State University ol New York at Albany Friday, November 8, 1974 UESDAY I. University pi New York at Albany Vol. LX1 No,42 NOT—br 12,1974 Danes Rise in Polls, Face Easy Task Tomorrow by ItsZuckerman curried Ihe ball 12 times for 140 Saturday. Ihc quarterback com­ categories. "This was a good win is an excellent receiver, but can't Soc Department Chairman Albany State travels to yards and • two touchdowns, in­ pleted 21 pusses and the Alhuny over u good football team. It was an make up for what his team obviously Piutisburgh tomorrow to face an op-' cluding a run of 60 yards on the se­ defensive secondary was unable to especially fine game for spectators." lacks. ponent than can hardly be called im­ cond play from scrimmage. defend itself. All of fair's com­ . He was referring to Ihc offensive Overall, the Plattsburgh team Faces Reappointment Turmoil pressive. Ihc Great Duncscomeinto Orin Griffin and Glenn Sowalskie pletions were short yardage tosses, capability of the Danes. does not impress the Albany also had impressive games at Curry. as Ihe Danes did not allow him to Plattsburgh. the opponent scouting stuff. Ihc Grcut Dunes- this game after their tlncst offensive by Bob Msyer The Student Press interviewed a Griffin rushed lor 115 yards in five throw deep. . tomorrow, is 2-5 on Ihe season. defeated Piutisburgh last year 32-0. showing of the season. "The whole thing is about to blow score of faculty and students and carries and scored two touchdowns, Ihe buries exited from their 50-23 I heir problem so fur hus been a luck The scouts feel that last year's per­ Last week against Curry, Albany up. Either the administration makes found, among other things, a crippl­ Sowalskie carried the hall five limes victory at Curry without any serious of offense. The team cannot sustain u formance is no indication of what dominated the second half both a decision now or they are going to ing case of low morale. When we for 80 yards with one touchdown. injuries. Offensive tackle Dom Ron- scoring drive. The defense is on the the Danes are capable of doing to offensively and defensively. After spend the rest of the decade picking guaranteed that no one's name Highly rated fullback lorn DcHlois cone suffered a bruise to his hand field often, due to Ihe inefficient Cardinals. this kind of victory against a tough up the pieces." The faculty member would be used in the story and that did not have a good day statistically, that has not been resolved to date. offense. Therefore, they lire before In lasl year's victory, the Danes school, one can only imagine what did not want to be quoted by name, our primary concern was todiscover but he blocked excellently to open Doctors feel that Dom cun play Ihe end of the game. were given many scoring oppor­ the Danes will do to a lowly oppo­ but summed up the overriding senti­ the reasons for the present and holes for the other bucks. tomorrow, but it will not be certain Aside from the fact thai the tunities from the incapable kicking nent. ment of the Sociology Department, former low morale, faculty until kickofftime. defense is constantly on the field, in­ game of Plattsburgh. The Danes Ihc Curry game found John Ber- Ihc one bright spot for Curry was that Chairman Ray Forer must not members, students, and others juries to key pluyers have hurl received Ihe ball live times inside lu/zi having probably his best game their sophomore quarterback loin Coach ford gave an overall im­ huve his position us chairman renew­ associated with the department Plattsburgh even more. John Cass in, midliekl due to poor punt and ever. John was 2-2 passing for 73 lair. Dane Coach Hob ford praised pression of last week's game as a ed. began to talk freely about the situa­ solid team performance in all at middle guard, is the best defensive kick-off coverage, I his year I his same yards and one touchdown. Bcrluzzi fair for his excellent play-calling last The faculty had been informed tion. lineman on the squad. However, he is likely to occur. Plattsburgh is lack­ that a decision on Forer's renewal as may not sccuclion tomorrow against ing in the kicking department and For apprehensive graduate chairman would come by November Ihc Danes. the specialty tennis. students und untenurcd faculty I, but, Vice President for Academic The defense, as a whole, is very Ihc problems lacing Plattsburgh members, the Student I'ress Affairs Philip Sirotkin claims that good. They are not a disciplined in containing the Great Danes are investigation was particularly was not the case. "There will be no squud. yd they do the job well. Bill humorous. Uy Ihe end of Ihc gume. threatening. One graduate student decisions until after the external Callahan, at middle linebacker, calls the defense will have hud a long remarked, "Our degrees are on the review committee hands in their the- defensive signals. He was called workout by chasing Hcrtuzzi and line. We fear reprisal if we speak out report." He said thai such a report "a great athlete with good football Company up and down the field. against the man." Another student would be released in the middle of sense" by Coach ford. I he Albany Slate Great bancs tire said, "We grad students have a next semester. Flallsburgh's coach, Roger currently ranked seventh In the different interest than Ihe faculty. ilawiky In many respects the Sociology Casciani. believes in free substitu­ Lambert Howl poll. This game We huve lo deal with each other, and Sociology Department Chairman Ray Forer is receiving some opposition in reappointment bid. Department is no different from tion on defense. It hus been his habit tomorrow should be a boost to Ihe we arc self-serving. We want to get other departments within this un­ lo shuffle sevontecrtpluyers through judges. With only one game remain­ through our degrees. Graduate on to say, however, that "he is u personality and his often had judg­ iversity. The department luces petition was drafted. According toa the first siring defense. He is forced ing, next week against R.IM., the studentsarc easily intimidated. Thai ruthless person and his style offends ment in his dealings with people, his serious cutbacks in funding, because notarized statement signed by the to do this during the gume. because Danes musl finish strongly lo have a is part of the academic gume." u lot of people." record as a sociologist is mediocre, of across-the-board budget cuts this same faculty member, the following the defensive unit is kept busy by the shot at the Lambert Howl. Hut for muny it wus more than a Ihc faculty hud been told by Dean forer. as a chairman of n major year. Junior faculty members are events occurred: waning offense. Couch ford wished to decline game. The tenured faculty was more of Social and Behavioral Sciences, department in a university center has concerned about tenure, especially forer explained that he was dis­ I he Plattsburgh defensive secon­ comment on the Lambert Howl. He open and more critical of Chairman Richard Kendall, to comment on somewhat questionable academic in light of the tight job market. In turbed about the petition calling the dary is very stingy. They will be vir­ is not going out of his way to gain Forer, clearly a majority believed retention of forer as chairman. Ac- credentials. In ihc 20 years since his January, a group of "well-known" action "inappropriate, unnecessary tually impossible to beat with the favor with the judging committee. that the department needs a chair­ cording to several of the graduation from Yale, he has sociologists are scheduled to and immature." He continued to say long pass. However, the wishbone When a game is out of reach, lie will man who can avoid alienating as department's personnel, Ihc out­ published only six articles. Only two evaluate the department, and their thai life behavior of Ihosc faculty attack of John Hcrtuzzi can compen­ substitute his second string rather many people us Forer has. come of this vote was 14 to 2 against of them appeared in what are critique will make suggestions about members was analogous lo "juvenile sate by sprinting outside and using than roll up a score, liven the second One faculty member asserted, renewal, generally considered prestigious the program, particularly the delinquents." flic faculty member combinations ol sweeps and short string should have no trouble offen­ "Speaking up against the chairman Basically, the question sum­ journals. A former department hole Masters und the PhD programs. then proceeded to ask forer "what passes. It is doubtful that the sively or defensively against may hurt the department at a lime marizes as why is there such a degree faculty member was prompted to about those who signed it'.'" "They However, in other respects, the The Grlddere In action in their last game, venus Brockport. the Great Dane* are now ranked Plattsburgh defense will contain Piutisburgh. just prior to external review, but we of sentiment against thechairmanby say "forer would have difficulties have placed themselves in jeopardy" Sociology Department's situation seventh in the Lambert Bowl Ratings, and travel to Plattsburgh tomorrow. Bcrluzzi for u lull game. This should Bus lo Plattsburgh have been silent too long. I have seen members of his own faculty. The getting tenure today in a junior he replied, forer told the faculty appears to be unique. It suffers from be a field day for the statisticians. There will be a bus load of students abused, talent wasted, und answer is a complicated one, that college." member thai he (forer) had not ex- more than the usual squabbling, per­ On offense, Plattsburgh is non­ students following the Dunes to money thrown down the rat hole." often combines professional Kay forer had difficulties helore peeled such action of him and made sonality conflicts, and internal existent. Joe Garcia, at quarterback, Piutisburgh for the gume. for ull Another faculty member admitted criticism with personality he became chairman in January of ii clear i hat he was now "implicated" politicking that are inherent in Booters Reflect on Seasoni s a good passer und runner. He hus those interested in going, there is u that "forer has done some good by differences. Many in the department 1972. Prior to assuming his new with the "rest of them." acidemia. not been given time in Ihc past by his1 sign-up sheet in the campus center bringing in quality people" but went argue that besides Forer's abrasive position forer was cl.airman of the Continuing, the member asked. By Nathm Salant Danes edged their hosts, 2-1, and The assists statistics tell the same offensive line to do either with any till 4:00 or call Josic at 457-8786. search committee thul was looking "Will those who signed live petition 'This was a terribly disappointing Buffalo State, where Albany was talc, with the teum leader, Arthur consistency. Halfback Bob Mehan, Tickets cost $3.50 a person. English PhD Program Under Scrutiny to replace Paul Meadows as chair­ be given unfavorable letters of season," reflected Albany State var­ again victorious, this time by a 2-0 Bedford, picking up three of his four' man. reference when iliey seek alternative margin. The scoring problem assists in the first half of the season., sity soccer coach Bill Schieffclin, by Elizabeth Gross he thinks the doctoral program is in jeopardy, he replied This committee voted to exclude eniplin ment?" forer said thul alter the 1474 regular season had became obvious versus Cortland, a Ruano und Johnny Rolando (last, The English Department's PhD program, like the that he has "no idea. What's the point of worrying? One junior faculty members from its "black listing" hud been known to oc­ come to a close with losses to Stony team Albany lied 0-0, and became an year's assist leader with II) each programs of the History and Chemistry Depart ment's, is must conserve energy." He added that the English proceedings. cur In mutters similar to this one.and Brook (3-1) and Binghamton (3-0) eyesore, when the Booters managed assisted on three occassions, once now under the scrutiny of the New York Education Department's program hus been reviewed before for The junior faculty at that time that some people never escape the this past weekend. "True," only two goals against a very weak again largely in ihc first hull'of the Department. Lust Monday and Tuesday, two "site different purposes. joined and sent a petition to the sears no mutter where they go. He Schieffclin continued, "our final New Pa It/, squad, despite out-' year, Jerry Lee Hing, the only other cvalualors" visited the department, reading doctoral dis­ Dr. Knolls also brushed aside rumors that have been department chairman. Meadows, added that hedid not think that heor record is 7-5-1, but when you con­ shooting the visitors 67-4. player to assist on more than one sertations, questioning graduate students, and meeting circulating on campus. Questions have been raised con­ and the search committee chairman, anyone else would "blacklist" in this sider our 5-0-1 record after six goal, tallied his two assists curly in T'hc second ha If of the season began with various faculty members. cerning: forer. The petition was a "request case. According to the statement. games, and the fact that this season's the season. with an upset loss to Hamilton, 3-1, The site cvaluulors are a part of the Education 1. the validity ol a two-day site evaluation. schedule was not nearly us tough us "I am not going to start milking ex­ followed by a crucial 4-1 loss to Department's response lo a stale-commissioned panel of 2. the state's process of analyzing doctoral programs. "Speaking up against the chairman may last year's, the final record is very cuses," said Schieffclin. "Sure.some Oncontu which cost the Danes a January 1972 that examined Ihe status of and resources 3. the state's possible attempt lo eliminate "duplicate" mediocre. We thought that we had a players will point to minor injuries share of the SUNY Conference lor doctoral educations in New York Suite. Known us doctoral programs, especially within the Stale Universi­ greut deal more talent this year, but and blame them lor individual hurt the department at a time just prior to championship. I hcBooters returned, the Fleming Commission Report (official name is ty system. we really did not improve on last failures.Others will criticize the of­ home, sweeping Potsdam (5-0) and Regents Commission of Doctoral Education), it explain­ Ihe rumors were not quieted either by Dr. Dorothy season's 8-5 mark." ficials und blame them for losses, but I'luttsburgh (1-0), before the roof fell ed in its Position Paper #19, "Meelinglhc Needs of Doc­ Harrison, who is liaison officer between the examining external review, but we have been the fact rcmuins thul we did not play "We played two seasons," said one in at the end of the season, with con­ toral Education," that problems involve difficult finan­ commission and the University. When queried on the well at ull Ihisyear. I 'he team failed to of the Booters. "the first half of the secutive losses to Union (5-3), Stony cing, changing employment markets, und the over- project's set-up and process, she replied, "Our position is play together on numerous oc­ silent too long. season was successful, but the se­ Brook (3-1), and Binghamton (3-0). supply of doctorates in some fields. lhut no information on the process or project will he cassions. Technical errors such as cond half was bad news. Instead of In their last seven games, the Danes publicized." She added that "all evaluations are con­ ovcrdribbling were repeated gume These problems were further emphasized by Dr. improving us the season went on, scored twelve goals while allowing fidential. Any publicity could be ha rmful to the universi­ I have seen students abused, talent wasted, after game." Waller Knotls, cliuirmun of the SUNYA English our play degenerated. Ihe only eighteen. Subtract Ihe 5-0 win versus Department, who suited that the Hoard of Regents is ty-" "Our primary problems were a good game we played in the second Potsdam (the only solid team perfor­ "looking at the quality of PhD programs in New York;" When pressed further, she declared that secrecy con­ and money thrown down the rat hole." , general lack of aggressiveness and' half of the season was the win over mance of the second half of the healso stressed lite fuel thul ull PhD programs in private cerning the project was essential to "protect the institu­ Potsdum." season), und the goals scored versus hustle, und the lack of a player who and public universities in Ihe state urc to becvuluated. tion [the university]," Her explanation of this statement thul the entire department of forer was asked one more question: goals against difference becomes could smell the net and take some The season's results and statistics was that potential students might be "scared off by any Sociology" be given copies of a " 'Would you advise me to look more revealing. physical punishment to score a lend to back up thisstutcment. Alter Ihe site cvaluulors who examined this English report ol a state probe into the department, although she departmental "goals" report and "he elsewhere for employment?' Forer Individualslulisticsulso showed the goul." their first six games, the Booters Department lasl week are Ronald Paulson of Johns ugreed that u commission's analysis might lead to given the opportunity to vote on Ihe encouraged me to do so for my own "two seasons". Chepe Ruano, the "Perhaps success came a little loo were undefeated, having scored thir­ Hopkins University, a specialist in 17th and 18th century positive results instead of containing only negative con­ names which arc submitted 'professional advantage,'" team's leading scorer, with six goals, easily last year, und we just did not teen goals, and allowing only two. English literature and Russell Nye of Michigan State, notations. recommending a department chair­ Ray Forer would become Ihe netted five of them in the first half of stand up to Ihe pressure of being t Opening the season at home, the whose forte is American Literature and History, accor­ She refused to state when the Commission's findings man..." The petition quoted chairman of the Sociology Depart­ the season, frank Selca and I'as- favorite," said Schieffclin, ashiseyei Danes were impressive 4-1 winners ding lo the Directory ofAmerican Scholars, IV64. Their on Ihc SUNYA English Department would be made regulations of the College of Arts ment u year later. In the three years quale I'ctriccione (five goals each) looked off into Ihe future, or perhaps over R.IM. and 3-0 over Frcdonia. report, along with the conclusions of a high state Doc­ known, saying that the results will be announce when and Sciences which affirmed the that he would serve, Forer would scored most of their goals in the first Ihe past, where NCAA Tournament (The Booters would not reach the toral council, will he sent lo Dr. Ewald Nyquisl, Com­ President Benezet wants them publicized. When they tire right of all members to participate. succeed in seriously harming morale I pan of the season. I he only other teams from Albany Slate's soccer three goals scored plateau again un­ missioner of Higher Education. He will then inform announced. Ihe depart ment's doctoral program will be in Not one faculty member who sign­ within his department. But Forer player to score more than one goal program urc lo be found. til game ten versus. Potsdam, the President Heiiezel of Ihc committee's final analysis of the one of three culugorics - ed that petition remains toduy ut this could not have accomplished this was Matty Denora, who tallied three Hooters romping, 5-0.). Like Ihc old Brooklyn Dodgers, English Department. 1. continued us is. university. without the benign help of an ad­ times late in the season. Last year's Scoring problems began lo plague und the modern New York Yankee*, Dr. Knolls' reiicilon is one of calmly waiting for Ihc 2. put on probution. Ray Forer wus approached by one ministration unwilling lo recognize leading scorer, I id gar Marline/ (nine lobby tchiegei and Pasquale NMoolona battling tor loose ball In Ihe Danes when their first road trips Ihe Albany Slute Booters will just report, of refusing to jump to conclusions. When asked if 3. phased out, of the signers three days ufler the problemswhen they were developing. look them lo Oswego, where the goals) saw little action this year. huve to. "Wail 'till next year." Booters' final homo contest this year versus Union, After 35 Yean, Morgan to Receive Diploma by Peter Fetter system started in 1969, the path to it, and I did not organize it. Hobart quisitiveness and imagination after reflects favorably on his career in in 1939, James Lee Morgan obtaininga college diploma lay open overall then was a liberal college and they complete their formal educa­ construction. "Construction is never ,ra!tstoT\'j*biiilrrev»aislhu;cortu»>- entered Hobart College in Geneva, to him. This body accepted all his it gave me a close understanding of tion." boring. One never approaches the jfcyataliL Homnml aupre»«ioiv.di:cvidimc'-.tht New York, as a freshman. He was Hobart credits. He has taken 14 co-operation that I would later use in "People get into their own world, same problem in the same way. You t-ttiCjBOTtt..a_L«sAB)M«»tOUf inanuiaciiinnn.ofievidenct'.and the studying to be a priest. This courses in the past Ave years. At pre­ Management and Labor ' occupy their own little niche and do get immediate returns on your ac­ naitsi.willduaB.s:thi;r«idi«»sc)ttii: oostrucuoii of lusuct December, 1974, he will graduate sent, he is taking two courses at negotiations." not see beyond this, they can't see complishments. You areableto see a imiiiaiMinii in'' Hi —•Miliiiii Hibc-rrairit::;orrihissW!OiJu:isiitiv.tyi- with sequences in Economics, Art, Albany Slate. They are the History Morgan, 34, is in good health and new ideas and new people ahead or project develop from the raw .'ofWotat'Qfaagaary.ian'Tkjnaiay. Sociology, and Foreign Language. of the American Labor Movement optimistic about his future. He has them. It is easier for them to be reac­ material stage to a living entity riplosive ppieee -id( -ruinematie uiaui- "!^T7^"--T:he*mnl«i 'har- -p3n..-Arlmisiioii;js heeibr a.faden^a.nce-.tb.tannouaeemo.. m -Wj.Hh.ufWn ^uagrceiucn; „ i{, LChatuci -makes She statement that "In my junior year, I was drafted Labor Relations both taught by Dr. tive to continue his studies in and liberals, because the innovators demands constant imagination and siuarm •-witb .ux starts nod ififts, rtiic-.bulicis irrmi .thi.-s>haf\r V\?bToadi3C.ta—a—n ^ toUiaiuctov thatiall the telephone ainei-oxe. *luei, the.d.,s,uC* money to go back to school, so I got teen of his children to attend his ancestors have had considerable srrysehiatr lsU. -D'fp.urtsrs, cammurn at d^tlrthe>W« v-i ave,be=,r. t,mee .1=,,,, M ,, ,. ,,. He advises students today to con­ Comparing the two distinct -and aniriligilivt reporter. :ht-mas B B E 1 CB t ; a job as an electrician." graduation. Six are already college longevity and he intends to match ^eyewitnesses. :docirmonts isnd stantly strive to improve the mind phases of his academic career, ahe:rm.LuuJOUiin^iacti llin jtiniaw- Silt .announeethbiiilct. IS.that.tneiov.ct.gover.tinen, «a, honau. Morgan worked his way up as a graduates. Six more are still in them. nnoiapronn. :!; irJew'isl,irnmigiation:pol cyt.,ob a .t uUe. ouce ,,o ., ,u„ , ,„ ,,, and body. He sees those who do as Morgan feels there was more in­ spantrs morccs scene rttfic sniatii B I 1 U I C N 1 school, while one is in the Army. JShnracli .neither iaccusesinnyonc Union Electrician until 1954 when he Morgan runs three miles every not only benefitting themselves, but sistence to develop and compose Kober Kenned wa- kilwi -Hi:- itcd Stales .Congress. 'nor '.excuses janjiarie Side jputs the purchased the company he worked Although a devout Christian at other day. has been skiing actively also helping mankind. He written thoughts in essay form in the strong iteiing; tor koocri kmnttl .ainlxncs n: :thm)irr/:bos, liniltphl ol ^he Jews told JJuekieythat iorthc:Pastthree year, some,, u,, WW)K fdr, the W.W. Gettys Electrical Hobart. he and his Bishop decided since 1947, golfs in the 90's, and recommends that more people con­ thirties and prefers this method to ^combined vwrth ibis aouoi aoou „Z shut ofl-.periodtcally.'but several.were.uaually leu ope., Now a „ , t«a Company which operates in the that priesthood was not going to be a plays a nifty game of tennis. He ex- sider craft-oriented careers if they the prevalent Multiple Choice Tests thousands onrnkiand hundreds ol the residence -presented .and thaii swam :aauali> happened -*avt: "tal have-been shut ofl..they:aaid. Plattsburg area. He headed this part of his future. He had opposed plains his continual athletic, possess the requisite mechanical today, which he finds limits the im­ intcrvjew-s "Tin invcs-upauoi *was ipnoi .knowlcdet 11 is tupato the Enaracl tn•.: rmccius no mvtsuEit company until recently. With his the colleclinn of money in Church vocational and academic interests in skills along with an adroit mind. To agination and constructive thinking physically and nnanciali- :ex- laudicncr t<> :dciadc whether'.Sirhnn tn'- assassination earnings as a contractor. Morgan while he wasconducting Sunday ser­ his philosophy of life. further the training of craftsmen, he of the test taker. He admires the Inaustin -outrhis-pcrscrvcrancepaid Sirhan kilieii -Kobcrt skcnncd> or "Thi srdflsin; i*as ao consum :1oc , •K0M1-. (Al't—-iiiiirmoveviowctl by Woiltl-rood Camc!cm , n wnctnc n wu:i.aSecont|{JUIlT.T.".!! built a drive-in Movie theatre, a vices. He said. "1 am against Maintaining Fitness has been urging the International openness in social relations today in next five years 6t;hisliie.?lLeovEm) of i. Cnaracnhas uncovereAashoci- raintir oreaK-througli. oitpraduinngcuuntrie-jrprpposeu o i fni.ne. < trailer park, and some real estate hypocrisy in the organizations fron­ "I believe the body atrophies from Brotherhood of Electrical Workers college, and applauds the tearing .;i luntl tu.develop luathpruductioii tn needy .nation developments. He also served on his ting Christianity, especially in the lack of use. People become older to found its own system of Univer­ down of the double standard, the T'he on cuumnes.mude.thurpian contingent on theparuapatu local school board for a dozen years, Church itself." faster from not maintaining their sities which would be partly drift towurd less status symbols, and uustriitlucu cuunme-.und mevsct.nii-monevuirccisHiriucnRirH.s was an adult education Art teacher Morgan in his college youth was muscle tone. Peopleatrophy menial­ vocational and partly academic. the greater respect for personal and iiteni kind, cnnlcrcitce sources said. ior a decade, and taught in his un­ very active politically. His views then ly too when they lose their in- After forty yearsof labor, Morgan intellectual integrity. ion's Apprentice Training School for intcnis.will-be chosen on thebasis ol wrmng-iihlilm IBS spokesman iidwtn Martm icrmcu tm proposo \ imci esun leaned strongly to the Left. He saw a "rrterbiudem -Association ol tbi: Stale liniversiiyol three years. .ability nv'rneeudeadiinci..anii.intcres!.They.will-bea>- aduct! ma1, Washington would have to br .consulted OCIPI n strong connection between the New' Yorkjs3ponsohnjianmicnisrapprariraniin.Coii»- -occted an live rin -Albany. anthanange:acadcmii. crcdi; .delegation muu"-any xontmitmcni Morgan is proud to be a union classless society and the Corporations Rule Regulatory Agencies muuicauon -am Medm ior the carainf.'racademii .witn.aiacuitYTOeinbcrontheir;hamccnrnpu:..AS25u5t( member and is still very active on Brotherhood of Christianity. He has seniesieriSASIi is.i wivrkinccualiuon ol77-SUN\ stu- ITihd United biaiesnasstrongivmsisicdai tne contctcuc -in: Dcnd-willneipui deira" iivmjt expense many levels. He notes, however, "As modified his views since then. (ZNS) A study made by the Wall Securities and Exchange Commis­ regulated. denugovcTTrmenis which-advocate. the -nghiSiandrin oil producer;, wttli their vas; new oi! income, acecr .; sn;'.: in 7 nedeadiine lor receipt oLnpptications it bcccntbcL.- a conlractor, I was an employer "At one point." Morgan recounts, Street Journal has found that most sion, and the Interstate Commerce The study also found that i crests ofc siuasni.i am i maintain. in Albany, a i'lill-irra-. lecdinji tm- work. •t-o; rmor-. tnlorraation student: snuuld contaci ther negotiating with the same men who "I wasasked to leave Hobart because of the governmental regulatory Commission maintain what the numerous commissioners have been Leriisiniiv • lobnvm:: suit.. < ..nmmuiucaunn, of tier.-, Contcrcnce planners said the nian-wa.a maio step tnvvar • nn.i -nr.'.e: ormnus newspaper editor or news director or write, vvi* were my union brothers." He said of my involvement in a poster agencies in Washington are actually Journal calls "a cozy relationship" accepting gifts and paid junkets Siudemt-iicrvjces. oTiiet.-aniLan Office 68 iniormatioii drev Hugos Lammuiucuiion. Dircctoi. SASL im.. mn^tcrnygoaii o; the conference United Nations niannei . a.- :".-.j_ i that he was quite sympathetic to his program protesting the firing of a controlled or manipulated by the with the companies they allegedly provided them by the industries they -and Research. IO'J btatehtreei. Alban,. W 12207, {Sl8)t46aa406 that investments in poor.cuunmesmust be tnpted iu Bams5 • muni employees' needs. For instance, he Professor. I was later reprieved corporations they a re supposed tube oversee. regulate. In addition, says the Jour­ A-maxrmum oi lour murrnswili report on siuoent -hv 198U. extended hospital coverage to his though by the Administration which regulating. Dubious Activities nal, many commissioners use their related I ssues witicit uevein onthe Lejnsiaturr.UicSB N V • iMHTE-lUMM Netherlands (APt—bonny f iscnc- s cues workers before the local union did. reconsidered and felt that their According to the Journal, The Journal study found thai a agency appointments as "stepping- Central /\dmimstrauon..nml onSljNYcaTnpuscs.iact; iinii'lCussiau it thsdisnute between the Aiucncanami tn-: tntr-ii Yet he often dreamed of acquiring original request was far too harsh a regulatory agencies such as the high percentage of the com­ stones" that is, retiring from the lnicTn.will-be. assigned ;rpnrucuiararcu_and.wiilheip n f-iifmif ha lie,} hwc* hedetation lsii; settled bs /ipri . tne presiden: o. tn ieuti It is academic degree. When the New penalty for my involvement in the Federal Power Commission, the missioners appointed to the commission to accept highly-paid producca-rnonthlvnewslcucr. a press service, ami-press lis Mas buwe saiti m.an intcrviev Sunaa ' ne will .srn :s York Slate Continuing Education campaign as 1 only drew pictures for Civil Aeronautics Board, the regulating agencies come directly jobs with the same corporations they (ZNSj AiaiLUiicauloinhicronQuluus-..Trnnc: na t ,-ymciican of hi. crown.unless he agrees; tn ueicnn n uiwr :n Federal Maritime Commission, the from the corporations being were once regulating. releases set ;i:ne\v-worldpiDissmokmy record nvpufhaiiiiwiivo] . -MWUI i-miiiiiuv *-Villliii33IUH, VI1U fivnii 1111; in I puittl IU 11a IJClllg "tit i/iisv ie^u;.,i:i.si^. i ^^ sc n tit; Icdcratioi. wnicr: i Known .a . ruK "1 he nrocrnrn oilers siuUcnisan opponuniiyio.Eaiii.il hispipf. commuoust" 10 ID hour.. 3h mmuie- rinu-^ wnrkine. liisiEhi inn pubin: nllarrs rcporiinj. news "*Ai tne Thotucrn wi; are m .. compict. stalemate Luw ,.i .wminr^anaprouuctioii lccnniquc...'.li-wilfaiso.pvepai second; A n .lune mecunji in Nice, rranct. tn-. f ld-.scanEres n-:e Victorious Democrats Must Handle Inflation /QA in on Ecuador Coup .ueipanis.an.undcnaandingottnelegislative process am. -Hr surpassciS tb'. previou rccon; ol I- noui. 2l domantt tor a newsearinjisystem tortile ln7uai*-matci Wi-.e Democrats a chance to show what or if—they could Iitgncr education poliac: minutc:i-anU-41: second. tm.s f iscitcr sentii telegram to the tcactatioii choacutuant: (AP) Democrats have amassed a political weaponry for (ZNS) Former C.I. A. agent Philip Agce has charged that the Central In­ saving In. demand wen '•non-negotiable" ane rcnoutictu . their 1976 White House Challenge, but have also in­ produce, "lite ball is in their court," said House telligence Agency was deeply involved in the overthrow of two reformist Republican Leader John J. Rhodes. "Wi ladvisod Inn thai nt nat.unti Ytpri n mar-, u- curred the burden ofdcaling with the nation's economic governments in Ecuador in the early I960's. •i.-ajWMt,''***'**«»»Kr''*',":""tJ-: ills, The burden of producing may fall most heavily on the annealei: nin: to reconsider ins posmoi n tne tntcrer. c :i: Agee. who is now living in England and writing a book on his C.I.A. ac­ lite same off-year election victories that tightened heretofore disorganized House Democrats with world Bui so iartne work; cnamnon na rtoiesacict t .: tivities, spells out the agency's alleged involvement in Ecuadorinan interview their grip on Congress and the nation's biggest states aggressive liberals within the parly's caucus seeking to said in the current Rolling Stone. confronted Democrats with a situation in which they take the lead. Agec states that he was assigned as a "case officer" for the C.I.A. in must now produce on the pivotal issues of inflation and Rep. Phillip Burton of California, an outspoken Ecuador In I960, and operated on a $500,000 (dollar) budget which was used WABHfNOTON IAI'i—Irmtet! Miif. Worker Cresitli recession. liberal, is already running for the post oi caucus chair­ lo manipulate political events in that country. deelnren Eodavthaua nationwide coal strike, altnnucn nar Otherwise, they lace a 1976 presidential race against a man with an avowed goal of welding the party into a ! bcai willigo on until hi i2U.0(K memner wu 31 rlcccn President Ford sounding the "do-nothing Congress'.' more organized force. Secret Destabilizing Programs Mille tolii .. new, eonicrcnci tn: IIMV mad; "ever theme thai carried President Harry S. Truman to victory Whatever degrees of success he achieves, however, few He states thai Ihc C.I.A. decided to created political desturbunces in 4^si>niyiffieTUtrttiK:aiLmtryiasnxjrttiT^ setnemeni m nine tii-avoidat striKe but sattl trie mnus.tr . in 1948. expect the House, despite the Democratic two-thirds Ecuador against two reformist Presidents -Velasco and Aroscmena— IternticsaiiBrackiT^tatffiirirainsliii^criiKite na- attcniioi. From National Chairman Robert S.Strauss down, majority, to become the "veto-proof" body against because of their pro-Cuba leanings. *Si nnv coa. miner mivrtteci torccd tc reKor ti tn Democratic leaders declared that Tuesday'smandate yvhich Ford had campaigned. Agee reports that covert "destabilizing" programs were carried out by the I2oo«toriti called il '"a whrri coal mdustr seem t< unttcrsiams—r strike" n: sau. provides an opportunity lor nutionul leadership in key In fact, the Senate, with a somewhat smaller C.I. A. with the help of several high-placed Ecuadorian officials who were on 1 he union cntn saiitriroeress is neine tnutle in tne neL"--n areas, primarily in dealing with the country's economic Democratic percentage, may pose an even greater threat the C.I.A. payroll. Among those on the payroll, says Agee, was a member of BS |pnol±attiDfsQunii-HD2in£ taU wnule continue bin tftt -gu: prnmenis end i mine: crisis. to the President since about IU Republican liberals the Ecuadoran legislature who later became Ecuador's Vice President. tpti tsrngtnmu^rri'thtr raDm lac-, reman unsolved ' "The opportunity begins tonight." Strauss told generally support the Democrats. Forged Documents Used sEurrsntiertD itanti ii: leaver Mtis mine, attends wcr: closet! In- tn: VcrtTan iJa celebrating Democrats at party headquarters. The problems faced by Democrats, with their new The former C.I.A. spy says thai one method used lo discredit tics with iVDurBoriyaxhausteD nui no liKels tt. reopen .Until tn: I'MV approve'- m'\ roi Democrats Put To The Test riches, arc more than matched by those of President Cuba was to plant a forged document on a leading radical organizer. Agec barltei 11 tin das I'MV Via Vresiticn; Mlk-: im.. Sen. George McGovern, the 1972 Democratic Ford. He heads into the final two years of his presidential slides that when the organizer visited Cuba, a tube of toothpaste, containing iwertheisssiingi ing and strikt -wnicl: will hspn.a- 12-.0 u.Tii 1 uestl.T 1. IIKI 1 presiden tin I candidate, and Sen. Walter F. Mnndalc, term with the weakest Republican party in a decade. a forged document detailing Cuban plans to overthrow the government of Ruiisatrng.' wees am' pernap: livngei who hopes to be the next standard-bearer, warned of a Both organizationally and ideologically, Ford faces Ecuador, was placed in the man's bag. XreemSUggesteU. 'Tte 1 tn iss: weal loupe- that cante toreca&ii 1976 backlash if Democrats failed to produce. difficulties in gearing up for a 1976 presidential race his The toothpaste tube was discovered and opened, the man arrested and a iTTUistc BcinDnvernal diet Some Republicans seemed inclined to give the aides still see as possible. lew months later Ecuador broke off relations with the Castro government WttBHfNCTFtHs 1 »\!'' And rev I Gmsoi 1 exne.-ic ir^ffiDtsouTrd.expiDrinr eiiniiiditti ti head the ketteral hnerje* Wmmisnanoi. n piaces where WDtxk. rai nam das 01 iwn an intormed wnira hen sam MonOa \Wim Fmwi die FM (Kwyaub in to Writ THE TAVERN ROOM Drive Our Cars tongerar=eiiSBtiJ I andtte l'resideni l-OHi had aiinnimcct! Clci 2"mai he wnuii '• • 1228 Western Avenue sararjjrrc,.areguided % heiiil tin FI.A when Congress returns trnn. reces: Pree To Florida, Itu tin anticipated nomination wa- alread 11 ''"'•' Pine Hills (between Silo Rest. & Travel Lodge) , instinc; " -pressinna. Mitirne. rcnorteti heeaURt ol incrcasm: iinrsn 482-9671 California and all ...-SiJD.^-millini, wihsid' Uw uinkf-riiiiuiini' veniur 1 • Wine & Liquor Store. Inc. folk music every Saturday Ttteijniythir^therrittCyHcari^r«eai3Diit is that iViichai ()i 1 ranspor. C.i.. owarttiai hi tiu Cedent Mantim: Aiin. cities in the USA iirijantak isayaungnuistca Igiam tifbKOi: was adnitiiisii-iiiiii AAACON Auto idhsons. itecepuinci RIS mnnlh' late 01 i. ml a orrsiii mon -tat gift wrapping Sat.. Nov. 16: John Simpson will be buck trans (come early, limited lo 120 people) Transport

WArillINf:TllN (n_ds p.m. "Fare" negotiable. Call Hope yeu had the bast 20th Birth­ you have not yet gotten a placement Volunteers are needed to work at ond Undergrads. • • era you thuad in- Maggie, 7-8339. • ., . , and would liko to work in a' V.A. 2 brge sleeping rooms/clean, utilities day everl attend, Tuesday, November 12 at tho rVeeie-Orled Coffee Nevso correctly in the - Student CHtsjcfotyr Hospital sponsored foster home with gO*S*__ furnished, centrally located on bus Ride wanted to Washington, D.C. Fri­ Love, 8:00 p.m. in HUH 8. Thursdays, Fridays or Saturdays. CaH There wW be o table In the Cootput MAJORS * AAIMOBS middle aged and older psychiatric Una. Suitable for teacher, business day, 11/13 returning Sunday, Frank • • • Roger at 489-3132 for mora kifermo- Cantor lobby with correction forms patients, please call Jay or Sue at Skis—brand naw Atomic • "Supramt' parson or student. Call 462-6983 -7 11/17. Please coll Allyn at 462-1247. "Mala looking for Warmth and Com­ Jewish Student's Coalition, Holi­ November 11.-11. to sura your •(•-tow Society is sponsoring a 402-3311 out. S66. Car required. friends con roach you. Sponsored by • US", Fisher • super OT*s, K2-Two'i. a.m. to 10 a.m. or after 10 p.m. panionship" day Sing Moating, Dutch Quod Ride needed to Michigan State. Call trip to the Naw York State Court of Any ttudenh desiring to tee a O.C.S.C. Bad oflar SSO or up. Solomon 444 evenings. call Timber 7-7980 Cafeteria, Thursday November 14, * • • Gerry 7-8722 Appeals Thursday November 14 bindingsalto. 4375340. 7:30 p.m. All welcomed Attention All Community Service Used loo* fxrhenae materialize for Jan and Deb Anyone interested, please sign-up in Students: Evaluation sessions are noRt semester contact Mooreen 1966 Chavy Wagon, $200 or bast Hope your weekends came out University College. • • • SERVICES PERSONALS now going on. Attendance at ana DeMoio at 437-5211. Off-Campus Studants do yaw oflar. Mutt sail immediately. CaH Joo, O.K.I There will be an important mooting * • • seminar is mandatory!! want fteeh fruits and vegetables at 487-7843. Flaming Pink of tho Catteti Mouse Committee this Psychology: Dr. James McConnell, Newman Associatfen Deify Mow low prices? Join the feed co-op. for Sunday at 7 p.m. All those interested • • • Garrard $1X2 turntable with base Typing, tape transcription, my home, Eggy. Professor of Psychology, at the Un­ Schedule: Monday and Friday: details ond order form contact Stu­ Dear Trudy, please attend. If you cannot attend Interested in working in tho and dust cover. 3 speeds. Ready to reasonable. Call Pat, 765-3633. Every moment I spend with you is iversity of Michigan will bo speaking 11:10 a.m., 12:10 Communion Sef- dent Association CC 346, 437-4342. Nancy, Maria, Ellen, Mlndy, Jan, call Roger at 489-3152. Capital for academic credit? Call ploy. $40. Coll 436-7044. precious to me... on "Memory Transfer in Planarla" or vice; Tuesday, Wednesday, ond Sponsored by O.C.S.C. Light trucking, reasonable rates, Bug, f red, Horace and everyone else Danny 7-3336.. Happy Anniversary, Darlingl "You Are What You EAT"!!! H will be • • * Thursday: 11:10 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. 1968 Oidsmobile convertible. Good John, Run 438-8123. wish you the best birthday everl • • • Monique held on November 14 at 8 p.m. in l.C. Forming Star Trek tan Club All at the Campus Center Condition. tlOO. Coll John 457-7968. SUNY* sVemen'tCenfe., located Country-rock group—BADGE is now lee Wandee, Meetings 11:30-12:30 p.m. Satur­ , Peter 16th Floor Eastman 3. It should be interesting! Please !>TiTmfl:f_r_«II_ * * * at Cooper 100, State Quad, it open in Albany area, reasonable rates. Have a Happyl Weak-Strongl days and Sundays, 2nd Floor Brown snorkle jacket, size: small. Butter Butter attendl latin Women Workshop from 11 -4 Monday through Thursday. Call Ken 463-6423 or Rick 463-2917. Rosy, Jew, Mendy, Mahican Hall; Faculty Advisors Great condition. $13.00. Coll 7-5293. Cheese Cheese "BirthControl" Rim: In Spanish and Come by and see what we have to Creton, Celery. * * * Millet Reclamation Program... O'Harra and J.V. will attend opening of for In the way of literature, relaxa­ Must Sellll Electrophonic stereo, Gar­ OVERSEAS JOBS—Australia, Eu­ What's a Pinch A representative from franklin The second collection pick-up for English .meeting. tion and someone to talk to. All rard 6-200C turntable, AM-FM stereo rope, S.America, Africa. Students all Without a Squeeze Dear Robert, Each year, every woman Pierce law Confer in Concord, N.H. Miller beer cans, bottles and keg Date: November 12 should have a Pap test. It's radio, B-track play and record, air professions and occupations $700 to I am your prisoner will be on campus on Friday, • * * Place: Campus Center Rm. 315 welcome. Tom the best way to find oul if stickers is Wednesday, November 13 suspension speakers. Only 6 months $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, over­ Shackled within your shell. November 15 from 9 a.m. until noon. Rugby Club Meeting* Contact Time: 7:30 Are your feet ready? Mine are. you're free of cervical cancer. between 3-4 p.m. Colonial 3-3:15; old, best offer. Coll 7-4707 eves. time, sightseeing, Free information. The way I need you baby— The lest is painless, and lakes Appointments can be made with the Frank at 7-4504 or Stuart 7-5085, for State 3:15-3:30; Indian 3:30-3:45; Speakers: Dr. Hood and Dr. Constan­ TRANS WORLD RESEARCH CO. P.O. Cheryl, No words could evei tell. only a few minutes. It can secretary at University College. an enjoyable game and the spring and Dutch 3:45-4:00. Remember that tino. WHAT TO Dynaco A-25 speakers, "Bett-Buy", Box 603, Dept. B-5, Corte Madera, You little patootie. I'll be there to You mean everything to me.Have save you suffering. It can season. $4,000 worth of prizes will be given Open to public. Consumer Reports, less than 1 yr. old, save your life. Please have * * * CA. 94925. snuggle and huggle you tonight. a Wonderful Birthday. to the top 5 on-campus groups that * * * The multi-media concert-reading sell pair $100. Call Harvey, 7-7952. a Pap test. Soon. Very soon. . Tuesday November 12 at 7:30 • * * your Blinky Balguma I love you. Looking forChrisfian Fellowship? have the most points after the third of James Joyce's Fmnegan'• Wefce Students—Ultraprolong is in. Call Al p.m., the Society of Physics Students Auditions for Telethon 1975 are Parti'69 Valiant, 438-8123, Noel Praise God with us every Friday night collection. Questions? Ivan 7-8927 or will be presented Tuesday and or Gary at 438-1802. To:Beth, Judy, Laurie, Sharon, Sue, will hold elections for officers for next beginning Monday, November IB. at 7 p.m. in CC 315. Kevin 7-8716. Wednesday, November 12and 13at Royal portable electric typewriter. Ellen, Sherry, Kevin, Paul, Dean, Jack Fuck you. I never said you were. If you semester. Also on the agenda will be Pick up applications at theC.C. Infor­ Typing done in my home. 869-2474. There will be a meeting of the 8:30 p.m. in the lab Theatre of the Very reasonable. Call 465-8582 Roses are red, ever come out of your shell, finish Cancer Society $ a discussion of some important mation Desk. Available dates and luso-Brazilfan Club on Wednesday, PAC, Script by Tom Smith and Harry evenings. Typing done in my home. 482-8432. Violets are blue; your sentence: departmental matters. All physics times are listed at the desk. November 13 at 8:30 p.m. in the * t • Staley of the English Dept.; electronic Gee, a girl sure is lucky, I'm just . . . students are urged to come. Meeting An introductory lecture and discus­ Two 15" VW snow tires on rims 4-ply 4th SUNYA Annual European Ski Fireside Lounge of the Campus There are Free Apatfmint* music by Any Aldnkk; directed by To have friends like you. will be held in Physics Lounge. sion on Eckankar, the Ancient low mileage $50. 436-9441. Tour. St. Anton, Austria Jan. 5,1975 - Student, Male, 21 gives self two Center. Anyone interested should available now in downtown Albany. Tom Vanley as a collaborative Thanks for making my 18th so speciall Science of Total Awareness, will be Jan. 15, 1975. $399 inclusive. John weeks before jumping off tower. If come. No rent, just utilities. This is Dear Kalimba Man: I've been ab­ Love, Diane held in room 370 in the campus "horizontal" community process. Morgan 457-4831. you know good reason why not CLUBS & MEETINGS legitimate! Interested? Call Stu 482- solutely distraught. My morning center, on Friday, November 15 at "C+" please write P.O. Box 203 FF Campus 6742 after 6 p.m. or 457-6542 during * • * coffee and English Muffin with Dissertation typing service 869-5225. 7:30 p.m. Eckankar is the key for un­ There are reasons I don't show it the day and leave your name and The Jewfsh Singles Club of the strawberry jam haven't tasted the To:the Piano Player HKF and Thurs­ 4+2+ {Four plus two plus) Holiday OFFICIAL NOTICE locking the secrets of the universe. It is If I don't tell you soon I'll blow it Contraception number. Sponsored by O.C.S.C. Capital District will hold a dance on same since you left. Where have you day, Sing meeting, November 13, 9:30. proof of the survival of man, after funded by S.A. Sunday evening, November 17 I really dig you and I want you to 4+2 Basement. All invited. Questions been?—Harried Harriet. HELP WANTED Where have you been strangers? Clinic Starting November 24, 1974 and death, for it gives evidence that all featuring the music of "Neon Park." know it call Lori 7-5236. * # * Dear Harriet: I've been here all Come up and see us sometime. every Sunday thereafter a tennitnet things have life beyond this physical The event will take place at the "A" Zero Population Growth group along. By the way, marmalade is Suite 1701 will be put up in Gym C of the Physical plane, including animals, plants and • Heritage Village Apts. Social Hall, Ecology Freaks: Environmental group organizing for action and awareness good for the nerves. So is a Kalimba. Cheryl, Important meeting of the Education Building from 2-4 p.m. A minerals. needs dedicated people to help with Spend an Evening Gambling at State Guild-Hand, N.Y. and will begin at Munchftin Club All members please sign-up sheet in the main officeof the on campus and in capital district. $15 delivered. Marc 462-9929. I'm so glad things are back Thursday Evmmgs 8:00 p.m. Refreshments will be community organizing and fund- Quad's CASINO NIGHT— U-Lounge People needed for present activities together again. Let me see the provided. The Singles Club is open to For Sale: 3 speed Schwinn— raising drive in the Capital District, of State Quad—Saturday November and developing new projects. For sparkles in your eyes. Ul tiff Jewish men and women between 20 reasonable condition—$20. Call Phil Full and part-time positions. Fair pay. 16th at 9 p.m.—$1.00 with Quad further information: Eric Kuehn Box Blinky and 30 years of age. For further in­ 482-7371. No experience necessary. Call 463- Card,$1.50 without—Albums Auc­ 112, Dutch Quad, SUNYA or 457- Student Health formation Calf Temple Israel office in 4859, after 11 a.m. for interview. Seth, tioned off and Mixed Drinks too! 7661. Please support ZPG. For Sale: Reel to reel tape deck with Albany at 438-7858. After you snuggle and huggle me Service tapes. Excellent condition. $125 or We want people who like to talk on 6811 Burfie lucks outl On Campus, a planning guide, I'm gonna cuddle you and then...I best offer. Call 457-7814. Ask for the telephone, part time or full time, See you at Cornell! coordinated and published bi­ Thursday is open night at the can't say. Ronnie. days or evenings. Call Mr. Spiegal at monthly by the student activities of­ Freeze-Oried Coffee House. If you Wanted desperately—a used por­ I'or appointment call: 459-9000. Name your own hours, Hortence, your lovie fice is available at the CC informa­ want to play, sign up at 7:30. If you table cassette tape recorder. Call tion desk. Get your November- chance for advancement. Allan, want to listen, performances start at B Chuck 7-4032 457-3717 December issue now and know what's MOUSING Happy Seventeenth, you Schmuckl p.m. in the Patroon Lounge. (First Babysitter needed: a kind, responsi­ happening on campus. Supplies are P.S. Chem Majors Suck. Attention Mr. Rick Olson, Mon.-F.i. I p.m.-5 p.m. floor below Patroon Room), ble person to take care of a five-year limited. XXX Bio Major Please report immediately to House in Colonic, 1 bedroom for rent old. Thursday evenings. $1 an hour t^i HiiiiniiiiniuiiiH i uiiiiniiniiii-mmHiiitiHiiii.MiiMiueiiiMsU.iiirsiiH MHWIIMSIIIIIHII Health Service in response to your available from December on. Month­ 274-2927. Andy Bomb, positive V.D. test. Confidentiality assured. ly rent $55. Call 4890049 ask for The LA-E Fan Club says "YEAHI Advertising Sales, Part/Fulltime, Corkie Mike. Fuckdooles" whenever we listen to Schenectady, Complete training. your show, Matt, UNIVERSITY OF PARIS- Roommate wanted, $80 per month, 377-4800 Don't let Cindy see this. includes utilities, close to busline, call Eric Longslime +RRRosss +The Big J + SORBONNB Donna 465-1314. Susan The Humungus Cunt. SUNY-New Paltz Philosophy '!»«* M *** Frodo Gave his Finger for Us Year Mountain Top Farm. 200 acres— LOST & FOUND Chipmunk, $100 a month inc. utilities. Need Magic Being How about it7?? TICKET BOOTH Qualified undergraduates in. another mature couple to share. One The chase goes on S. J. Jr. philosophyand related majors hour drivo from Albany. Write Box M Found: For the team that played TXO The Hunter LEC- can earn 30 to 32 credits; c/o Washington Park Spirit. 184 in league IV Basketball. I accidently Why do you say that? Babes, regular courses at Paris- Washington Ave., Albany. took one of your basketballs. Call Les PKM Now that you're legal let's do It 4 7-7850 to confirm. Sorbonne (Paris-IV). The the 1 or 2 males needed for really nice times a day instead of 3. Yippee. BILL— Now Open SUNY Program Director will apt. on South Main—need cor. 489- Happy birthday. Happy Birthday! help students secure housing, 2497. Found: man's watch in State Quad The Staph Love, arrange programs and assist Parking Lot. Call 465-2840. Agent mighty minute Need roommate, $70/month, Im­ Don't say goodbye—I'll bo right them in studies throughout the Irish Setter mixed with Cocker Buy your tickets from mediate opening, 436-9960, or Sieve Shelly, down tho hall. _____ year. A four to five-week T. 438-0108 (leave message). , Spaniel; male, 7 months, mod. Your times of Saturdays Past are Except on Mondays and Thursdays. orientation and Intensive 11 PM to 8 AM daily. Call anywhere in the reddish-brown, black trimmed ears secure, but only if you stop getting up Roommate for psychology student, language review will be held country for 350 or less or anywhere In and tail. Answers to Gemari. Lost on 10:00AM—4:00PM i female 434-1248. for more ice cream. at tho start. September 15 to New York State for 250 or less. Madison Ave. bet. Quail/Ontario. Your Occasional Boarder Arc you R-ltinR Fucked? .g June 15. Estimated living ex­ For Rent: Furnished 4-bedroom apt., Anyone knowing whereabouts Each additional minute costs 200 or less. These To the TXO Poops— I block of»SUNYbusllne.479Hudson plea so call 465-9506. Reward You arc ul dept. stoics penses, transportation, tuition rates apply to station-to-station calls you dial your­ You have: No imagination Ave. Call 462-2896. offered. Unite Hun) Ih.uiiiiiu Cauls and lees $3200 New York self, to anywhere in the U.S. except Alaska & Monday—Friday ! No organization residents, $3700 out-of-state Hawaii. Tax not included. Two people needed for country Reward for Koy ring, lost 11/5/74. No bolls Diwn Look HZ H.n,S3..95 For information, applications, homo. Large room, vegetarians Many koys, including two VW koy*. Love cind Kisses, KD f'urkcr- JZZ r..g.$34,95 write T'ofessor larry Holrm.s, preferred. Car nocossary. $30 each, Finder call 482-0849. Leave metiugo PS How can you sliavt.- without any il. I.tuth.r ..17. Ui'fi.VuO in the | Dep" "lent of Philosophy, FT plus utilities. 8693077 evenings. lor Chris. shaving cream? 1000 late Univ.irsity of Now NewYorkTelephone 3 bedroom, unfurnished, utilities In­ Lost: Blue Tim ox between Indian und Dear Person, ( uriipii'. tinier Lobby York, • lew Pall/, New York Wed. & I hum. only Gameroom cluded, busline intermural games Sunday. Maureen I am paying. 12561 Tel. (914) 257-2696. $125 month, 465-8620 7-5211 Lovn Always. 10 IIIII in .1:30 pin •*__.;___• NOVEMBER 12, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT.PRESS PAGE SEVEN PAGE SIX ALBANY STUDENT PRESS NOVEMBER 12, 1974 QaoteofthtDty "•••• Thiiwillnot bethtlssutep. Wehavetoftceallthertruggles-mUitary.political.econornic 4™ • • and social. 1 do not claim for a minute that we have solved then proNerm." i "If tsnett PremUr Yilzchak Rabin Mserspectives >1 - editorial / comment hi ' . In a speech on his government's new austerity pi If ). m J^5tat^Jiuve«ttyolNewjror^tAlban^^^^ 11i Furor over Forer 1 Because of the actions of its chairman, the Sociology Department is coming apart at the seams. The controversy building within the department threatens to tear its foun­ • ,'iyr 3* dations away due primarily to intense intra-departmental dislike for Ray Forer the l/FW9 the boycott, it V| Department Chairman. The situation in the department can only grow worse, unless 1} I President Benezet decides to begin the search for a new chairman. The already crippled department is trying to bind itself together—at least until after the State Education <: II: Department sends in its scholars to rate the department. Students do not need to be Teamsters and Gallo strung along for the ride by, the Administration which appears to be waiting until at least January before committing itself and the University to another three year renewal. Come January they will probably re-appoint this man who has shown a I IS record of intimidation and abuse of his firing powers by eliminating thoe who speak out against him. 1 ! Forer admits he may have been in error in some of his past actions. "Perhaps my wording was a bit harsh in some cases. I would apologize for that, but I do not think the substance of anything I said was in error." He was referring to several letters of transmittal to the Council on Promotions and Continuing Appointments in which he stooped to personal insults against people who were up for either tenure or promotion. '] He has put at least one letter of apology into one department member's file, but this name-calling indicates an unprofessional manner (at best) in approaching his job. Department members feel more than uncomfortable around the man. Forer pins the Shades Of blame for this attitude on four tenured faculty who are out to "get him." But it appears that more than simply those four are opposed to what has been described as his "ruthless" tactics. The problem is that the junior faculty members do not want to say anything, for fear of being denied tenure, and the graduate students are afraid to open­ 1 ly criticize the man, for fear that their degrees will be jeopardized. Six junior faculty members once criticized Forer for not allowing them to participate in the selection process for a new chairman. Not one of these six is now teaching at SUN YA: all were « J1! subsequently denied reappointment, before they even reached tenure review. By no means is the administration clean in this whole affair. The name of Sirotkin and Kendall continually reappear wherever there is a question of denial of a faculty member's academic rights. In this case, Sirotkin ignored protests by senior faculty members over the way the department was being run. They did not listen to grievances by faculty who complained about treatment within the department. The situation within this department is in some respects akin to that of other i departments, but other departments do not have the chairman, who some feel may not be able to get tenure at another university. They do not have a chairman who uses in­ timidation and coercion to make people agree to his policies. They do not have a chair­ man who is afraid of anyone who he thinks could look better than him in an evaluation. They do not have a chairman who openly admits he does not know the new methods in ^/M&>-aXE UNEMPLOYED? HI, I'M tWfr-CORE WPpiX ClASS' If his': discipline. tmmmmm • warn SSWSSKi It is now up to the administration. Will they keep this man who uses phrases like a ''''J "caricature of an academic" to describe his colleagues. Will they continue to condone the actions, merely because the power of the chairmanship is behind him, or will they seek someone new, someone else from the department, who could come in with a Chances Are Things Could Change strong background, someone who could remedy the battered department and con­ struct one that does not have to spend time rebutting accusations their chairman makes? ttby Steve BrioMsmmmKmtfiffXtmx The Democratic Party is now firmly en­ matter how loud the Democratic attempts al The answer to those questions is self-evident. The ad ministration - President Benezet trenched in power on the federal level of taking credit for it, it will almost certainly be and Vice-President Sirotkin - must decide to deny reappointment. But this is not government. It is interesting to attempt some the President, and consequently. enough, they must also account for their failure to respond to complaints from faculty predictions of how the party will dissipate its Republicans, who will gain mosl from un im­ : members, complaints voiced three years ago and longer. advantage by 1976. proved economic situation. This gam in \ It is a simple truth of our two party system prestige can safely be translated ml" ad­ Post Script that fortunes rise and fall with each turn of ditional Republican seats. events. What appears to bean invincible front It is curious that in light of the trauma of Watergate, due in great part to the efforts at of Democrats might easily crumble in a .1. President Ford may also attempt m make its cover-up, that the administration would take such great pains to conceal discontent relatively short period of time. What are some political hay of the party situation i! his within its walls. Surely it is no great crime to admit that some administrative and of the possibilities? policies lag in effectiveness. He could pnssibh academic appointments were made in haste, or turned out unsuccessfully. It would be 1. The Democrats could proceed on the point to particular instances of Democratic too much to ask of anyone that every decision be the right one. The cloud of suspicion assumption that this year's elections were a snubbing of Presicjeptial legislation and ami- only arises at overt attempts to hide the facts, to cover-up. sweeping mandate far them, instead of the plain that his hitjiiU Were tied by a partisan. i truth; that Americans have merely repudiated unyielding Congim, If the Dcmoctah ! the Republican party. Perhaps repudiate is handle the charge,incorrectly, or have no i I too harsh a term; reprimand is perhaps more viable defense to the executive attack, ihe> applicable. Anyway, the Democrats may be could again have difficulties in maiiitammc i> templed by circunstanccs to nominate u man their huge edge. such as George McGovcrn, someone with u 4. Finally, a scandal of a sensational luiiuit 11 limited appeal, for the Presidency again. He could hit the Democratic parly. I Ins '•wins proved his inexperience with some un­ the most unlikely possibility, especially in Ihe Kninm IN (ini> DAVID LITONUR believable campaign blunders in 1972, and by aftermath of Watergate, but there is always a MANAI.IM, t.uniiK NANCY S. MIU.EK emphasizing some possible legislation that remote chance. If something like this oc­ HI SIMSS MANAUIH l.liS ZtH'KBRMAN was attacked mercilessly and successfully by curred, In the nature, of say, key Democratic Niws IIHMIR '. NANCY J. AI.IIAIKIII Richard Nixon and other Republicans. ASSOCIATI. MWS I.IHTUH MlCIIAM. SliNA leaders being exposed as having taken bribes PtH.sfK i|vt..s IDIItIR DANIEL GAINI* The point is, though, lhat a weak from lobbyists, the results could be as dis­ Assol IAII PIMSFICIIVLS EDITOR ItAHIIAKA FlSCIIKIN Democratic nominee would quite possibly astrous to the -Democratic Pari) as 'I'M IIMI Al, IIIIIOK PATRICK MCGI.YNN lengthen the coaltails of the Republican, and Watergate was to the Republicans. ASSIHTATI IICIINM Al. HlllOKS DONALD NliMCIK, WILLIAM J, S 11(11 at the very least, reduce the Democrats' To those who suy it would be illogical In ICUIHIRIAI. PAfil: IIIIII1R • MlNDY Al.lMAN holdings to a figure well below the over two- think the Democrats would commit >mcti Ams mi nm ALAN D. ARHBY thirds of Ihc scats they now control. Inciden­ follies, one can only say that while Watergate ASM* IAII AM.II> WITUM PAUL PHLACIALLI, HILLARY Kill.HICK tally, with Ted Kennedy out of the race, none .Sumis inium DHIICI! MAOOIN placed all politicians on guard, ii could noi of the present aspirants for the nomination possibly eliminate greed. As Nixon's scandal A.SMICIAU seimis mi Mm NATHAN SAI.ANI seem overly dangerous to Prcsideni ford. AllVIRIISIM, MANAI.IH I.INI1A Ml'Mf* slowly fades from public consciousness, A.VMKTAII AIIUKIIMM, MANAC.IR I.INI1A DllSMONIl politicians will tend to become less careful and (T.ASSIHH) ADVWTUINti MANAOIS JoANNIi S, ANI1RHWS 2. Ford could see his economic policies bear naturally be more susceptible to temptation fruit in the form of reduced unemployment (.KAIIIII luiiim ...' WKNIIY ASIIIIR II is definitely a possibility to keep in die back and a reasonably lessened rale of inflation. If SlAH rllUriHiKAPHMS KuN AMKIIN, Kllll MAONIliN of our minds. his programs follow the plan, noticeable im­ OUR OH'icts ARC I.M AIIIII IN CAMPUS CUNTCR 326 AND 334, provement will occur sometime in lute 1975 or Yes, power is an amazing thing. Hut it is an OUR mm-HONKS ARC 457-2190 AND 457-2194. early 1976, ebb and flow concept. Il reaches peaks. Of course, that liming ii excellent for the valleys, and stalemates. It never stabilizes for We ARR ("UNDID RY STUDRNT ASSOCIATION November election, The recovery will have very long, There is no reason to believe this hid time to gain some momentum. And no situation will be any different. M

Even It nobody remembers the candidate*. It Sure Made a Great Play I Introspective. . . . by Barbara Fischkin people throwing out invitations to CBS Elections News Correspondent parties on every floor and Linda Ellerby gave in to the little man's accomodatingly trying to squeeze in as A while ago I read a critique by Kate Millet on D. H. Lawrence's harried attempts to move her earring to many celebrants as possible. It Lady Chatterley's Lover. Usually supportive of feminist writing, I a point dead center on her left earlobe. became evident that the only way up was, this time, enraged by her inability to see the different levels of That was the extent of the "test run." or down was the stairs...until someone meaning. I believe she mis represented Laurentian characters and It couldn't progress to her right ear discovered the freight elevator'a. That misinterpreted dialogue. She had characters shouting things because Ramsey Clark, with his elec­ worked well until thePinkerlon caught where Lawrence had them speaking softly. It's a very different thing tion eve hopes not yet worn down by on and refused to let you get off once to gently say to a woman "lie down" than it is when you shout at her discouraging results, came in and stole you had gotten on. So, it was back to to do it. the show. the elevators just in time to hear a man After things quieted down again get on and proudly announce to a I think I've just pulled a Kate Millet on Jules Feiffer.I read this among the Clark supporters gathered group of strangers, "I'm Bob Abrams' week's cartoon and didn't want it printed. I felt degraded by his in the Commodore Hotel's Windsor wile's father!" exaggeration and his depiction of such a non-existent stereotype. Boom in New York, Ms. Ellerby said: With the losers the ending wasn't He wouldn t put a man in such a useless, stupid role. 'The network producers all knew quite as happy. Two supporters at Wilson when Clark was coming out. It was i »;,K The stage was quiet at Carey's Ballroom headquarters as the bad news comes But then, isn't thatthe point?Isn't it the women in our society who planned that way so that all three network cameras could get an ideal but that didn't last long. The performers came out just past midnight. over the tube: don t necessarily sit home and phone people up all day, but spend "You know they predict Carey to angle. The three major networks get album route. Hanging above the with his color-television-blue eyes, their lives in useless pursuits both at home and in the working together, but when minor newspapers stage were larger than life black and win." "Yeah, better luck next time." world? Pursuits they are pushed into by husbands who ignore them and student newspapers come it is a whites: A smiling Mary Anne, a Until... "I wanted the death penalty and watch television all night or bosses who ignore their skills in push and a shove. 1 much prefer smiling Hugh and, in the center, "What's your name?" reinstated." very much the same way. Feiffer is an exaggeration. But, maybe covering fires. This is more hassle than eleven Careys, al! smiling. There were "John Conally and yours?" "Maybe CareyTI do it." excitement." also signs like, "We were NumberOne "Barbara Fischkin." some women will see it and say, "That's an exaggeration of me and "Nah, he'll never do it." To others, waiting for the final tallies lo endorse Carey-the Bronx-Pelham "Oh yes. Ol course!" my hfe. Satire, when understood, makes one aware. That's why "I'm gonna halfta buy a shotgun." at the Commodore Hotel's Democratic Reform Democratic Club.'They were "From the Albany Student Press?" Feiffer. fl£ 'Yeah, we're all gonna haffta buy headquarters and at the Republican all homemade with magic marker and "oh..." shotgun's." Foots are necessary to aid understanding. And, that's why "But enclave in the nearby Roosevelt Hotel, oaktag. John Johnson, a member of the And we, as ASP reporters planted in the hassle was the excitement. In these settings the candidates Eyewitness News Team, in Clark Can She Type?". We hope men and women read them both. the middle ol these scenes to do or die Broadcasters, reporters, bartenders, could be movie stars, Broadway stars, headquarters, wasn't much better. His Daniel Gaines and Barbara Fischkin were part ol the show, be it comedy or actors, employees, mothers, children, even vaudevillians, if they had to. long arms served him well as he tragedy. We tasted .wine in the candidates, mothers of candidates, Fade in to Carey acceptance pushed ASP Associate News Editor, Guv'norSteajl: House at a table next to sisters of candidates, children of speech. Mike Sena, out of his key place next to ABC correspondent, Melba Tolliver, candidates, neighbors ol candidates, Hugh Carey yells, "Stop the music!" Ramsey Clark, leaving Mike only with and with the sudden realization that we Even If nobody remembers the candidate*... priests, Hasidic lews, foremen, bums, Mary Anne Krupsakmust do the same. fantasies that went like this: were no longer in the Campus Center waiters, Pinkertons, students, Robert Abrams, candidate for "I went over to him later and said, cafeteria , got into it. supporters and friends were Comptroller doesn't know yet whether 'You know Mister Johnson that was a It Sure Made a Great Play We sat next to AP reporters and le. celebrating, crying, playing, singing, he has won or lost and maybe that's really bad thing you did, pushing me 3P Ihem explain the "inverted pyramid" jillerbugging, arguing, screaming, why he has more trouble than the like that!'" Photos by Mvkkr method to us three limes over. Wetold l/FW, the boycott, Teamsters, growers and Gallo... writing, drinking, acling, praying and others getting the band to stop. 'I'm sorry son. Come up and see me janitors that they could not sil at our applauding. One woman slopped to Uh...lake two. any time and I'll give you a job.' " il phones in Ihe Windsor Room. We had realize thai she couldn'l remember Some ol the stars, though, don'l even Shades of Gray The street theatre, which took place payed for them. We were reporters. who ran against Rockeleller last time, need settings. All they need is a hall. inside, was more real. The observers 4P&5P We walked into the room designated but for many the celebration blurred Fade in lo hall outside Carey suite on became the participants and at times itfalmud's magical mystic tour... "Press Only" at Clark headquarters oul political consciousness. twenty lirsl lloor. they outdid the originals. and frustrated by our inability lo find It was streel theatre, the movies, Reporters wait outside the guarded Carey, while giving his acceptance out anything, were comforted by cries A Real Cherokee Bar-Mftzvah Broadway and television all crammed suite, ignoring remarks trom aides like, speech was rivaled and, at times, like, "It's impossible to get any 6P into four large rooms in two hotels and "I wish these people would get the hell successfully upstaged by a gloriously information. Do you know what's A WP1RG investigation... spilling oul into the surrounding halls, oul ol here." Bella Abzug, who is drunk, beaming, beautiful, Irsh going on? 1 don'l know what's going elevalors, lobbies and suites. The city, mnning again for Congress, dashes compatriot with while hair, a red lace on. I think I'll call Ihe cilydeskand see itself was inlected. Some who didn'l out in a long llowing, black cape and a and blue eyes more striking than 'But Can She Type?' what came over the AP machine.' make it into midtown still managed lo red, wide-brimmed hat, which, even anything ever seen on television. He They were the pros and they were 7P get on the six o'clock news by showing on her, looks likean exaggeration. She had been singing and dancing and it doesn't only happen in the movies... having the same problems. up at Iheir lavorile department store's conlers quielly with one privileged leading the "We want Carey. WE Later we wrote in a hurry, election day sale. Those al home could reporter, losing composure at the end WANT CAREY." chants all evening. surrounded by collee and cigarette 'Serptco' and '' Off the Screen watch it all and when Ihe program and exclaiming, "1 never said that!" Now that he had gotten what he butls, in a Irenzied attempt to make tlie switched lo Waller Cronkile Never said whal?...But, she is off not wanted he took the victory personally. 8P deadline. Someone said, "We're like . I discussing the economy they could even hearing that or "How can she While Carey spoke he cheered so real journalists. We're slobs." (We swilch lo Channel Five and see wear that coat in New York?" Irantically il was a wonder the Dillon, thought we were real journalists). Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca in Fade out. Carey and "Take an Irishman to It was a hard act to shake. order not lo spoil the mood. Those who represented television Lunch" buttons that he had pinned on BKK %(&£ jut, amBu m "I don'l want to go back to shcool. 11 \owwre were really on television and all too his white suit didn'l come rolling ofl H056AIOP CCm The mood was helped by scenery. This is loo much fun." WB^MVHUSftWPrS AT ollen they lived up lo their stereotypes. onto the lloor. eoro Far Irom being advocates ol Ihe empty "You'd gel sick ol it soon—all the I TffclV.. _ rAKBAC^ In Wilson headquarters, JohnConally, Street theatre knew no bounds. At SCHOOL, me„w7 stage, Ihe producers ol both the phoniness." .U78 W a member ol the ABC Eyewitness the Commodore it became vertical J 60, ISSLOU) Roosevelt and Commodore "I don't know..." {-(ELePHOUt. News Team touched his perlectly and look lo the elevalors. They were ID Mn and renewed the request that What turned out to be the iinal Many congressmen, especially from who are truly concerned about the ing water were present in the fields, to April 18,1970. not represent our workers .... We with Gallo old contract be extended, negotiation session took place. At the South, would vote "no" otherwise. farmworkers. The teamsters claim child labor came to an end, can continue negotiations at any itrick again refused, because the this meeting, Gallo pointed out that that the farmworkers have chosen dangerous pesticides were closely April 13,15,& 18, 1970 time." The years went by, and by the end of |llo farm workers were entitled to the union still had not submitted its them,d the growers agree. The supervised, and there was es­A second three-year contract was David Burciaga calls Deatrick to set World War II, unions were a powerful UFW boycotts have been called to Wineries. Here are economic improvements the economic proposals, and that in the tablished a Union hiring hall with negotiated and signed between the next meeting. force in the United States. Their power force the growers to reject their • UFW contract should provide, previous eleven (11) meetings, the was so great that businesses felt the consequent elimination of the Gallo and the UFW for three years •u Teamsters contracts and sign with the (d the UFW had not given Gallo company had demonstrated con­ threatened, and in 1948 Congress hated labor contract system which expiring April 18, 1973. May 22, 1973 UFW. Mo one denies that the their separate ver­ bir wage rate requests. The UFW siderable flexibility in their position ! brutalized and humiliated workers. Ranch Superintendent Bernardi passed the Taft-Hartley Act which out­ fi I \ farmworkers are far better off today is primarily interested in retain- on all resolved and unresolved The Hiring Hall established hiring and Supervisor Landucci accom­ lawed certain "unfair" labor practices. than they ever were, with some of the March 22, 1973 the Hiring Hall and Union Dis- issues. Yet the union to date had greatest gains taking place since the on the basis of seniority and gave pany Teamsters into the fields. They included secondary boycotts and According to the minutes of the sions of the con­ line clauses that Gallo farm failed to indicate any flexibility in strikes and boycottsbased on jurisdic­ Teamsters began holding the con­ workers for the first time, job securi­ March 22nd meeting: Gallo pointed srkers rightfully objected to. May 29, 1973 their position on several key items, tional disputes. tracts. But while the Teamsters take ty. out that UFW had not even credit for these gains, the UFW would During negotiations Deatrick is including Hiring Hall and Union The farmworkers never got organiz­ presented their list of proposed lay 11, 1973 probably have been able to get the flict's history. (The pressed on why Gallo is refusing an Discipline, which Gallo wanted to ed and thus didn't grow as the other April, 1970 changes, as required by the terms of [egotiations continued. The UFW same concessions from the election.He answers: "We have no conform with N.L.R.A. re­ unions did. The Taft-Hartley Act Gallo renewed this first contract for their 1970 contract. UFW artreed to [laimed that Teamsters were growers. What the farmworkers reason to believe that no one but quirements. limited' unions alter they were es­ really want is not clear. They voted an additional three years. The new submit this list at the next meeting, chronologies con­ ibserved on our ranches. Gallo contract provided for increased you represents the workers. An tablished a nd powerful, but those limits overwhelmingly for the Teamsters, scheduled for March 29th. The isponded that neither Teamsters June 25, 1973 made it extremely difficult for the but the UFW points out that many of wages and additional benefits. The election just delays things." UFW requested an extension of (or UFW representatives were per- A letter from the Western Con­ farmworkers to get organized. They the elections were not by normal Robert F. Kennedy plan gave their 1970 contract, which was itted in the vineyards during tinue through these June 7, 1 973 ference of Teamsters was delivered had always been ignored by the major ballot. They were based on a system workers their first medical in­ denied. 'orking hours and that super- Feliciano Urrutia who worked for toGallo claiming that the Teamsters unions, since they were very difficult to I ' where each worker gives a card to a surance coverage. As Ranch Com­ >isory personnel were so advised representative who counts it; he is in­ Gallo since 1958 is fired for his represented the majority of Gallo organize. For example, there can only mittees became more active, March 28, 1973 ind would continue to enforce this directly chosen by the employer. workers became increasingly more six columns) membership and support of UFW. farm workers, and asking for a be one or two entrances to a factory. Burciaga called Deatrick and lolicy. Gallo also pointed out that 1 ' DG involved in matters related to the meeting to prove this claim. Pickets can easily block the entrance. cancelled the meetings scheduled the one occasion Teamsters' Union. June 26, 1973 Farms can be reached in almost any for March 29th and March 30th. [epresentatives were discovered on UFW(con) Gallo distributes a letter to allJune 27, 1973 direction and at any point. This is a Gallo ranch, they were asked to workers stating that the Teamsters Before a meeting could be held to problem the UFW olten faced. They Below we print a sample of Gallo's publicity campaign. March 22,1973 ave by a company supervisor arid have given notice that they repre­ verify or disprove the Teamsters' would sel up pickets in two or three Robert Deatrick met with David ey did leave immediately. sent a majority, and that Gallo is claim, the UFW established a picket places, but scabs could still be brought Burciaga and the Gallo Ranch scheduling a meeting with them im- line at the Gallo vineyards. Since in at other places. Committee to discuss lormat, ay 17 & 18, 1973 mediately. Two strong Union the UFW had been soliciting signed Chavez' UFW grew, due mostly to •gp f You've Read This Advertisement, procedures, and gerier/illies about nly six negotiating meetings had members, including one on thecard s from Gallo farmworkers for at their own efforts but theirellorts would the negotiations. Mi Burciaga 0 Mr. Burciaga called Mr Deatrick to Dn receipt of Bob Gallo's letter, agree to a card count ol authoriza­ it was determined that a majority of the shelves were hit by Ihe boycotts. request extension ol the contract Ipesar Chavez advised he did not tion cards. UFWA uiorktrs fo rwut rauTOBorcon GALLO MINES. We. Inaut aW sufporkd all Gallo farm workers (including These were truckers, canners, which was due to expire at mid jagree there was a contest between Untt umiov. HB?Wr J : tr'-g^ aj[ ogrioutturai those who went on strike June 27th) packagers, etc. They were mostly After suflering for years night and set a dale loi the first two unions, and that there should had requested that the Teamsters be members ol the Teamsters union under unspeakable living —ST*"*Other^ America n workers workws wtiu ^ tMiimxi and working conditions, are guaranteed this right e negotiating meeting lor the 25th ol be an immediate election. Without their collective bargaining agent. Since Teamsters union members America's (armwotriers by law. but agricultural LtAar Relation, Att,ivhicb April. Mr. Deatrick relused to ex­ came together In the 1960s ^workers aren'l. laws governing union election The teamsters submitted proof of were losing their jobs as a resull ol the Ala mt tow. Tht m'jorHu to form a union, a union .... Jallo July 6, 1973 Ojtammtiu, stud WW tend the contract and sent a letter procedures, and bindincj all parties majority preference; and the UFW UFW's secondary boycotts, they of,w wtrkus stltUtJ that would fight for their products, you can help stating "Our position lias "ol David Burciaga gives the religious irighis and articulate give them this baste right j *ltclicyi^lfr\/MT\(ttS. Tdt involved, the employer is evidently had not been able to ob­ became interested in the farmworkers. Wit "liaimkn A> riftutnt \\w\f needs 'A changed since March 22, when 1 group signed authorization cards I j I. i Tlie union was the TpesllcldesTicklnto^-. f Ripple. Thunderbird, vulnerable to lawsuits and boycotts tain such proof. It was obvious that The Teamsters' unions work together; f the fields, and dllowedl Irom 173 ol the 222 Gallo workers tftMn m matng lk% sunt tiled Farm Workers o| Tyrolirt. Andre. Eden Roc told you that we would not agree to by the losing union. We knew that terica (UFWA). and on the pay roll on April 18, when the neither union would agree to the Ihe truckers help Ihe factory workers lion. Fair employinenl Carki Rossi. Red Moun­ uag rfi« majim'ru stittUi its leadership anextensionoftheGallo UFW Con­ Gallo farm workers were being practices went out the tain and Pmsano are all ground rules for an impartially by relusing to transport certain goods, |dillons Improved contract expired. Sister Joyce H»UfWAwi inr-tu window, and living and made by Gallo, and should tract." tatlcallu A little loo pressured by the UFW to sign peti­ supervised election, or agree to lor example. (This is illegal, but things working conditions be avoided America'-, Higgins telegrams R.J. Gallo asking pruixitiiMt U4 IU/HI ideally to suit some I returned laJJtebad old farmworkers have broken tion cards and the UFW could have give up the light if they lost the elec­ can "happen", products "fall out ol Ihe growers, and when him to examine the proof. Gallo _ rTorganl their backs lor hundreds 1/trijJlW ilfinttitfi curt*. Jntracts expired last presented these to us if they had a tion. In the absence of any legal rand lympnlhlierew,,, tol years to put Irwd on Bojprfwg ga(lo wmes ca*, refuses to answer her phone calls truck,"etc.) sumMat many growers ^ir table Now they're fcV systematically liiud and majority. mechanism to require both unions did irlir bestlo destroy asVg you to do some o"^ hurt our untkw. We and does not acknowledge the The Teamster's would benelit by evicted Irtirn company J .Ii4.l4iiiii[iiiii hiiiiu dim^ir them Will .owned housing ''~ «« dom^ 04. mMh OA we telegram in spite of the earlier to agree on an election procedure, bringing in Ihe farmworkers, and they r Ernest and Julio Gallo, April 25, 1973 fltHiing ? MrtpiM VfUft a. the world's largest winery J Cewfopujh^jrfe^W^ May 21,1973 promise to honor the card check. and to be bound by its result, Gallo believed it would benelit those who spearheaded the unlonj ol a gianl step backward*, Gallo again refused to cxli'iid the cottnit Mof moat our rf Gallo's field liar _ had to make the verification against busting ellorl " to prouirfe f^nt, Stofery lldS Gallo stressed that the contract ex­ were then under the UFW. uiarktrs H\t higkuhpaJcl in ..... _ IT55T" contract indicating thai H personnel and payroll records. Asa 'men, women and children /«ga%-rupwuU(iJ aflj pired over a month ago, and could July 7, 1973 The UFW held moslol Ihe contracts H* CWiWa/ Mkd announced that UFWA strictly to do with our philosophy result, a letter was sent to Gallo farm 4,conlrgj _.,_ manning the picket lines •totally mpwtiiU Mio*?, not understand why the UFW was Teamster Director James Smith an­ until llieearly seventies; the Teamsters ———-New contracts' were met with a massive , We're both interested in IJCHUII) tin Sfcht./wMilg ?£»«£*> r workers stating that Gallo would crime in and took over some in 1970. were signed with the ,. campaign of violence andi agreement." Durincj the session stalling. nounces that Gallo has recognized I plan tWaavi Hun palJ TeamstersUnlon.conlractf ^Intimidation bruu^li— recognize the Teamsters as the The workers chose through various lliat had been worked | ^^••WB^roinlhe Juan Perez of the Union ollio- .nin­ the Teamsters as the bargaining Ufa wisunMict, pan/ htaiHi out behind doted doors I fields and return to the bargaining agent for Gallo farm card check-oil systemsand some open consumer boytoit But es in to inform union nec|otuiliors agent lor its workers, all ol whom Misuraticf ,poM ptrai'm with no workar.parliclpa J June 1,4, & 18, 1973 workers and negotiations would elections, though the UFW contests the lion. NO^HP^^/ they need your help to that Teamsters have boon seen go­ Further negotiation sessions were are out on strike manning picket |>l*«, fW i»taM

•..,-.• i IHalmmd't magtcol mystic tour. A JVYPfRC Investigation... 9 A Real Cherokee Bar-Mitzvah 'But Can She Type? ..Jxcerpted Irom "But Can She Type"-A Study of Employment Agency Dis- doned copper mining town.) crimination Against Women in Albany by Mew York Public Interest Group(NYP- "I used to have the feeling before the summer that I would never take 1RG\ Karen Sadowsky, Project Coordinator. hallucinogens but with these two friends I felt different. One of them I believe was a member of the Native American Church (for whom it is legal to use peyote). We Women work. The United State Department of Labor estimates that women would take 4 buttons each time. soon will constitute forty per cent of the work force. Women do not work only "I am notaware of the procedure but we did follow some ritual. We would sit because they have nothing better to do or because they wish to earn a little around in a circle in a dimly lit room with a drum and sing. pocket money. Like men, most women work out of economic necessity; they work "Peyote made me feel as if I was in the earth. I'd move my legs and feel as if the to support themselvesand their families. Inl969,eleven percent or all American earth moved. I'd speak and it was like the birds were singing. I waslike the rivers, families were headed by women. In 1972, almost forty per cent of working wives the mountains and the earth. From the first time I started having visions each had husbands with incomes below $7,000 a year. by Mark Cohen continuing where the other one left off. Even though women need to work/they face blatant discrimination in pay A young boy'^ dream and nights of sleeplessness on theeveof hisBarMitzvah "The first time I took peyote I had a vision where I saw someguy walking along scales and employment opportunities. The following table demonstrates the ine­ may not seem to be of any importance either to him or his rabbi as long as his the road with a pack on his back and long blonde hair, blue eyes and high quity in pay scales that a woman can expect to encounter once she enters the voice is clear and his prayer is deep, but to Hal Malmud something was deeply cheekbones. In the vision I knew he was Indian, his name was Joe and that he was work force: (Figures represent average income for full-time year round work) important in them—something which lasted longer than a day in the synagogue from Denver. Education level Female Male and that was stronger than his voice as he recited from the Torah. "Two weeks later while driving in a pick up truck we saw someone walking Eighth grade graduates $4,400 17 goo As I sit in Hal's room on the 20th floor of Eastman Tower on a Friday night in late along the road and I met him. We became sworn brothers that day. High school graduates 5,808 9 g'qg September, the reason becomes obvious to me. Hal's long blondish hair is tied up "It was unreal, like Chuang Tzu (a Chinese mystic) when hedreamed he was a College graduates 9,162. 14 351 in braids and a feather is meticulously placed in one of them. A lead eagle butterfly and when he woke he wasn't sure whether he was a butterfly dream­ medallion accompanies some beads in circling his neck. As his eyes peer out of ing he was a man or a man dreaming he was a butterfly. I don't know why it Sixty percent ol lull-time working women make less than $5,000 per year. A third the valley between his cheekbones and his brow I become a bit uneasy. I look happened, it just did. I can't give any physical explanation or anything like that..." ol those make less than $3,000 per year. While 28 percent of working males about his.room which is not unlike any other students room (or, more precisely This separate visionary ol Hal's became part of his everyday life, joe had had make over $ 10,000 a year, less than,3 percent of working women earn that figure any other R. A.' s room) in that it contains an overflow of posters placed on the dull visions similar to Hal's previous to their meeting. Also Hal met an old Chinese While differences in pay scale are striking, they do not tell the whole story. To adequately judge whether or not women are receiving equal pay lor equal work, white of the walls, and it has a stereo, records and textbooks. man who wandered the desert alone. Like a refugee from the T.V. series he large common room painted dark green with folding dividers to form abouteight a comparison must be made between men and women holding similar positions. But there is a difference. On the turntable is a record with chants in a foreign offered to teach Hal a certain school of Kung-Fu once he learns Chinese. At times, interviewing areas. There were also about six separate offices painted light Unfortunately, men and women generally do not hold similar positions. Women tongue, en the walls are pictures of proud and crinkly old men and women with an old Indian man would drop by where Hal lived with his friends. purple adjoining the waiting room. Next to me a woman was also filling out an account for 95 percent ol all typists and 99 percent of all private households long black hair and brilliant scenery behind them, and in his bookshelves are "The Indian would be able to feel out our mood and adapt to us. He would application, but her application was pink, labeled "Lady Dunhill" at the top, and workers, telephone operators, stenographers, and practical nurses. Women have books half from his Chinese language and literature classes (where I first met Hal) always come in moments of crisis, somehow knowing when they were. He would had a picture of a woman in a skirt with papers in her hand. My application was been systematically excluded Irom better-paid skilled jobs and upper-level and half itvfulfillment of the dream which he has maintained since his 13th birth­ pose us questions or speak and make many allusions to animals. Then he would labeled Dunhill" and shewed a picture of a man in a suit with a briefcase in his white-collar positions. day and His day in the synagogue. In fact Hal's dream is more alive today than 7 leave by saying, "I am only a mocking bird," and returned a week later tosee the hand. Also, on the woman's form, there was a list of about two dozen business years ago; it is the modern rebirth of the dream if his grandfather, and his grand­ effect of his talk, like some Zen master who had just posed a question to his Alter a telephone study, NYP1RG researchers were able to identify problem machines and secretarial stalls—typing speed, stenographic ability, etc. There father's people—the Cherokee. students. areas and take to the field lor interviews. Eight employment agencies in the were no references to any secretarial stalls on my application. Listening to the While 6n his father's side Hal is descended from a long line of Russian lews, it is "Sometimes also we would go hunting, usually for rattle snakes. We would kill Albany area were visited, first by the "undergraduate" group, then by the secretary answer phone inquiries, it appeared to me thai she was referring calls his mother's father who has the proloundest influence upon him. His mother's them with a gun and say a prayer for then before and after we killed it. The meat "graduate" group. Guided by prepared resumes the first group sought a lull-time from men to male counselors and calls from women to female counselors permanent position that would help pay for finishing his or her education: and ^he grandfatherwas one of many Cherokees who were forcibly evicted from their was unlike anything I've ever tasted. After completing the application i was directed to the large common room second group sought a lull-time permanent position with a good future and room native landB in the Southeastern United States in the 1830's. He and 15,000 "In the mornings I would bathe naked in the river and say my prayers. Later where I noticed all the interviewees and interviewers were men. Women were lor advancement, starting at $125 a week. Neither group claimed any clerical others of his people travelled what was called the "Trail of Tears"; a long overland we'd all go into a sweat lodge—an Indian sauna and sit around in a circle around directed to the small purple rooms where female interviewers were located. I was skills except lor typing. trek, to Oklahoma. The tribe was nearly shattered by this. It took the 6,000 people a hot pit singing and praying. told by the -Jiter.-iev.-e: that'. was just at the right age for a management trainee who lived many years to regain their spirit. "I didn't know what the words meant but that didn't matter. I knew what the Undergraduate Field Study position in retail operation, possibly an accounting department in larger outfits. Hal Malmud's one desire is to "be adopted by a tribe; it may not be a Cherokee songs meant anyway." He pressured me to sign the contract which i did not do He said there was but other Indians can adopt you into their social order as a brother." On the door of Hal's room hangs a"medicine shield" or what is a result of a vi­ Dunhill Employment Agency, 41 State Street, Albany New York. nothing he could do for me until I Signed tne contract 1 said I'd take the contract, Hal leans back on his dormitory bed and begins to talk. The lights of the city of sion quest he undertook this summer. The shield is brightly painted in red, yellow Female Experience: have :: baked over by a -.end who was a lawyer and come back later. Tne next Albany shineithrough into his room. From a few flights below us, perhaps on the and white on paper. The design is an abstract interpretation of an eagle. Four Dunhill is a large employment operation with two divisions. There is a : ;cep- day :.-. the mail 1 received a letter merely storing, "Sign the contract, i can do 17th or 18th floor music is filtering through. The music is loud but it begins to fade feathers hang down from it. Four is a sacred number among many Indians. The tion room which is in the center ol the office. Both divisions contain four 1 noihmg tor you una! you do out in my mind as Hal talksof the actual dream he had when he was 13—the very shield is dircular (circles are also sacred among most tribes) but the eagle con­ that are partially divided, each housing one employment agent. Notably one same age when an Indian youth is supposed to go on a "vision quest"—4 days of tained within it is peculiar to Hal and the second day of his vision quest. division appeared to be much larger than theotherand the decor seemed newer What Is To Be Done' • fasting and prayer until he learns of his true spirit. Seven years later when he did "On the second day (ol the quest) there was a sunset. I had just given up on ever and more expensive. The agents within this section were al! men. The reoeto- It is clear thai employment agencies pursue oven discriminator/ practices in go on a vision quest, a similar vision came to tell him of his destiny. receiving a vision and I was almost ready to return and admitted to having failed. tionist handed me a pink application and two copies oi a pink contract, each tne; r dealings •».-:•_, men and women These practices perpetuate a vicious cycle "In the dream I was walking through a forest, kind of wandering through it.The "It was one ol those sunsets that seem to cover the whole sky in Iront and headed by the title Lady Dunhill.' I proceeded to fill out the application and oi inequality between the sexes in the total work force of our society, and thereby lorest was dark and had the smell of deacy anddeath. In thedarkness I stumbled behind you. The trees and rocks all around me were glowing orange, even my returned it to the receptionist She then asked me to take a typing test She placed perpetuate me oppression of women over a fallen log; a chipmunk came over to ask me if I was hurt. I said no. skin. I was so intent on gaining the vision that I only caught it halfway through. me in a closet with an electnc typewriter and gave me the test Since the employment agency :s oner, "he on.y way many women can fand a "As I began to stand up many more animalscame to see me. There was a deer, "It seemed to break my uneasiness. Alter that I sat down unconsciously and I was then introduced to a iemaie employment agent in the smaller division '•- it is imperative ma; its practices Be amended lo accomodate me needs of a bear, a fox and a snake. As I looked at each animal all the movements of the just began to contemplate. In a little while the vision came—it was the same eagle which contained two other iemaie agents. The counselor, Fran Hadersbeek, women and to comply with the spirit and the .ere: of me lav.- MYPIHG -rges toe animal came to me. That is, as I looked at the snake I could see it crawling and lay­ 1 had seen when I was 13. It came as the last thing in the vision but the eagle had began by asking me personal questions She asked 1!! was planning to relocate to 10.towing recommendations ing eggs, when 1 saw the bear I could see ii catching fish and crawling into a cave, the same markings as long ago. It was all encompassing. Even the clouds above Albany because my fiance' or boyfriend lived there When 1 replied no the agent and the same with the other animals. me took on the presence of the eagle. It's presence reaffirmed what had been said asked me what inends I was visiting ! replied that I was visiting with friends whe "I used to think that an animal can't talk and an animal has no leeling or per­ before. went to SUNYA. The agent then asked rne their names and what yea: they were sonality but as I looked at each animal and the movements came to me I saw that "I wear my braids and my feathers now lortwo differenct reasons. Forone the in college. Astounded by the personal nature of the questions ! asked her oa:d_zec Any :orrn o: oiiierencation among this was wrong. leathers bind me to the spirit of the birds to which I am a brother. . . I have motives. The agent explained that the agency needed such informaacn to deter­ me agenc .= r_y nature discriminatory.' 'The darkness started fading in the forest and 1 began to feel comfortable with accepted the eagle as my spirit and all birds at the same time. mine how long I would stay in Albany However, I had already told her ".hat I liked - an obligation to instruct their counselors as them although I can't explain why. I had a feeling of comlort in a group, of 'The other thing is that they are a natural expression ol what's inside ol me—a the Albany area and that 1 was planning to settle there balance and security. Although the dawn came 1 couldn't see the sky. The feeling ol Indianess that is just bubbling over. The counselor then asked me what kind of work 1 was interested in doing. I toid sorting ail women in cienca! positions and must animals told me that there was another world with a sky and trees outside of "I leel allegiance to the Jewish people asa tribal people and a struggling peo­ her that I had come to hear her suggestions, that I was unsure oi 3 career for en ran be placed in derscai positions. where we were. I asked them if they could take me there and they said no. ple but I don't have any leeling for the Jewish religion." myseli. I repeatedly stated however, that i was looking for an interesting >ob with .ce.-.ng women assecond-ciasscsnzens who do "I began to feel lost, that everything I ahd ever experienced was nil and I My interview with Hal ended some 3 or4 hours alt^r 1 lirst walked into his room. room lor advancement, and that my first preference was a :oc in vhicr. my heir male counterparts started crying—until all the animals started crying along with me. When I got home 1 went brousing through a book called Touch the Earth, A Sell employer would help pay for my education She seemed annoyed with my re­ petuanrg one m.sta/.er. oe.ie: mat all women giy do no: view -me.: cos as permanent careers. 'Then I heard a voice, saying 'Don't cry little one.' Portrait ol Indian Existence. It was late Friday night, the Jewish Sabbath, when this quest and said that she could do nothing for rne if I had no idea what1 wanted so .m asking any applicant personal questions not "And I looked up to the sky to see an eagle. passage, (written in response to an offer made to a group ol Indians in 1744 lo at­ do. 1 then told her that! was very sure of jobs idid no! wan! cler.cai work "..' any psoymer.i '.:.: .3 .rr.pcTta.it to /mow personal .:.- " 'Just spread your wings and fly.' , tend college) caught mye eye. . . other typical women s pbs that were dead-end streets She responded by saying 00.03 snou.o ce aste-d as simple directives. For "And the next thing I knew I was above the trees next to an eagle with white "We know that you highly esteem the kind ol learning taught in those col leges, that the only jobs they had in this division" were cienca! iocs I asked, what is oace dons that would pre- markings on its head and wings. The eagle flew with me for a while and then left and that the maintenance of our young Men, while with you, would be very ex­ this division? Tne women's division' The agent replied mat a women s divi­ mgv thequesa me alone saying— pensive to you. We are convinced, that you mean to do us Good by your Proposal: sion" was against the lav/ She claimed that it was simply this division as op­ ild ce " 'You are an eagle and others will look to you lor • strength.'. And then my and we thank you heartily. But you, who are wise therefore not take it a miss, il our posed to "that division", as she pointed "o the section where four male employ­ father woke me up and told me it was time to go to Synagogue." ideas ol the kind ol Education happen not to be the same as yours. We have had ment agents were seated at their desks ec cy an agency pro: so ;cc placemen 1 should •a. women, or should roe adnuiussered only after the some Experience ol it. Several ol our young People were formerly brought up at After this interchange, the counselor decided that sne r.ad no 00s .n ner :..e to: This summer Hal took a bus out to Arizona to study Political Science at Arizona the Colleges ol the Northern Provinces (i.e. Northern U.S.); they wer instructed in me, and sent me 10 the other two women agents ..-. the office Tnese m.ve.-r.ews .n -rxpress^c 1 her desire for me type of employment to which the test resai State University at Tempe. The course was "Revolution and the Social System" all! your Sciences; but when they came back to us, Ihey were bad Runners, ig­ followed the pattern described above The last agent I spcr.e w.th seemed more 0 iae new torvc (jenerai but what really attracted him was not political science (or his other major, norant ol every means ol living in the woods... neither fit for Hunters, Warriors, sympathetic. She went into the men s division 10 see about a management .ness -aw should LZ amended to prohibit Chinese) but the earth— nor Counsellors, they wer totally good for nothing. g titles wiuch directly or mdmecoly indicate training program lor me When she returned, sne told me thai the program was sen .segregate!; sob pecis. "Out there they said you could hear the earth speak. I felt that the earth was "We are, however not the less oblig'd by your kind Oiler, tho' we decline open only to persons who were twenty-one or older 6 Tne Hew Yore General Business Law, section 187 should be amended to calling me out there. I had originally planned on going to school, work fora while accepting; and, to show our grateful Sense ol it, it the Gentlemen ol Virginia will mate it a violator, tor an empvcyrrier.t agency so disennunate or. the basis oi sex and then split. But Icouldn't take it. I decided totry and get on the Navajo reserva­ send us a Dozen ol their Sons, we will takeCareof their Education, instruct then in Male Experience- tion, which is really a big one, but they wouldn't accept me. all we know and make Men ol them." Current laws do not provide tor r^sper.soon or revecattone* an agency'sEcense I was given a white application to lill out While I was hllmt out me torrr. •. oscause v. sei dtsenmssaben A penalty such as this will insure that each agency "1 dropped the course and hitchhiked to Flagstaff where I happened to meet One must think that after all Hal has done this summer and even now, his real noticed that the office was set up for two different approaches. mere was one two other Indians who took me to where they lived near Jerome (a large aban­ education and his real barmitzvah have just begun ias s direct state m putting 2 step so discriminatory employment practices.

PAGE 6P ALBANY STUDENT PRESS: NOVEMBER 12, 1974 NOVEMBER 12, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE 7P H doewnt only happen to the movie*... jurisdictions! dispute between two unions. This, in turn, his subjected ui to vilification From Cwtral Council: letters and character assassination. If there is any 'Serpico' and 'Papillon' Off the Screen moral justification for this, we are at a loss to find it. Pardoning the Convicted better shoot yourself first." named the by mis­ HAARLEMfi NETHERLANDS interested in the existence of a "pad," O'Heaney's For Real The highly ethical manner in which this an organized system of bribes from The British bobbies didn't impress sionaries who fled there centuries ago (AP) Frank Serpico, the lonely labor dispute has been presented by the media The ASP was asked to publish the following letter and Central Comet resolution. crusader who helped expose numbers operators that was netting him: "their methods leave a lot to be during an epidemic of malaria on the in various areas has alleviated an otherwise To the Editor: widespread graft in the New York City dishonest cops $800 a month in the desired." mainland. distressing experience for my brother and me. To: Your article on taverns in La Belle Albany police department, gazed out the caie south Bronx division. Serpico keeps notes for a possible For 100 years, France kept its most We offer you our full cooperation in arriv­ President Gerald Ford etc. that appeared in Wednesday's /IS/" (Nov. window at two long-haired Dutch cops Frustrated at departmental foot book, "not a behind-the-scenes, sour hardened criminals in the South ing at and presenting the facts in this case; and New York State Congressional Delegation 6) was full of misiinpressions. Most noticeable grapes look at my past but something American colony—in the Devil's we will appreciate yours. Senator Jacob Javitt going by in a mini squad car. dragging, Serpico at last took his story was the writer's description of O'Heaney's Island complex and in prisons and Senator James Buckley The one next to the driver was a lady to The New York Times. The resulting on the philosophy of justice." He was Grill at 184 Ontario Street. The description Ernest Gallo cop, blonde arid pretty. newspaper series caused a sensation. asked to address the police academy work camps on the mainland. was out-of-date by over two years! True, The enclosed bill calling for the pardoning of persons convicted of marijuana sale or posses­ sion is a position statement adopted by the State University of New York at Albany Central "Happy as larks," observed the In the fallout of related events, the em­ in a Swiss city and pulled together For 50,000 of the 70,000 convicts, O'Heaney's is neither a swinging singles up­ Council, which represents the student body. former plainclothesman whose fight barrassed mayor appointed the in­ some of his theories on police training, French Guiana was a death sentence. town nor rock band druggy downtown bar, This piece of legislation represents an expression of mixed sentiments, confusion and revolu- against police payoffs and official dependent Knapp Commission to in­ "like allowing 18-year-olds on the They were killed by disease, by guards and it may be raunchy by Wolf Road crowd Cheering Five-Quad vestigate police corruption. Amid a force to train with an experienced and by each other. standards, but it hardly deserves the image of a sion. Confusion over Ihe meting out of unequal standards of justice, whereby punishment no cover-ups shook the administration of longer fits the crime (or any rational pattern) other than politcal expediency. Revulsion, about Mayor John Lind-' welter of in­ partner, having a ghetto family and Few of the 20,000 survivors ever saw jock-fraternity-fight-all-the-timc boring place that the article painted. Tuesday, Nov. 5, 11:30 a.m. the current situation whereby many thousands of otherwise innocent marijuana smokers have say and became a dictments and maybe a guy doing time rap with the France again. Some escaped into the To the Editor: served (and are serving) time in jail, and have had their careers and lives ruined. O'Heaney'sisa rea/bar; it's clientele blends best selling book federal in­ recruits and re-examining the whole wilds of Venezuela; others served out This morning while most of the Albany stu­ This legislation makes no claim as to the value of theeffects of marijuana per se. but merely the Irish philosophers, jobless Ph.D.'s quiet "off- -and hit movie. vestigations, the deal of arrest records versus citizen their terms and stayed in French dent body was still asleep, crisis struck our inequity of the present system's harsh treatment of its users. We hope you wil(accep«his bill in campus" couples, profound grad and foreign "Cops over here pplice com­ rights." Guiana. suite. One of our suitemates blacked out; the the true spirit in which it was intended, and we hope that some serious thought is given to the ex­ exchange students—all in all. great conver­ are respected. missioner resign­ He attended a World Police Federa­ thud of his head hitting the floor luckily woke oneration of this country's non-criminal "criminals". sationalists. You never know what infamous another up. They relate to the ed, the department tion meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland, There was . . . Henri Charriere, the vagabond may drop in. showering you wilh Patrick B. Curran Controlling the urge to panic, we im­ people. They aren't was reorganized and was disappointed to find it "a big convicted murderer who maintained O'Neillesquc observations and grcal lies of President mediately contacted Five-Quad Ambulance plotting ways to put and its rules beer drinking lest that had nothing to his innocence and chronicled prison wisdom. There may be a bit too much sports Student Association Service. Within minutes two very capable you in jail to meet revamped, holding life and his Devil's Island escape in two SUNYA do with resolving problems of better on Sundays, but O'Heaney's remains the representatives of Five-Quad were ad­ arrest quotas. field commanders law enforcement." books, "Papillon" and "Banco." It is closest thing to McSorley's that Albany offers. ministering first-aid to our semi-conscious "Policemen in responsible for the But the more he thinks about it, Ser­ primarily his work that brings tourists. One does not expect the general ASP and bewildered suitemate. conduct ol their Switzerland are pico is convinced "it isn't just police ... Francis Lagrange, the convict pai­ readers to appreciate it. but for those who We could continue the story in detail, but CENTRAL COUNCIL even listed in the phone book, so men. Precinct captains were banished corruption. The whole system is rotten. nter who only in prison developed his might, one hopes the out-of-date picture por­ it's not really necessary. Our friend was in 3 A JOINT RESOLUTION someone in trouble can call them up at to the sticks and there was an exodus of Here it is 1974 and they still bitch own style and stopped imitating the trayed in the-45/ will not mislead them. Albany Medical Center receiving excellent home. In New York it's still a big deal retiring top brass. about busing. America has become masters he had forged so successfully And no one has ever heard of "The care, not more than twenty minutes after his Whereas: President GeralU Ford has declared amnesty for draft dodgers and conscientious ob­ getting them to live inside the city Walking the streets of the old the land ol the Big Rip Off; rip off others for so long. Crusher." accident, jectors and deserters as well as a previously highly placed White House official; limits. Here cops on the beat can wear Haarlem, which long ago gave its before they rip you off." ... Soulange, a diamond thief, whose Cathleen Houlihan Five-Quad Ambulance Service deserves Whereas: President Ford has declared this a time for the nation to heal its wounds; long hair, beards, earrings, anything name to the New York ghetto, Frank Serpico pointed to a paperback ragged diary tells how he plotted his congratulatory honors of the highest degree Whereas: In keeping with this spirit of sympathy and forgiveness; It is hereby proposed that the following be enacted: they like." Serpico, now 38 and retired on a dis­ copy of Kurt Vonnegut's "Breakfast of escape from the island. The last page lor a job well done. Unfortunately we do not know either the young gentleman's or the ability pension, tries as much as he can Champions" on the dashboard. "There said, "Tonight, I think I will succeed." I. that Central Council adopt the position that a complete and unconditional pardon be Serpico, known to prostitutes in the young lady's name so we cannot thank them granted to all persons incarcerated or convicted on charges of possession or sale of non- to forget the past and live in the pre- And he did, with three other men on a other Harlem as 'The Beard," studied a guy who's got it all together. The personally, but we in suite 1304 are deeply in­ wholesale quantities, of marijuana. This pardon shall include removal of said conviction from his own collar-length hair and neat •sent.' American dream has become a night­ rait made ol palm fronds. They drifted debted to these fine people. any affected individual's record. spade beard in the mirror. He tugged "I don't look beyond tomorrow," he mare. I don't think the system can be for days without food or water until one In conclusion, we would just like to say to II. that a letter be sent to the President of the United Slates and the entire New,York State the gold earring in his good ear and said, turning his right ear to the peal of changed by legal means anymore. I'm man, gone mad, jumped into the sea. the Student body that whenever Five-Quad Congressional delegation, including our two Senators, with a recommendation for action as ordered up a genever, a "young" bells from the town hall clock. "The fascinated by Patty Hearst and that The others drew straws, and the loser asks for donations, to spare the change: some­ stated in section I. : Holland gin. way my head is now, I don't think I'll be Symbionese Liberation stuff. After was killed and eaten. Soulange made it day you might need them too. III. that copies of this bill be sent to the President of the United States, the New York State "Hey, you know something," he around very long. Who wants to live Vietnam and Watergate, what can be to the mainland and found refuge in Eastman Tower 1304 Congressional Delegation, The New York Times, the Albany Student Press. WSUA and all laughed, "I never caught a European forever?" called extreme?" Dutch Guiana, now Surinam. Albany area radio and television stations and newspapers. NOR ML. the Majority and Minori­ cop cooping." Cooping is police slang Besides the unknown enemies Alfie ty Leaders of both houses of the New York State Legislature. for sleeping on the job, in school boiler listens lor, there is the enemy within, There were no cells on'Devil's Island IV. that this bill shall take effect immediately upon approval in accord with the Constitution. rooms and tenements basements, a the bullet fragments still lodged in his itself. The prisons were on the other custom Serpico early encountered as a brain that could begin moving at any Devil's Island islands. rookie cop in his native Brooklyn. time, bringing total paralysis or death. Royal Island was administrative Farming the Wine And Now, A Word About Movies: A horse-drawn barrel organ cascad­ The lost hearing in his left ear causes center for Ihe three islands. There, ed a waltz across the cobblestone him to lose his balance in the dark and DEVIL'S ISLAND, French Guiana prison walls crumble as palm trees square where Serpico's mobile become confused when sound comes (AP) The cells, five paces long and thrust between the stones. In building To the Editor: Deeper Into Atmosphere camper was parked at a meter. Alfie, Irom several directions. three paces wide, stand empty. alter building, heavy wooden cell During the past year, the United Farm by David Wade his shaggy English sheep dog and "on­ Always a loner, The Beard abroad Smothering heat and a jungle of palm doors sag open, rotting on their metal Workers Union and its supporters have dis­ teams carefully trained in the wonders of seminated considerable "information" about Perhaps one of the least-acknowledged Wire-Crossing; the beauties of the Unfocused ly true friend," peered patiently out the has become even "more radicalized, trees enshroud row upon row ol braces. the continuing dispute between them and the aspects of SUNY cultural life is that of the Screen: the effects of Sound-Manipulation! window. more anti-establishment" than in the curmbling buildings. The only light filters through a four- Teamsters Union, as to which union should Weekend Movie. How many of us attend the Ihink of the suspense built up by those pearly For more than two years now, Ser­ days when his hippie clothes, bushy A quarter-century has passed since inch vent in the ceiling of each cell, have jurisdiction over Gallo farm workers. SUNY movies every Friday and/or Saturday moments of strained silence; by those pico has been in self-exile abroad, hair and swinging Greenwich Village the guards in white and the inmates in touching the three wooden planks that Much of this "information" is demonstrably night? Yet how many of us bother to tip the mysterious objects on the screen which, when almost constantly on the move, trying lite-style made other cops suspicious ol red-and-white form a bed. misinformation. We are certain that you doorpeople or thank the projectionist? How finally focussed. reveal themselves as THE to find himself and maybe—he smiles him. He was a crack shot and a karate striped uniforms The tin steeple ol would prefer to present all three sides of this A Good Job . . many of us enjoy the special effects created by END', by the vain attempts to reconstruct wanly at the suggestion—trying to lose expert, but he didn't "belong to the left the penal a church pierces controversy if it should become, or if it has the projectionists and doorpeople to save us vital dialogue from the blur ni broken film! somebody. Both he and Alfie have club." He liked ballet and opera, kept colony known to Royal's jungle become, newsworthy on your campus. There Irom the boring spots? Yet, how many of us Yes. I'msureallofmy readers will recognize blame the^e hard workers unfairly for these trouble sleeping. T.S. Eliot's poems in his locker and, he the world as Devil's canopy. The are three sides, the U.F.W.'s.the Teamsters' To the Editor: these wonderful but much-maligned produc- very attempts? tion^ of our core of moviemen. But even these He was warned, he testilied in court, laughs, "didn't stash money in mason Island. church's doors are and ours. I'm writing [his to compliment the ASPon Oh, fickle, foolish and fussy audience! Oh, magnificent effects cannot compare with one jars out in the back yard to avoid em­ Roofs have cav­ freshly varnished, For our part, we stand ready to assist you in its coverage of the elections last week. Next they were going to "do a job" on him poor, thankless, oppressed workers of SUNY masterpiece of cinema, shown in secret just a and he could end up "face down in the barrassing bank accounts." ed in and shards of but frescos by in- every way in presenting the facts on this da) reporting ol national events is something problem fully and fairly. If you wish any infor­ Hollywood! Think, you ingrates of ticket- lew weeks ago. in a delicately-arranged at- East River" forgiving evidence against The dust has settled now, and every red tile are strewn mate artist one duesn'I expect from a college paper, and it mation from us, you need only to call. Our buyers, think of the hours of labor put in by (ontinued on page ten like leaves in the uas an enjoyable comprehensive surprise. fellow plainclothesmen on the take crooked cop he testilied against has Lagrange are Communications Officer is Dan Solomon. from gamblers. served his sentence and gone Iree. hallways and chipped and peel­ Congratulations on a job well done. I'd be His telephone number is (2(H) 521-3599. \er\ interested in knowing how you did it. Six months WMr appearing as a key Serpico wonders il he would do it all through the yards. ing in the open- Please do not hesitate to call upon him forany Neil Baron IN TO witness at the;, perjury trial ol a over again. There is no sided wood inlormation you may need; and please do call plainclothesman who denied taking "Dare I disturb the Universe?" he museum, no old-timer to tell the stories building. upon him if the U.F.W. or its supporters thousands ol dollars in graft, Serpico quoted his lavorite Eliot poem, "The ol the inmates who toiled and died The laces, haggard and unshaven in "make" news on your campus, so thai our side HUoAT was shot in the face while making a Lovesong ol I. Alfred Prufrock." here. There are no souvenir stands, no the laded paintings, are those ol the »f Ihe story may be presented simultaneously narcotics arrest. In his ramblings, Serpico has lormed guides and few tourists. prisoners. The subjects are also uni­ and equally in your columns. On Election News Serpico stoodl apart in the ranks of some opinions of the police he en­ There is a hotel, once a dining hall quely theirs: St. Peter opening the gate, II the U.F.W. or its supporters request the New York Police department, the counters. He liked the easygoing infor­ lor guards, but it is seldom full. the return ol the prodigal son and advertising space for their viewpoint, we nation's largest, as one ol the lew of­ mality ol the Helsinki cops. He thought Barracks that once housed guards Christ's ascension. would appreciate it if you would give us an To Ihe Kditor: equal opportunity, at the same lime, and ficers ever to report corruption and some ol ihe local police in Italy lived up are now occupied by families of a On St. Joseph Island, thedisciplinary preferably on facing pages, to present our side. I would like to commend the ASPon their ;-< then voluntarily take the stand against to their Italian movie image ol "bumbl­ dozen technicians who man a radar center, solitary confinement and the I will tell you quite frankly that this has been line election coverage. It was fast, comprehen­ mm /. - ing, sleazy corruptability," but the station that tracks missiles launched • crooked cops. For breaking the un­ guillotine were meted out to those who a saddening and disillusioning experience for sive and belter organi/.ed than the local written precinct house law that in effect carabiniere, the national force, were Irom the French space center on the broke the rules. This island, like Devil's, my brother and me. Ours is a famil) business. newspapers puts cops above the law, he was "respected as a just police organiza­ mainland, only 8 miles away. The is uninhabited today and rarely visited. Within it we have warm and close shunned and hated by his fellow of­ tion." bubble-topped station is on Royal Prisoners sent to the Salvation relationships of many years standing. We Dennis R. Brown ficers and written oil as a "psycho" by A village policeman in Italy showed: Island, almost concealed among the Islands loiled in the not sun breaking believe in and encourage union representa­ ruins ol the penal colony, which tion. Further, our farm workers receive Irom his superiors, him a rusty revolver, rocks, building cobbled roads and The Albany Student Press reserves the us voluntarily more than is required by their Four years had gone by since a cop "When was this shot last?" Paco ask­ spread over three islands—Devil's houses lorlhe guards, tending gardens wle rn-Jit '" i

'wmemm -.*• • '.' columns •'•"•}**?. r Movta 1 Guidelines for Decisions continued from page now An Evening's Perversion k]r Loft Kjnasfco mosphere suited perfectly to its content. What From the moment anyone gets up in the teaching that Jesus was talkingabout? The Bi­ person in the work) who needed hint, be would do I speak of, fellow worshippers of the by Speaet Raggio alleviate the pain, and it is here that he was stabbed by morning, he bit to make decisions. Most of ble says, "We have come to know and believe have died exactly the way he did. He would .cinema? I speak of none other than...Deep The Marquis de Sade. Mention his name and reac­ Corday, defenseless in the midst of his writing. these lift moral onca, having to do with right in the love God has for tit. God is love, and he havesaidalltheoutntgeousthingshesaid. He tions will range from repulsion tocuriousfascination. The Marquis de Sade and Jean-Paul Marat never ac­ and wrong, better and worse, good and bad. who abides in love abides in God, and God in would have done all the wild things he did. Throallti Repulsion for what some view as the most obscene works tually met. When Marat died, Sade volunteered to say a All of IN IMC tome tort of guideline to help us him," We, for our part, love because he first For you. Just one pitiful, confused, lonely, Yes, friends, that detailed description of of literature ever written; fascination for the amazing in­ few words al the burial, an offer inspired by purely selfish decide between choices. loved us. The commandment we have from scared kid, social ills of America, that well-known cham­ telligence of the man responsible for them. motives. From this chance incident, Peter Weiss con­ himisthis: "whoever loves God must love his Up toYe a Ii your guideline "what everybody elte ii pion of Deep Throats the world over, has in­ From the completion of his earliest known work—in Of course, it won't make any difference if ducted an absolutely brilliant play, The Persecution and doing," or "what's best for me" (but maybe brother." a John 4:16,19,21). 1782^-Sade was forced to deny authorship of almost you don't want it to. That's up to you. The Bi­ deed paid a short visit to our campus! The star Assassination of Jean-Paul Moral as Performed by the will hurt somebody else), or "what Mom and everything he wrote. Only recently has there been an Daly Moral Choices ble says, "Love is Very patient and kind, never of that epic, the heroic and awe-inspiring Lin­ Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direc­ Dad said"or just "whatever is easiest?* Have ! da -Lovelace, has demonstrated all her in­ acceptance of, or at least tolerance of, Sade's work. tion of the Marquis de Sade . Or, to fit the marquee, Obviously, the guideline for a Christian jealous or conceited or proud, never rude or you ever bothered to think about it? These . telligence and versatility as she fights the Sade probably could have avoided the censorship and Marat I Sade. choices and guidelines were around 2,000 who must make daily moral choices is love. selfish or irritable. Love does not demand its forces of nature and nausea, drawing cries of persecution that he was and is subject to if only he had It is a difficult, complex play, and just as it is not easy years ago or so, when Jesus Christ was doing But Jesus never talked about ah ego trip, a own way. It does not hold grudges and will artistic appreciation from an adoring limited his writings to the sexual explicitness and variety to watch and understand, it is not easy to produce. his three year teaching and miracle-making trite generalization, a "nothing word," when hardly even notice when others do it wrong. It audience! for which he his famous. However, Sade was an atheist, To celebrate the occasion of their 150th production thing. What he said and did upset the big guys he talked about love. He said, "There is no is never glad about injustice, but rejoices and this, coupled with his highly political pamphlets, the RPI Players chose to present MaratSade. It is ex­ so much they killed him as a public criminal. greater love than this: to lay down one's life whenever truth wins out. Ifyou love someone, placed him in a very unfavorable position with both cellent, thanks to the direction of Bill Kammer and the for one's friends." And that's just what he did. you will be loyal to him no matter what the Today there are people running around who Backed by such thrilling and innovative Church and State. He spent a good portion or his life in brilliant acting of the Players. claim to be "Christians." The Bible says that He always gave, never asking anything for cost. You will always believe in him, always compositions as 'At Last We've Found Your various prisons (where he did most of his writing) and The Fifteenth Street Lounge at RPI is just the right when someone becomes a Christian, he it a himself. He lived and died freely, for people expect the best of him, and always stand your Tingler' and the themefrom the original Old eleven years in the asylum of Charenton until his death in size for Weiss' play, its smallness and informality new person. How does this Christian make who were rotten and hated him. And he didnt ground in defending him. Love never ends..." Spice shaving-cream commercial, Miss 1814. engendering the intimacy necessary to the play's success. choices? How does this brand new person live dieforsomevaguegroup. Ifyou were the only (I Cor 13:4-8). Lovelace and her crew revealed new depths of Jean-Paul Marat was one of the greatest men of the Mural/Sail'e. is a play within a play. The audience day lo day? First of all, what is a Christian? hard-core talent. Also making new strides in French Revolution, champion of the people who actual­ enters and is seated in the asylum, as the inmates mill Protestant? Religious person? Someone who classical forma the acting Held were Linda's final love and ly carried out the re\olution. His political essays and about, waiting for the play to begin. Sade enters, and M. don his best? Follower of Jesus Christ? fiance', an unknown cast in the role of a star­ pamphlets made him an enemy of the royalists, who sent Coulmier, thedirector of theasylum. enters with his wife A Christian knows that there ii a Cod. This ving thief, and Linda's roommate, another un­ Charlotte Corday to his room to kill him. Marat, suffer­ and briefly introduces the play. Bath Water is Best God is loving but perfect. The Christian known willingly demonstrating her own ing from a skin disease, was forced lo sit in a bath to "The subject of tonight's piece will be the assassination For those of us who live within the lound. may I say. of the tpiashing realizes that he is not super-goody Captain fascinating talent. of the revolutionary figure Jean-Paul Marat, by the waters and pounding hoofs of Saratoga; Bath. England, should be of special Lovable. But instead of feeling guilty and try­ woman Charlotte Corday which occurrred just fifteen ***«««******* interest For it was a Roman, and became a British spa. So far as is known, ing to escape from himself, or maybe see an years ago this very night. . . Please settle back and however, it had no horse race-*. analyst or something, he reaches out to the relax . . . and joinusforapleasantevening'sdrvenion.™ promise of Jesus, which claims love and However, cxcrutiatingly brilliant as these Hut MaraiiSade never approaches "a pleasant The Latin name of the city. Aquae Sulis, is c.ear evidence of the nature of oneness with God, freedom, and life. professionals were, mention must be made of evening's diversion". It is a disturbing pta>. a visually the Roman settlement; aquae "wafer*™ was frequently the name or part of the the subtle talent of the sponsors of the film. assaulting collage of conflicting characters. Sade is name of an ancient spa. Suhsfsthegenittvefposscs.sive)caseof Sul.the name Shown in a choice basement, upon a of an obscure native deity, in whom the Romans uw some resemblance to This changes him. It turns his whole life situated in his own milieu, he is ir. total control. The stylistically-wrinkled sheet, and complete with their goddess Miners- In Roman times the rm-.-st prominent buddings were around. He can't explain it, but a lot of the asvlum director is held back by his fear of Sade and the musty odor and darkened passages, the at­ the temple of Sul and the hatha themselves, fed by the hot mineral springs of ways he used to do things don't work for him other inmates The inmates are puppets, they obey Sade mosphere of the production was authentic and the area. Aquae Sofia was famous throughout Britain and Gaol, not as a anymore. through fear and force and respect, he is God in thn inspiring. In fact, that atmosphere was so in­ small universe of Charenton. Only the Herald does not military or municipal center, hut a;* a health resort, fo judge from the spiring that my floor, the majority of which tombstones, found m the vicinity its function as 3 health resort was not entire­ A Christian is a follower of Jesus Christ, succumb to Sade. He defers to Sade's power through was present, seemed sincerely affected by the ly saeeeggfofc and Jesus said: "If you live according to my choice and not through fear The Herald's delusions at manner in which Linda Lovelace conquered in the course of time me Roman hatha fell into rum and were generally dis­ teaching, you are truly my followers." power and ,uperionty are balanced by intelligence And her terrible, crippling problem. Altogether, an tunning, ennablmg him to live in the asylum and not regarded. However, ihc me does not seem to have been compfetely deserted. Now, back to guidelines. What was the excellent and uplifting experience. simply survive like the others. He plays the g3n-,e to suit \"ners m evidence of Christian reiigious establishments 'here from 676. 'fne his own ends. beautiful abbey church, icif! m use today, was begun m 1500and finally con- lecrated in 16(6. it was m the eighteenth century that the fame of Bath as 3 I.uke Castellucci is absolutely flawless as the Herald, spa waa revival. Excavations undertaken in connection with hmidmg fne recalling Joel Grey's Ma,ter of Ceremonies ;n Cabaret. University Concert Board presents baths of that period revealed many remains of the Roman esranfishrnenr. bur He remained property above the action of the play, an [he people involved were far more interested in their o*#n projects Thar, 'hose observer, superior to both the acton and the audier.ee. of the Romans Classical scholarship, however, flourished m mar era Still to- I. scellent performances were also turned is by Robert be read, carved ;n Greek letters over the entrance fo rhe Pump Room, are Ehe Larry Coryell Schiller as Sade. and Susan Prescott Purdy as Charlotte opening words at Pindar's first Ot.-mpnm Ode Corday an especially difficult and exhausiing'-role Water (is) best. \laruilSade is a constant bombardment of opposing During the eighteenth century Bath Became not only \ much frequented spa and the philosophies a., Sade and Marat argue points of the hnt lis.) a uiciai center The works of British novelists dealing with the period revolution, ;ino other characters add their own im­ are full of references to activities there. Vfuch

Center ^ ym Wigs 2 Shows in the CC Ballroom 7:30 and 10:30 pm $2.00 with Student tax STUDENT SPECIALS EVERY WEEK $4.00 without tax

TWO/? - sat open 7 am - 9 pm no appointment necessary The Legendary Preservation Hill Jazz Band Traditional Dixieland Jazz we invite you to come in and learn about the Scientific approach to hair and Skin Care direct from New Orleans

this week's special 11 also featuring Ragtime piano-player, Dill Jones. jacobie's part-n-angle Saturday, NOD. 16 PI Hk Th* RITE OF SPRING 8 pm in the CC Ballroom Hern Concerto No. 1 m E Flat style-cut and blow dry $2.50 with tax Peter Knott, Scioiat Includes conditioner 6 hair analysis $5,00 without tax Postaore Serenade Tickets on Sale in ftw CC Gumeroom 10:00 am-3:30 pm tickets: Albany • S3 SO 56.50 Jfcw 540C - Jig. CO ."'.tiulents-mrf

teg. price $15.00 special $8.00 aud at the door rsserMrtensTeSii f5f^4sC*7SB S trnfinMSfz M BMIS HOC Tickets for public $5.00 -- on sale at RPI fieldhouse gat r.r :momuttir.n. PAGE TEN ALBANY STUDENT PRESS NOVEMBER 12, 1974 PAGE ELEVEN NOVEMBER 12, 1974 ALBAMY STUDENT PRESS Reenter a Child's World 'Lovers and Other*'

by Howard Jacob* child is told by his mother to get out of her way; Hegoes Filling but Tasteless 1 guess all little kids have had their own trees, held to his room and all of his fantasies of monsters come funerals for their pets and have gone into theiriown fan­ alive. The monsters come tinder his power. In this story by Alan D. Abbey frantically. Bailin's best scene was tasy worlds in their own room. Last Friday I had the op­ everything goes wild. Soon dinner time come* around Last Weekend's Lovers and Other where she rubbed an imaginary portunity to re-enter the work) of the young when I and the fantasy is over. Strangers used only two of the sticky icecream pop from her hands. attended "An Afternoon for Children." The production was well organized and the setting was movie's four interrelated skits, and didn't tie them together, but let each Three short children's stories were adapted for the appropriate. The children watching all sat on the floor stand on its own. Joseph Bologna stage and put on for some young children and a few older around the room. Since most kids don't like chairs this Johnny and Wihna and Renee Taylor, who are ones who all seemed to enjoy the performance. was a good idea. The lighting was well done with the themselves married, wrote a funny The Giving Tree was about a young boy who had his spotlight most important in directing the attention of the script that ultimately copped out in own apple tree. As he grew older he used the apples to sell children. The second playlet, titled "Johnny the end. and make money, cut down the branches to build himself The cast rehearsed for about three weeks. I spoke to and Wilma," was easily the stronger a home, took the trunk to build a boat and left only a one of the members of the cast and he told me that he Director Sharon Swerdloffs of the two. The acting was much stump. It was not until years later that he truly ap­ preferred adult theatre, but it did not detract from the production was excellent; she made more confident throughout, and preciated the tree. He was an old man and he used the performance. The actors seemed to relate well with their good use of the Arena area in both blocking was much more im­ stump to rest his tired body upon. parts. scenes. The first, titled "Brenda and aginative. It included the two actors Jerry," was about a very well-read In The Dead Bird a group of young children playing The entire show was only about a half hour long but pacing around on top of their bed, pick-up who spends the entire even­ together, find a dead bird. .They bury it and hold a most five year olds get restless after this amount of time like two sumo wrestlers feeling each ing quoting from such authoritative funeral for it. They then resume their play. They return anyway. As I walked out I asked a few children what other out. Equal use was made of the sources as Sex and the Single Girl to the grave often and sing by it as a memorial. The story they thought of the plays. One said he liked TV better but three pieces of furniture, and the ac­ and Sex and the Single Man before shows the children'siftrst encounter with death. most were quite entertained. I hope that there is another tion was more spread out. throwing herself at the man. Brenda The third story was probably the most appreciated by "Afternoon for Children" this year. College doesn't have Wilma and Johnny weren't mak­ was Mindy Bailin, and Jerry was the young audience. In Where the Wild Things Are, a to be complicated all the time. ing love much anymore, because Scott Westover. Bailin was a Johnny felt his male supremacy be­ : caricature of the Cosmopolitan m* wuh£imjpi IJM6 AS «'« ing threatened. The two ran through tmm woman. She played hard-to-get until enough insults and threats to give ix£L '*i he started getting discouraged, then Don Ricklesmaterial foraycar.The \tnit HM $m said, "You'll never learn themeaning essential problem with the Ifciw »ite. ZA ur. of reciprocal giving—then take, I'll fcapwro M/iie characters was the man, Len give for both of us." She was totally Scibilia, was not strong enough to ^ALMOST!* given up to the idea of being a sex givein;andthcwoman, Holly Fitter, kitten, no matter what she spouted was. It was less important to her to about "love." force an issue than it was to him. Giving in took more strength and confidence than holding out. K HPN'T HMNT Hf WMTweouiPW'TCf. Tfl HBl ttXIMUY THAOUOH HIS THICK SKULL The main problem with the two EXH.9ITID! Ht HAS The play used thediffcrcnt exits of plays was their superficiality. They SO HATCMICITJIASJ HORNY TOO! the Arena well, und made good use were funny but forgettable, cute but HAUteATIN&>/V I of some sound effects such as the tasteless in the end. The other fault flushing of a toilet. The acting was was that there was no connection stiff in the beginning, and loosened between the two, and neither was up near the end when the two actors really strong enough to stand on

Chart of the Development of history from tha Standpoint of the Providence of Restoration

The Providential Age for the Foundation of Restoration Adam Noah Abraham Jacob Joseph r^^^SF^^^pJ *0 ^^^MM^^^P^^^O^^^^^^ff^^"!^^ m

The Providential Age of Restoration Abraham Jews

Silvery In ! The Period of I The United j Jhe™videij |jewiih Captivity Preparation for (he Coming of the Egypt , Judge, • Kingdom Lffl*MU .ndRe.urn Messiah 120 -**-»dg- 400 The Israelite The Israelite ] The Israelite Monarchic l The Israelite Democratic Type Society Clin Society } Feudal Society j Society !

The Providential Age of the Prolongation of Restoration The Lord of Second Advent

i Christian [ TTWIVJI * ! Persecution under Churches | The Christian The Divided |pipii Captivity The Preparation for the Second Coming lm d0 1 of the Messiah Roman EmpirIJCe .UIIUundeWr iPatriarchal uuioikiiai) Kingdom I! EasJ t« an™..°d Wes.t I! and Return I System \ - 5±S—4oo -»l^ -120 •»** 400 iJ-^--2|(> History The Christiann { ThThe Christiadirt*!ian |! The Christian Monarchic Society The Christian Democratic Society of Religion Clan Society I Feudal Society I

History The Early Church ^Absolute of Politics System Society Feudal Society iMonarchic j Democratic Society 'Society I789 (Ensjhth. Intiuiliill Revolution) History The Slavery T"'~-fhZ— 7 Imperialistic'The Society of Economy System Society The Manor System (Feudalism) The Capitalistic Society (of Socialism, Society

COLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION FOR THE RESEARCH OF PRINCIPLES

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 13 THURSDAY, Nov. 14 Room 325 (Earth Sciense Building) Lecture Center ti 23 Free Introduction Lectures. Free Lecture :'History from the Standpoint TIME 1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. of the Providence of Restoration, 2:30 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. BY MR. JOE A. TULLY. FREE TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR Lecture starts : 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. THURSDAY-NIGHT ® discussion : 8:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. INF&S^tWmS^-- 4 63 -3570 0, 463-3007

PAGE TWELVE, ALBANY STUDENT PftESS NOVEMBER 12, 1974 NOVEMBER 12, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE THIRTEEN one week lively holidays Good Rats Win League M It's More Than a Job In a game which head referee Nathan Salant called "n„,„r.i. r by Vbiny Rcda tripled since this facility opened. The games this year," the Good Rats defeats tk!o ' ' of ,he fine8t It is a simple concept really: the again in the second World War, par­ to win place is flooded with people several League III Ftag Football c£££g ^ ^^ *"* "* right man for the right job. Yet it is a ticipating in sevennujor battle, a, » times a year, and he', hit for things "The game was a lot closer than the final IMT.I..JJ. • ... rare occurence in this world of member of an anti-aircraft unit in* from both our side and the woman', • bureaucratic inefficiency and Peter Europe. "I wouldn't sell my side constantly. He doe, it all, but it principles. memories of it," he says now, "but I would probably drive me to my wouldn't relive it for anything Both team, entered the game with injuries ,„ key p.ayers. The Pervert, For this reason, Leslie Benjamin grave." Sicgel is a very special fellow. Most either." Athletic Director Joseph Garcia equipment managers of college gym­ Although justifyingly proud of his Umbos! agrees, with some regret, that "Ben­ nasium, do not get articles written record, he said that he would rather without linebacker Pete f££ring' ££*«£ « **• ny is doing the work of three men. about them unless they are so old . it was not mentioned, because upon Montego Bay He issues equipment, purchases it, that you refer to them as "Pops"; so further reflection, he realized that he London Theatre & Dining takes inventory, runs the. laundry old that sport,editors have pangs of had been "just another fellow doing DECEMBER 29-JANUARY 4, room, and the large and small locker conscience thinking that no article rooms. When he's out a day, we have his job, that's all." SPECIAL FEATURES; The Regency, 100 Queen's Gale, 1974 The Good Rats received the opening kickoff <,„d „,.: ui will be written about these men until To a large extent, this i, the way •Round trip economy class jet air S.W.7 to search our minds deeply to find the game', first score, when WiUoughby M° en Job i? T* «'" f°r an obituary becomes necessary. someone that we can entrust some of Benny looks upon his present work, transportation' between New An elegant Regency exterior with a We will be sponsoring an 8 day—7 touchdown pa„hit. Tom Monaha f ,hen dfd a auick ,lt V, '? ' " y"A anAround d the SUNYA gym, his responsibilities to." but he is just as incorrectite gives to York/London via AIR-INDIA. modern refurbished interior, depic­ night trip to the new and luxurious however, middle-aged Leslie will his work here the quality of his!per­ If there is compensation for his •Seven nights accommodation in ting its motto of comfort at comfor­ ROSE HALL INTER­ *w? r °; ""- £ ssms IT ^forever be known as "Benny," and he sonality. He is a fiery five foot, four overwork, Benny apparently finds it twin-bedded room with private bath table prices. All its rooms, which are CONTINENTAL HOTEL in Bartholomae brought the Perverts right back in «l« „i*„„ r docs not need an article to showcase inch bundle of energy with a biting in the enjoyment or his surroun­ or shower at the REGENCY carefully furnished and carpeted, Montego Bay, Jamaica. The cost of his unique position here. wit, quick temper, and youthful and the Perverts were on the board. The extra point was m25 ' dings, agree the coaches. Suys Gar­ HOTEL. Tips and taxes included. have private shower or bath. Each the trip will be $399.00 +10 % tax and One need only enter the basement charm. After the Good Rats were forced to nunt nn fn„,.h A J. cia. "He is dedicated to the kids in •Continental breakfast daily. room has a television and an up to service:'. It will include; on the men's side of the gym during As he worked at taking out a spike Bartholomae moved the Pervcm 45 yTd, Sown, ?'" '°ngyardage, the intramural programs, the phys. •Transfer from an to London air­ the minute facility for making tea •Round trip jet transportation the day, to realize this. There you cd. classes, and the teams equally. from a track shoe which a cross­ port to your hotel including and coffee in the rooms. The Regen­ from New York via Overseas will find the equipment room. Enter the end zone, only to have WiUoughby come ZIn o Z^kS Z Every kid's problem is Benny's country man had dismissed as, "a porterage. cy h.is a well stocked bar and plea­ National Airlines with meals and the door to it. and you will meet an pass. He returned .. 80 yards for a touchdown, making the score 3 6 I he problem. hopeless case," Benny talks about his •Orientation tour of London. sant restaurant providinga good ser­ aluminum cage which separates you beverages served aloft extra point attempt failed, and that was the hair job in last, almost whispering tones. •Seven table d'hote dinners at the vice and meals at reasonable prices. •8 day—7 nights accom­ from shelves or sports equipment "We went up to the Pittsburgh creating a voice comparable to a The Pervertsi took the opening kickoff of the second half, but went no REGENCY HOTEL. The hotel has comfortable lounge modations at the Inter-Continental stacked eight feet high. game this weekend together, and Troy version of Jimmy Cagncy. and in all provides a warm at­ place, and the Good Rats took over. Three nlavs 1-,.,-r riirr i • hell, he's out there leading cheers for •Two theatre tickets of YOUR Hotel, every room with air con­ Behind you, on the other side of "I've always felt that I was doing mosphere. The Regency is con­ around left ******* J^J^S^Z our side. I know that when he can't CHOICE. ditioning, private bath and terrace IHl wun the door you entered, are 23 signs something useful and accomplishing veniently situated for the West End the extra point attempt failing. " make a game, he'll call radio stations • Value Added Tax (V.A.T.) •Welcome rum swingle party taped to its surface: "Benny's out to something here, of course, but it's Air terminal, transport, shopping, This time it was Bergerwho brought the Perverts back, break™ 60 vard, for scores." •All transfers and baggage handl­ lunch," "Benny back in 15 minutes." nothing special. Oh sometimes I may and sightseeing. onfirst down for a TD Tom Pardini took a short toss f oni2SJ Tennis coach Robert Lewis con­ BONUS FEATURES ing at airport and hotel "Cageclosed,signed Benny."arejust hitch like hell when things aren't go­ and scored the point alter to make it 19-13 annoiomae, curs. "He treats it more than just a • Free membership to the National •Tips for maids, porters and a few. ing right, but overall, the repairing Jim Sullivan pulled off a succcssfuldrawplayon third down following the job. He has the player's interest at Film Theatre. ITINERARY: beach boys The signs say a lot. They say that and upkeep of things fascinates me. k.c OIL and went 40 yards loranother Good Rats'touchdown, bu, ,h was heart, and our wins are his also •One free admission to the DAY I—New York. Depart New •Free beach lounges S when Benny leaves the equipment, and I like the sports and the kids us matched by Berger, who again brought his team within striking rangeIZ because of it. Haywood Gallery with one full price York on an evening flight via AIR- •Hospitality desk at airport and the equipment does not move. He well." h. took a dduble reverse 70 yards for a touchdown. Pardini scored the extra "I havegiven him a racket to string ticket purchased. INDIA 747. Dinner will be served on host escort throughout stay employs a few student assistants, of Still, keeping things rolling is not Pm,raiic d byfiw; ih d lor one of our guys, and known him • Membership to 15 different dis­ board—a choice of Continental or •Pre-registration course, but when he leaves the cage, often easy, and Benny has sometimes cotheques in London including the Indian cuisine. sssa: < - •"--*— -they leave with him, and the signs go to come rushing out to the court with •Full American breakfast daily vented his frustrations at the top of it completely fixed 45 minutes later, renowned Ronnie Scott's. DAY 2—London. On arrival in After a touchdown run by l.evinemade i, 31-20, Bartholomae was caught up. his voice. Although he states that he and 5 Gourmet dinners at the hot:l so that our man could use it in prac­ • A valuable TRAFALGAR London you will be met by our , or si, ety by Bob Lawrence. When WiUoughby followed with a touchdown now tries to take an easier attitude Hut signs do not begin to explain tice or in a match that day. Heck, he bonus card entitling you to discounts representative who will transfer you PW 10 Irace on the opening play after the kickoff, making the score 40-20 toward things, circumstances often why any man becomes special to had to drop everything else in order averaging I0%when you pay cash or to the REGENCY HOTEL. En rou­ the game was as good as over. leave no other choice, except the others. They do not reveal why our to do it for us. I'm sure!" travelers checks at the list of places in te you will have an orientation tour. , "It was ?ne of the best played and officiated games of the year, despite the equ ipment manager is so well known volatile one. Yet doing one's job well is just se­ our handbook. DAYS 3-8 London. During score said A.M...A. Student Assistant Gary Sussman. the supervis r o and remembered by every athlete "If I was always easy going," he cond nature to Benny, and he would •A free booking service for the your days at leisure you will have that intramural event. that ever participated for Albany. says, "there'd be no merchandise in CURACAO naturally shake off the idea of his purchase of additional theater ample time to explore on your own . The A.M.I.A. wishes to thank all of the participants in this season's Mag People help to explain what Ben­ this place. Theft is still rampant,and loolball program. having any special qualities. He feels tickets. and get to know London and ny means to his job. Says basketball the price of towels keeps going up. I Elsewhere in A.M.LA. news: there will be a FLOOR HOCKEY captains' that you simply do what you can to •A host of optional tours and ex­ perhaps visit Windsor, Hampton Netherlands Antilles coach Richard "Doc" Sailers, have to come down on people meeting Thursday, November 14, at 4:15 p.m. in room CC315 Rosters and gel by in this world with some enjoy­ cursions which can be purchased . Court, Stratford, etc. Two com­ "Almost anyone else in this building some! lines," bond money arc due at the meeting. Anyone interested in officiating please ment. from you London Host. plimentary theater tickets of YOUR JANUARY 6-I3, I975 could leave and not he missed as In the end, no one argues back, sign up with Dennis Elkin in the A.M.I.A. Office, CC356. An Albany resident most of his •Current issues of "What's on in CHOICE will enable you to enjoy much as Benny. He's every coaches' because Benny, like always, gets the life, Benny found out early that you London." two of London's fine shows. We will be sponsoring an 8 day—7 Just a bit about the floor hockey program: A special, safe puck is used right hand man. If you're a new job done. There is a sign on the other had to make the most of tough con­ • Membership at a Casino DAY 9-London-New York. night trip to the FLAMBOYANY which glides along the gym floor similar to the way a regular hockey puck athlete here, within a week you will side of the cage also. It is from an ditions. "It was south end against •The services of our resident Transfer to airport where you depart SANDS HOTEL & CASINO. The moves on ice. Physical contact is limited, for obvious safety reasons Each alumni who used to have some hot know who he is." the world in those days, and you representative in London cost of the trip will be $379.00 per­ player must supply his own stick. battles with Mr. Sicgel over how his via AIR-INDIA jet and arrive in Says track coach R. Keith moved in heavy traffic. Hut Benny, son, based on double occupancy. There will be a meeting for those people interested in officiating A M I A job should have been done. Married New York the same day. While aloft, Munsey. "Ile'sas vital to the.smooth could run fast, talk last, and fight Departures from New York: Every The following will be included: volleyball, Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m.. in CC356. Anyone inlcreslcd please at­ now. his present to Benny is knitted you'll be served lunch befitting a How of the program as yeast is to a dirty if he had to." Friday and Saturday from Maharajah. •Round trip jet transportation tend or contact Al Soloway, at 457-7722. cake mix. His job has probably out in the words "God Bless Benny's November 1,1974 through April 30, from New York with meals and He had to make the best of things Cage." 1975, except between December 15, $1*02.00 PER PERSON beverages served aboard the flights And Joe Garcia adds, "A guy like 1974 and January 4, 1975. •8 days—7 nights accom­ DEPOSIT $100.00 Benny: one day he has on a basket­ modations at the Flamboyant Sands HORNY BULLS ball learn shirt, the next day a soccer •Transfers and baggage handling team one. All the athletes have •7 breakfasts and 5 Gourmet LOVE GORY MOVIES. FOCUS on WSUA honored him one way or another. dinners I here's not a team dinner he is not •Bon Boni welcome cocktail party the week of Nov. 11-15 invited to. To me. he is a true friend •All taxes and gratuities and colleague." I •>• itt (including dining roam) at the hotel 7 - 8 pm As Benny works on that stubborn •Free drinks for players in the spike stubbornly, you look around JANUARY 11-18, 1975 casino every mon. - Album of the week the equipment room and see the •Free chaise loungesand towels al overflowing results of a school that We will be sponsoring an S day—7 both pool and beach has increased its varsity sports from night trip to Hawaii at the beautiful •Group scuba lesson every tues. National Lampoon 11 to 25 in the past five years. new WAIKIKI VILLAGE • Managers open bar cocktail par­ Somehow, this one guy manages to HOTEL!! The cost or the trip will be ty Comedy Hour keep track of it all. S449.99 per person based on double •Shuttel bus service to and from Benny pulls out the spike now and occupancy. It will include the follow­ city for duly free shopping holds it our proudly. "All right. ing: •Outdoor blirbcque dinner with every wed. - "Live" Coffee House Hour VinV" he says half defiantly, half in •Round trip jet transportation native entertainment in lieu of jest. Sure Ben, I'm not surprised. from New York via United Air Lines Thursday evenings dinner. Alter all. the right man for the right Including meals, champagne, slereo this thurs. A SPECIAL music and movie on board •8 days 7 nights accom­ FOCUS on Sports interview with modations at the new WAIKIKI VILLAGE HOTEL—built In 1973 campus representative Albany Great Dane Coach Bob Ford •All transfers and baggage handl­ ing in airport and hotel Kim Krieger i •l.ei greeting this fri. - Jazz FOCUS SUNY ALBANY STUDENT ASSOCIATON \ 1 *(iel acquainted broiling—Trade Th» Montezuma Horny Bull: " CAMPUS CENTER ROOM 346 1 02. Montezuma Tequila. Wind lours (arrangement of tours) '"f8fc-rcyl8|miifln (518)457-6542 daily (10 am to 4 pm) f 5 oz. CONCENTRATED ORANGE Montezuma BREAKFAST DRINK.Over ice. rT-1T_,^Tlr¥ , WSUA 640 -' a part off you •Optional dine around program Its sensational, and that's no bull. TEQJJi 1 A ___ funded by studeni association uvuilablc—S85.00 which will include •I'M. 60 Proof. Tequila. Borlon Disl.llors Import Co New Yof k Now Vur k 7 dinners and 6 breakfasts using ex- ALL TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS BY McCARTHY TRAVEL INC. mfri»ii». 1 NOVEMBER 12, 1974 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE FIFTEEN Stat* University oi New York at Albany Tuesday, November 12,1974 FRIDAY at* Univaiatty olHew York at Albany Vol.LXl No.43NoT*mbar IS, 1974 Gridders Roll Again; Demolish Cards 49-8

by Don Ncmclk non Blue, it raided Joe Garcia's posi­ and power on a kickoff return to ning wide and this proved to be high­ would not break." and Joyce R. Btlta tion behind a line that could not con­ make it a 42-8 margin. Albany's last ly effective. The defensive unit had Albany's outstanding season is a Once Stately ToimfwusesDecay with Age and Abuse Obviously the cliche "Ford has a tain Rudy Vido, Frank Villanova score came on an intercepted pass. somewhat of a minor difficulty try­ result of the players' hard work and better idea" holds some truth as and Tim Myers or keep them from Albany's effective strategy with ing to stop the passing game of determination as well as the Albany State combined that terrorizing the Cardinal offense. the wishbone offense against Plattsburgh. But as in previous leadership and innovation of a by Naomi Frledlander Richard and Joseph Gerrity, triumphant balanced attack that has Albany's defense was headed up Plattsburgh involved the option- games, the defense would bend but dedicated head coach. A glimpse of lower Hamilton owners of Arrowhead Realty which thus far provided an undefeated by Don M ion who picked off two type play. Coach Ford explained in Street in downtown Albany in turn owns many of the vacated season and a chance at the much passes and gathered in another fum­ this manner, "After the snap, the produces a jarring effect. Set against buildings on lower Hamilton, deserved recognition in the college ble. Albany managed to obtain defense must cover the quarterback, the old world dignity of Washington delivered one-month eviction football! world at Plattsburgh, seven Plattsburgh turnovers. the fullback, a possible pitch or Purk and the marble uniform of the notices to all the residents on that Saturday, as they overwhelmed the The second half saw'quarterback hand-off, or a quick pump to the South Mall, stand a row of aban­ st rcctduring the summer of 1973. All Cardinals by u score of 49-8. John Bertuzzi riflea five yard pass to split end." That leaves four Ithaca Wins Bowl; doned, disintegrating buildings. the tenants moved put except two It was a game that saw seven halfback Marvin Perry for a possibilities, three inside and one These structures, once elegant and families, the Michael Boves of 360 Albany State touchdowns and a touchdown. Later on a third down wide, which can be utilized offen­ distinctive, now mirror each other Hamilton, who could find no other flawless day for Al Martin providing and one from the three yard line, sively by a cut play or a counter play. with their boarded-up front win­ place lo live and James Inncss and the extra points. The Albany offense Bertuzzi spotted Glenn Sowalskie in Coach Ford scouted a Plattsburgh dows, chipping paint, and crumbling his family, residing at 325 Hamilton. was sparked by Glenn Sowalskie, the end zone for the fourth tally. right-left 52 Oklahoma defense with Danes Finish 7th ceilings. lnness. a former officer of the now who totaled 164 yards in 16 carries With the game in hand, Dave u "Monster in the Middle" to defend "The houses are habitable. The disbanded New York Stale for three Great Dane scores. The Ahonen was put in to call signals for the inside ground. That's when (AP)—Undefeated Ithaca College is the winner of the Lambert Bowl as the reason they are so bad is their social Volunteers for Missing Persons Unit team rushed for 370 yards, including Albany and he put together a 34- Albany switched to the outside. top Eastern football team in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's history," declared Greg Bell, a 13 which sympathized with theGcr- Marvin Perry's 63 yard sin only three yurd strike to end Don Whitely. Couch Ford added, "It was a high Division III category, it was announced Monday. member of the Hudson-Park ritys, manages the Gerrity owned carries. His big gain came on a 35 Then, Plattsburgh's offense ac­ thought game between our offense Ithaca, 9-0, compiled its second perfect season in nine years by defeating Neighborhood Association and a te­ Hacked Apartment Building, also yard carry on a pitch from Bertuzzi complished theironeand only score. and their tough defensive line. Rochester Tech 68-17 last Saturday. The Bombers received five of the seven nant on upper Hamilton St. The located on Hamilton. The Boves and that put Albany on the board in the With the ball on the 23-yard line, Sowalsk ie did a great job in the back first-place votes in the Lumbert balloting. completion of the Soulh Mall pro­ the Innesses lived rent free, only pay­ first quarter. Garcia unloaded a bullet to Huck field and Dom Konconc had a great Slippery Rock, 8-0-1, which got the other first place votes, became the ject aroused commercial speculation ing their monthly utilities. Mike Albany added another seven in the Finn for the touchdown (Mark ballgame." runnerup after posting a 27-5 victory against Clarion State. in residential areas, leading to the Howard interpreted Gerrity's second quarter with Sowalskie's Twain couldn't have made a better Dom Roncone's comment on the Ithaca will receive the Bowl presented by Henry and Victor Lambert Dec. 5 demolition of many neighboring motivations for this: "Gerrity does two-yard plunge. play). On an almost instant replay, game was, "Plattsburgh, like Curry, during a luncheon scheduled for the Hotel Biltmore. housing structures such as those on not want the responsibilities of being After the defense held off they added a 2-point passing conver­ concentrated on stopping our inside In order, the rest of the final Lambert Bowl top ten and their records were: lower Hamilton. a landlord so he just didn't collect Ihe Plattsburgh's Jim Fraser and Ver­ sion. Then it was Sowalskie's speed running game. We retaliated by run- Franklin & Marshall, 8-0; Millersville, 8-1; Widener, 7-1; MontclairStatc,6- Landlords have perpetuated the rent." 2-1; Albany State, 8-0; Trinity, 6-2; Kcan, 8-1; and Georgetown, 5-1. mmeHm razing of these historic buildings Following an oil-burner fire in For perhaps the first time this season, Ithaca College football Coach with the realization that the profit their home, the Boves moved inloan Although this house at 345 Hamilton St. Is relatively well-kept, many on the street are not. Students Jim Butterfield has admitted he is looking ahead. from selling the vacated lols to com­ apartment at 345 Hamilton, across The future for Butterfield and his team, which buried Rochester Tech plan to inhabit two houses In this area, In an effort to prove that the old town houses are liveable. mercial buyers will greatly exceed the street from their old one. The Saturday to finish 9-0, is an invitation to a bowl game—an invitation sure to any that would be collected as rent Boves live on the second floor of this come after the Bombers enhanced their status as the No. I small college team from tenants, says Bell. building us the first and the third in the East. "The city docs not enforce housing floors arc now occupied. 345 1 "1 don't think it's going to sink in for some time," Butterfield said after his codes." Bell explained as one reason Hamilton , with its bright red door team's 68-17 cakewalk at Rochester. It was his first unbeaten team. why (his process of deterioration and ! accenting the freshly painted gray Future Off-Campus Dwellers'Plans demolition continues. "The in­ I frame, has been kept in goodcond- Invitations will be extended Nov. 19 to two Eastern teams to compete in lion. which would seem lo indicate the Knute Rocknc Bowl on Nov. 30. The winner of that bowl meets a terrelationship of city and private that (he buildings can be preserved. Midwest small college team the following Saturday in the Amos Alonzo ownership has perpetuated this Though many of Ihe windows of Stagg Howl in Phcnix City, Ala. Unaltered by New Housing Law system." ihe upper floors of the abandoned Ithaca players have the week off before resuming practice. "I told them to Only recently has the city hired residences are broken and the walls relax and get their minds off football," Butterfield said. new housing inspectors whq arc con­ and ceilings appear damaged by Ihe Meanwhile, their coach will be out recruiting for the 1975 Bomber team. Ira Birnbaum who plans to move off-campus within the cerned with the eyesores surroun­ hy Ellen Eckstein weather. Bell assured (hat the in­ "Recruiting, of course, is the name of the game," he said. "You'd better think near future. "1 think" he continued, "that 95% of the ding them. The city has also Albany Mayor Corning altered the future plans of teriors of these homesare not "trash­ ahead or you're going to sink." cases will go undetected." developed a priority system, hundreds of students when he signed the new housing ed" and that the structures are In other games Saturday, two top New York State teams completed their The students who will seek off-campus housing for the whereby tenants can voice their bill. Students, according to the new law, will now have lo architecturally sound. He and other seasons with wide victory margins. Hobart finished 8-1 by defeating Fall 1975 term may be the guinea pigs. If they decide to housing complaints. But for lower limit cohabitation to no more than three unrelated per­ members of Ihe Hudson-Park Brockport State, 41-6. And St. Lawrence, 7-2, outclassed Rensselaer defy the law and cohabitate in numbers exceeding three Hamilton St., these innovations sons to u dwelling. Neighborhood Association recently Polytechnic Institute, 45-6. it may become obvious as to how stringently the housing have not yet brought about im­ Considering that this hill could leave a large number of asked Richard Gerrity for permis­ Albany State, the state's only other unbeaten, demolished Plattsburgh law will be enforced. provements. students without apartments, a surprising calm and even sion lo move tenants into Ihese State, 49-8, for the Danes' eighth straight triumph. They play RPI Saturday. complacency seemed to prevail. At present, few appear buildings. However no agreement l-'ordham handed Hamilton its 20th straight loss, 16-13; Rochester edged worried about this bill, especially since it will not im­ could be reached as a meeting on this The football team led by John Bertuzzi and hit wishbone oflense. The Danes return Alfred, 10-7; Middlcbury, Vt„ bombed Union, 31-3; and Cortland State tied mediately affect off-campus students. The real problems issue never look plaCe. Central Connecticut, 14-14. home Saturday to face RPI. will come next year when students will try to find off- To confirm ihe livabilily of these Saturday was a day of individual as well as team accomplishment for campus housing. abandoned buildings, a group of Ithaca, which breezed through a strong schedule to its first perfect season in "I'm not guing to let the new bill bother me," com­ SUNYA students and proponents of nine years. mented one off-campus resident. "II 1 wanted to stay I rehabilitation plan lo protest the un­ Senior fullback Duvc Rcmick rushed for 102 yards and thereby became the would. We have good relations with the family on the necessary decay. They propose to oc­ Runners Fold at Nationals first Ithaca player to reach the 1,000-yard rushing plateau. He had 1,010 on first floor," he added, flic student lives with three others cupy two of the Hamilton Si. the season. by George Miller As far as awards go, All-American Davis, Munscy's "1/4 man", who end­ on the second floor of a house on Kent Street. buildings, thus demonstrating that His backfield teammate, quarterback Jerry Boyes, fired three touchdown Events just didn't turn out quite honors are given out to the top 25 ed up a crushing 268th. The atmosphere was likewise quiet at the off-campus the residences are still habitable. The passes and built his season total to 15. right Saturday afternoon for the runners each year. Stalwart for the "It was the worst day he's ever housing office on the Albany Suite Campus. Student conspiracy to commit a mis­ Albany StatcCross-Country learn as (ireat Danes, Vinny Redu, capped hud," reflected Coach Munscy. "I signs asking for roommates and apartment fact sheets demeanor is a felony, one source they finished a mediocre 19th in the his cross-country career hy placing think ii might have been fust time remained upon the walls as usual. No signs of panic were pointed out when discussing the con­ NCAA Division III finals in 15th and thereby gained All- jitters. I don't think he'll ever have apparent. Apartments calling for more than three per­ sequences of these plans. Another Weaton, Illinois. American honors. one like thai again." Nevertheless, sons were still being listed. contact asserted that the charges of "We're not crying," said Coach Chris Burns crossed 39th out of the damage was done and that was "I would advise students against renting with more aiwctatad pr«u wktphoto criminal trespassing or burglary may Bob Munscy. "Of course we wcren'l the 304 finishers in another fine ef­ where it cost. than three people," declared Joseph Scaring, Dircctorof be the legal results of this occupa- Above: Palestinian Liberation Organization Chairman Yasir Arafat responds to overjoyed when we came back. II fort. Chris, only a sophomore, will "One thing thai everyone was glad Off-Campus Housing. "We will continue to list four or lion. However a third authoritative greetings Wednesday at the United Nations Building In New York. Bottom: Police we'd finished in the first len.l would be back for two more seasons, cer­ lo see was that Plattsburgh swallow­ more bedroom apartments but we will also write about source intimated the unlikeliness of a escort a pro-Israel demonstrator from the area. About 100 demonstrators chanted, have been by far contcnl with (hat." tainly a bright spot in Albany's ed the apple", said Munscy. the law. 1 don't really see any crisis in student housing," landlord pressing charges. Eviction "Murderers, murderers" as aides ol guerilla chlet Arafat arrived. Two Fine Times future. Carlo Chcrubino obviously Although they finished 16th, the remarked Scaring. "In my opinion," he continued, procedures or the demand that an As it was, however, Ihe harriers " Perhaps only ten percent of the off-campus students live exhorbilant rent be paid seem lo be didn't run up to his capabilities, as Cardinals were expecting three or -I—-L_ were only able to squeeze out two displayed by his disappointing 66th lour All-Americans. As it turned out in excess of three (persons)." more plausible alternatives, he said. fine times, one fair time, one poor place finish. according to Coach Munsey, "We Despite the fact that current off-campus students will SUNYA's Off Campus Student one and one disastrous one. When Unfortunately you can't run a had our two guys ahead of their not immediately be affected, the law remains as an Coalition averred that OCSC will you total these results up in light of meet with only three men. It lakes first." I guess revenge is still sweet obstacle. If the law is enforced, students will probably "morally support and publicize"slu­ 68 schools in a National meet, 19th live and this is where Albany really even though it came indirectly. have to face higher rents or return to the campus dor­ dent efforts to improve the con­ place isn't all that poor. Then again, got burned. What it all comes down Season Closes mitories. "When a $300 a month rent is divided among ditions of Hamilton St. In response with what the past season has to is how high those number four With the running of the Nationals, five people it's cheap, but reduce that to three and it to an ad placed in ihe ASP on Fri­ revealed, it isn't all that admirable and five men can finish. If you're Ihe cross-country season is rapidly forces the sludent out," stated Joel Diringer who lives on day, Nov. 9, Simon reported that either. looking for a good shot at a top spot, drawing to a close. The varsity has Manning Boulevard, a highly residential street. about fifty students have expressed Division III champions for 1974 they'd belter be up there around 100 their lust dual meet this afternoon Enforcement Of The New Law an interest in participating in Ihe turned out to be Mount Union with to say the least. against Union at 3:30 right here on protestation. Yet most students are not especially worried that the 105 points. Occidental College from "H ere's where we were in trouble," the Albany campus. It is your last ordinance will ever be enforced on any mass scale. The Historic Albany Foun­ California (148) grabbed second, revealed Munscy. "Our fourth guy chance lo see the harriers in action. dation's $25,000 grant from the mahlar "Since it will probably be enforced on a complaint basis followed by North Central College was not who we thought it would be, The last meet of the year is the National Endowment of the Arts is from neighbors you should speak to your neighbors. Try (174) and a suprise fourth place it was Gary Furlong. He was 196th," ICAAAA Championships on Mon­ Cross-Country star Redi, who became an All-American Saturday. for renovation only in, the Hudson- to gel your neighbors to come lo you to turn down a finish by Brandeis. Placing 5th for Albany was Brian day, November 18th. Park neighborhood. stereo, instead of going to Ihe landlord or the city," said wiraphote