Craig T. your love . . . and should it be a Keepsake, the Jacob!, Leslie A. Noble, Jean M. Standlsh, Richard E. Edelsteln, Lynn XCramm, Mary Noel, Oscar A. 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Deble, Susan J. Olson, Cheryl J. Taylor, James S. XDenby, Phyllis A, Kandel, Lynn I. xTomesvnry, Anne xKarplen, Ronald J. xO'Nell, Kenneth XDenby, Prlscllla L. xOsdoby, Judith M, Tencza, Phyllis J. {Alger, Ann XDenlson, Barbara A. Katz, Lois I. Flllberto, Daniel J. Jenny, Carol E, XPlrslc, Margaret M. Kavanagh, Coclle M. xOstrowsky, Barnet xTerry, Kenneth _._. REGISTERED ., Archer, Kay V, Fischer, Donald It. XJudge, Michael P. Power, Constance R. De Paolo, Nicholas J. xOwen, Janice A. Thomas, Gall A. Dl Donna, Ronald J. Kazlauskas, Edward Ash, Clayton S. XFish, Daniel XKllfoyle, Robert E. Prior, Ronald H. Keldan, George xPanken, Stephanie J, xThomas, Robert epsa Bailey, Paul R. XFIsher, Sharon A. XKlelnman, Dennis XRelchelt, Paul A. XDUaura, Cynthia L. Paplsh, Nancy 11. xThoiington, Ann M. XDIxon, Susan E. xKondlg, Anne V, TCeDIAMON ep D sRING aukreS ® Bazlen, Barbara K. XFunaro, Anthony KUmacek, Janet P. XReohr, Eugene Kessler, Bonnie E. xParker, Nancy L, Torzlllo, Nancv D. 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'^fPM Pog# 12 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Monday, April 22, 1968 Opening Game Captured By Eleventh Inning Run ALBANY J by Roy McCloot 15 STUDENT An eleventh Inning single by Jack Slnnot followed by Jim Sandy's fourth hit of the game and a Bridgeport outfielder's miscue gave the Albany State varsity baseball team an opening game victory, 4-3, over the highly touted Connecticut squad on April PRESS : : 11. In their next game, however, the Danes were held to Cas Golka's lone single, as ••",-" •••[ W-• •'\ •:-.:•• '•'"''' .'The Central Connecticut capitalized on eight Albany errors en route to a 5-1 triumph over the napless Statesmen. Central Connecticut's Brendan Burke recorded 12 strikeouts STATE UNiVEKSlTY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY as the winning pitcher. George Webb hurled the Track Club Impressive ALBANY, NEW YORK FRIDAY.'MAY 3,1968 VOL. LIV NO. 23 last 6 and a half innings in the Bridgeport win, giving up only one run and six In Meet At Brandeis by Phil Golvin hits while picking up the Albany State's track club par- Moshenberg was also second In Brinkley of NBC News win for the Danes. tlcipated in their first meet of th"•e- tripl'-"-•e- jump by one Inch with Albany was held scoreless un­ the year against the Brandels, a 42'3" jump. til the fifth Inning when Sandy Boston State and Rhode Island The club is encouraged by the Track teams at Brandels. Boston results of the meet. The mile To Speak At Inaugurations and Jim Rourke singled, Joe St. Onge reached base on an error State was first with 71 Vi points. relay, 2-mlle, 880 and 100 yard Albany was second with 49>/£ by Tim Keeley MEMBERS OF THE VARSITY baseball team were forced to to load the bases, and Rich dash were lost by a yard or less a larger crowd than the candi­ he joined NBC News In Wash- points, Brandels was third with and several men turned in Im­ Staff Reporter date. play eight games during vacation through a fluke in sched­ Spears walked to bring home the lngton, working in the network first State score- 33 and Rhode Island was last pressive performances, Mike No­ David Brinkley of NBC News Brinkley contends he is a re­ with 8. bureau until he and Chet Hunt­ uling. Only ten more games face the Dane batters. Two Infield grounders pro­ lan was especially Impressive as will be the guest speaker this porter, not a personality, and ley were paired as reporters duced Albany's next two runs, Albany outscored all Its op­ he ran the 440 In 52.5 and later Sunday at the inauguration of he tries to make clear the Im­ ponents In the running events. for "The Huntley - Brinkley Re­ with no one getting credit for anchored the mile relay in 51.8. the new LAAC and Central Coun­ portant difference. port" in 1956. the RBIs. Don Meyers and Larry Grederick Sol Moshenberg's 22'2" long cil at 2 p.m. In the gymnasi­ Brinkley was born In Wilming­ were first and fourth respective­ In addition to the Inauguration Sudden Death Playoff Bridgeport's runs were spread Jump promises strength In that um. ton, N.C. on July 10, 1920. He of the new LAAC and Central ly lh the mile. Mike Nolan's event. Don Meyers looked good "One thing I try to do," got his start In news, after throughout the game, as timely 52.5 and Frank Meyers 53.8were Council, the student ambassa­ hitting by Joe Santos (four hits) as he ran a 4:31 mile and follow­ says David Brinkley, explaining high school and a stretch In the dors for next year will be an­ barely edged out by Boston ed with a 2:04 half, Scott Price his newscasttng philosophy, "Is Army, on his hometown paper, Cap*>s Golf Victory accounted for all of his team's State's Ladlow's 50.9 mark. In nounced. tallies. He was credited with run- who was fourth in the 220 and to write scripts with the ut­ the Wilmington Star-News. Inauguration '66 Is being spon­ Bill Pendergast calmly tapped shared medalist honors with Mc­ the 100 yard dash, Basil Mor­ second In the javelin will be a most simplicity and clarity. If He then Joined the United In a two-footpar putt on the first Cloat for State with an 83. batted-ln and two runs scored. gan was second and Terry sored by MYSKANIA '69 In con­ In the Central Connecticut dependable performer. Fred­ a line or two of background Is Press for three years. In 1943, junction with Parents' Weekend. sudden-death playoff hole to win Craig Luther, another return. Mathlas was fourth. In the 120 erick, Gepfert and Rolling will needed first to have the main his match and give the Albany game, Albany scored on two walks yard hurdles, Kevin O'Dell placed Ing letterman, gained an easy and Galka's single. The score provide depth In the two-mile and element of a story make bet­ State golf team a fine 4-2 triumph 4-3 win In the number five slot. fourth. In the 220 yard dash, Joe McAndrew's 2:02.4 half was ter sense, I put it In, then get over Central Connecticut f ollege was tied at one apiece at the top Basil Morgan finished first In Luther shot a fine 84 for the of the fifth Inning, but then the very strong. to the 'lead' a little later." Collins Lauds Teach-In, on Tuesday, April 16, at the round and looked like he has 22.1 while Scott Price was fourth. Such an approach works In loser's course. Blue Devils pushed across two In the half-mile, Joe McAndrew finally regained his last year's runs on two singles and three Regatta Called television Journalism, as the Pendergast and his opponent, form. finished second In 2:02.4, a mere success of "The Huntley - Brink- Albany errors, giving them the tenth of a second behind the Makes War Comments Bill Thomson, finished all even Newcomer to the varsity lead for good. ley Report" on NBC-TV proves, Angelo Matra suffered a 5-4 set­ 2:02.3 of Brandels' Gage, with President Evan R. Collins dis­ In their match-play contest, The Blue Devils added two Sailing Club 2nd but Brlnkley's reporting skill would have In my classes." To necessitating the playoff. The back In his first appearance for Don Meyers fourth. Larry Fred- grew out of years of experience cussed the Teach-in, the war In more runs In the sixth Inning with erick finished second In the two- A lack of wind prevented all this statement a round of ap­ team score stood at 3-2 at the Albany. Matra experienced a case as a newspaper reporter. Viet Nam and related Issues at plause went up among many of of rookie jitters on the front nine, the help of two more State mis- mile In 9:59.5, a new club re­ 16 scheduled races from being Monday's President's Confer­ time. The two golfers played In cues, leaving the final score at held in the Kings Point regatta In addition to many broad­ the students present. cord. Pat Gepfert was third and ,r ence with Students. the number three slot for their but settled down the backside to on Saturday >rll 6, but the DAVID BRINKLEY WILL speak in the new gym during the Next a question was raised over come home in a solid 42. 5-1. George Rolling was fourth. The casting honors, Brinkley was schools and shot Identical 36s The bright spots In the young Albany Sailing Club was tied inauguration of Central Council and Living Area Affairs Com- chosen for the 1964 Golden Key A crowd of over 80 students Intimidation created by profes­ for 18 holes. The match was played at Indian m lie relay team of Frank Meyers, season thus far lias been the Jay Kaplan, Don Beevers and for second at the time of the Award by six leading educational packed the Patroon Lounge, to sors who counted absenses on In the number one position, Hills Country Club, a tight, tree- cancellation. organizations for his significant hear President Evan R. Collins' Thursday and Friday as double studded and amply trapped course pitching of Webb, Oalka, and Rich Mike Nolan ran second In 3:36.6, Albany's Gary Turton rallied Patrel, as the staff's earned- just behind Boston State's 3:35.4. In the races that Ubany was contributions to the national wel­ comments on the teach-In, Viet­ cuts. to win the last three holes to that measures 6500yards.Noone fare. nam War and related Issues last came close to matching Its par run-average Is close to 1.50. The field events, as expected, able to compete In John Sargalis "This action would Indicate score a 1-up victory over Mike State had a total of six games were a weak point due to a lack and Joe Sullivan combined to Monday afternoon. O'Leary. Turton was plaqued by 72 on this windy afternoon early Dr. King Scholarship President Lyndon B. Johnson that some Instructors made the In the year. over the Spring recess, with of facilities for proper practice. for a win, while Charley Bow­ appointed him a member of the Collins lauded the Teach-in by choice for students of whether Iron problems all afternoon In games against Harpur, Oswego, Scott Price and Don Beevers man teamed with Marge Straub carding an 87. National Council on the Arts. commenting, "It was well organ- or not they should attend the Looking for Its first winning and Plattsburgh remaining as of were second and fourth In the for a fourth place finish in their To Aid Disadvantaged lzed and effectively run." teach-in," quipped one student. Number two man for Albany, season In three years, Albany this date. javelin, respectively. Steph race. Sargalis and Bowman ser­ Brinkley and his New York- This student also asked what RayMcCloat, bowed to Gil Pratt, will be facing stiff competition b based colleague, Chet Huntley, When asked why he didn't speak Next weekend, April 26-27, Al­ Smiegel was fourth In the dis­ ved as skippers, while Sullivan y Borb Grossman Mr. Lynch; faculty, Walter President Collins would do If a as the Central Connecticut golfer from such schools as Hamilton, bany will vie with Siena and Pots­ cus and Tom Sears was tied for and Straub were crew. both entered journalism early at the event, he declared, "Look. student had to drop a class be­ scored a miraculous par three on The Ad Hoc committee .or Knotts, John Gunnell, Nell In life and worked their separ­ Siena, and Utlca Colleges as well dam (doubleheader) In local con­ second In the high jump, Sol Sunday's activities were call- the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Ing back now In retrospect I would cause of absenses stemming from the 200 yard 17th hole to stave as area competition In theCapltal Brown, Donald Whltlock and ate ways up until they met at have spoken, but last Monday tests. The Potsdam twin-bill Is Moshenberg was first in the long ed off In respect of Dr, Martin Jr., has advanced the hope to George Brewer; Staff person­ the teach-In. off a late McCloat rally. Pratt City Tournament on May 1st. at home. Jump with a 22 fit. 1 in. mark. Luther King, thus the regatta NBC News In Washington. when I made my decision the Is­ was deep In the woods off the raise up to $25,000 In King's nel (CSEA), Robert Whlttam; "I would try sweet reason with . jump wiiii a zz nt. 1 In, n was never completed, but Al­ name to help the underprivileg­ He Is bemused by such In­ sue was too confused." the professor to get you back In," tee. and Civil Rights Groups, Gwen cidents as the time he was cov­ A student then Interjected, "I 6 9 bany's second place finish In a ed. McLaughlin. Collins said, "This Is all I can Junior Dave Brelter registered field of eight, that Included Ste­ To demonstrate united con­ ering a candidate In the 1964 learned more last Thursday and do." A Team Falls To Union in Final (Continued to Page 6) Oregon primary and attracted the most lop-sided victory of the 9 vens Institute, Southampton, cern for one of America's most Friday at the teach-in then I The topic then shifted Into the day, as he downed his Central Maritime, St. Francis, Urslnus, pressing problems (America's war In Viet Nam. During the Connecticut foe, 6-5. Brelter After Beating Siena and Union 'B Lehigh, George Washington, and poor and their plight), and to course of the discussion Collins Union A worked the ball In­ N.Y.U. Is certainly encourag­ Union A worked the ball In- together ail year longlnnir_. ThiThus Hmtimoe quit-..••e- a- bi. •t• •to- be desired, but help the disadvantaged, the theme Over 800 Reached At Teach-in expressed his personal convic­ side, rebounded well, and play­ it really showed. The Union team ing. of the fund raising drive and tions about the war* SUNY Swimmers ed strong defense as they rolled the teams were very evenly worked the ball In close for good matched, and the quality of com­ The Sailing team traveled to the subsequent scholarships will "I feel we have made errors In to an easy 51-42 win over Al­ shots, while Albany was forced West Point over the vacation, be to honor King and his Ideals. Judgment that have caused us to Take AMI A Meet bany A In the finals of the area's petition was high, thus It seems Genocide, Draft Discussed to shoot from the outside, and that the extra-murals proved to and have two minor regattas In a meeting held last week, become deeply Involved," Col­ first basketball extra-murals. no one was hot, so the Albany remaining. One on April 11 at Tom Lynch, graduate teaching by Ira Wolfman dents, who responded witn ques­ sion witn otner speakers In­ lins remarked seriously, "Pres­ A PA won four of seven events, be a good thing, that should be cluding David Marmelsteln, an The Albany team was slow squad fell behind and never man­ continued. Hobart, and the Associate mem­ assistant and chairman of the new Staff Reporter tions concerning the voyage's le­ ently our position Is morally and but the SUNY swimmers took and unable to generate an attack economist of Brooklyn Poly- both relays and showed just aged to catch up. ber championship at Princeton. Scholarship Committee stated: gality and her current status with politically lndefenslve." in the early going, so Union Albany A reached the finals "Our demonstration (the fund "Aren't we all guilty of gen­ the government. tech. enough depth to gain first place ocide by Implication?" Dr. Hugo He further advocated that we pulled away quickly and went on by scoring a close 57-55 win drive) Is designed to Influence Following that, Prof. Hugo Be­ McDonald had previously dis­ should "pull out" without losing in Albany State's first Intramural to lead by at least 6 for most Bedau, one of 30 speakers at cussed the relation between pol­ swim meet. over Siena on Wednesday, and people by (1) action, and (2) dau, professor of Philosophy at face. of the game. then scoring a tight 60-59 over­ APA Defeated By KB results." the teach-in held here Thursday Tufts, discussed the War Crimes itics and the war In Vietnam. The final score of the meet and Friday, April 25 and 26, He called this the "Most unpop­ Collins was then confronted Albany started to close-In on time win over Union B on Thurs­ "Action, In this campaign Is Tribunals held last year. He ad­ with a petition signed by over was SUNY swimmers 68, APA several occasions, but each time questioned his audience. The guilt ular war in American history." 62m STB 44, and UFS 40, as day. The game with Union had getting as many people as pos­ mitted to those present that he 300 students that advocated a the Union squad came up with a real story-book ending. Union In League I Opener,8-7 of the American people was one had no special knowledge of the This was followed by poetry only four groups competed. sible Involved to show the depth of the many topics aired at the course In social problems, the basket when they needed It. led throughout the entire game, AMIA League I Softball action of our joint committment. 'Re­ Tribunal's work — simply what readings. All the actlvltes on BUI Churchman took two firsts In two runs In the second for teach-in. Thursdav were soonsored by High men for Union were Bob but the Albany squad slowly clos­ got under way the week before TXO, and his squad led 2-1. sults,' In this campaign, Is get­ he had read In four sources, for APA, scoring In the 50 but­ Seefrled with 14, Bill Prescott Drawing speakers from (Continued on Pg. i) (Continued to Page £) terfly and the 100 yard Indivi­ ed the gap to two with less than spring recess, and In the lea­ However, Potter picked up one ting the largest sum of money including "War Crimes In Viet­ with 13, and Barry Helden with a minute remaining. Gary Torino gue's opener, KB dumped the possible." schools such as Tufts University, nam," by Bertrand Russell, and dual medlay. Other winners for In the third, two In the fourth, Harvard, Princeton, RPI, and 11. Priscott played on the Un­ then stole the ball and lost It, defending champions, APA, by and one In the fifth. TXO came Acquiring money for the fund an article In the February Issue APA were Pete Pavone In the ion varsity at the beginning of Buffalo State, the teach-in reach­ 50 yard breaststroke, and Jim stole It again and missed the a 8-7 score. back with two In the fifth, on will be mainly a university ef­ of Ramparts magazine written the season, but he quit, and lay-up, stole It for a third time, ed over 800 students, accord­ by Jean Paul Sartre (which ac­ Doyle In the 50 yard freestyle. The game was tied 7-7 after a single by Ovalle, but Potter fort. Four university groups, fac­ ing to estimates by teach-In lead­ was, according to Union's rules, and threw In a long jumper at seven, but KB came up with the clinched It with two In the ulty, students, personnel, and al­ cused the United States of gen­ Craig Flood of the SUNY swim­ eligible for Intramural play. the buzzer. ers. ocide In Vietnam). mers took the 100 yard free, tie breaker In the bottom of the seventh, on a double by Larry umni, will be solicited for funds. Mary Ann McNaughton of the Scoring for Albany was well Albany then outscored Union by eighth. Dave Goldstein opened up Marcus, and singles by Dan Crip- Many faculty members have Richard Mumma, a chaplain while STB's Mel Brosterman was spread, as there were no real Philadelphia Quaker Action first In the 50 yard back stroke, one In the overtime, mainly on with a double, moved to second pen and Jack Adams. considered pledging as much as Group opened the Thursday ses­ at Harvard, on the "Problems standouts. Denny Elkln and Rich the foul shooting of Torino and on a wild pitch, and then scor­ Crlppen recorded 8 strikeouts 10 per cent of one month's sal­ of Conscience In Relations to and UFS's Pete Klara copped Spiers hit for 9, while Dave sion of the teach-In by discus­ the diving. However, the SUNY McCloat. High scorers for Albany ed on a sacrifice fly by Buzzy and yielded only four hits In ary to the fund. The minimum sing her recent voyages to both the War" stated that "dissent Is Goldstein and Ray McCloat con­ were Dave Goldstein with 12 and Ostrowskl. recording the win, but his con­ needed from the undergraduates not a privilege or right — It swimmers scored In the 200 tributed 6 apiece. North and South Vietnam on the yard medley relay and in the Ed Cole with 10, APA had jumped Into an early trol was not sharp, as he Issued alone Is $5,000, and for the total Is a dutyl" Again Albany was playing medical supply ship Phoenix. She 200 freestyle relay. The officiating and the organ­ lead, as a double by Mike Gil- seven walks, Mike Stacy took the scholarship, $10,000, but It is addressed approximately 50 stu- Richard Neustadt, junior at against a team that had worked ization of the tournament left mar tin and a triple by Rich loss for TXO. hoped that the total will reach Harvard, and a supporter of Rob­ Marglson highlighted a four run In other League I action STB far above the minimum amount. ert F. Kennedy for President, first. KB bounced right back how­ parlayed six hits and four errors Hopefully, the fund will be In offered his Ideas on how change ever, scoring two In their half for 9 runs In the first, and they effect by next fall, or as soon MYSKANIA could be brought about by work­ Northway Taxi For All Your Taxi Needs of the first and then four In then stumbled home to a 12-10 as possible. It will be a con­ ing In what he termed "the the second, two of them on a win over the Clinton Comets. tinuing memorial with scholar­ The members ofMYSKA- system." home run by hurler Ray Cascla. Both teams were very sloppy, ships created from the interest NIA wholeheartedly sup­ At the evening session, Gordon S atiffactien — 24 Hour Service APA came back with two In the while the principle will remain Rhodes Jr., who refused Induc­ but the hits were numerous, as port the present drive to fifth, KB then scored once In STB got 14 and Clinton 11. Dick Intact. tion into the Army this past Unlike Any Other (Service - Prompt, Dependable, the sixth, and APA got one In Woytek was STB's standout, as Solicitation of funds from stu­ establish a Martin Luther February, discussed his ac­ the seventh to send the game he had three hits and turned In dents and student groups will King Memorial Scholarship tion with the students present, ***»»onab|» into extra Innings. Cascla got a fine defensive effort. Tom Pot­ be under way very soon. About Fund and we sincerely hope Rhodes cited the 13th amend­ the win for KB, while Roger ter was Clinton's top hitter, as 150 people are needed to con­ that many other individuals ment to the Constitution, which New - Located at 1533 Central Ave. Northway Exit #2 Wright took the loss for APA. tact students on a door-to-door prohibits "Involuntary slavery" he rapped three hits Including a and groups will contribute Potter Club also scored In homer in the fourth. Dune Nixon basis. as a basis for his opposition to You Can Reach \)B at 869-8850 Its opener, gaining a 7-4 win got the win despite eight walks, Those In charge of the cam­ to the fund For this reason, the draft. over a stubborn TXO squad. and Marv Cole was tagged with paign are:students, Jeff Mlsh- MYSKANIA is donating Author - critic Dwlght Mc­ VIETNAM TEACH-IN last week featured two days of speak­ George Margam's single drove the loss. klnj graduate students, Lew $100 to initiate thedrive Donald of the New Yorker mag­ Llvermore, Tom Llckona, and azine . Joined in.» panel discus- ers and dialogue offering various viewpoints on the present war.