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Amid social upheaval, ACP carries on
Albany College of Pharmacy in the 1960s
The
1960s were a time of turmoil and change throughout the nation, as the United
States increasingly became involved in the war in Vietnam , the Civil Rights
movement heated up and charismatic leaders President John F. Kennedy, Robert
Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., were assassinated.
In downtown Albany , the '60s brought demonstrations against the war and for Civil Rights. The decade also brought the demolition of a large tract of property in the center of Albany for the South Mall, Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's controversial brainchild
built as an administrative center for state
government. By the time the large-scale (William) Buck's Follies, 1966.
project was completed, 7,000 people had
been displaced and more than 1,500 buildings had been demolished, including Albany College of Pharmacy's first and second homes on Eagle Street.
At ACP, the decade was marked by two important events: a new five-year degree in pharmacy was launched in 1960, and 1967 introduced a new dean, Walter Singer '48.
With
the Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy now a five-year program, students could
begin at ACP or study for the first two years at an accredited College of
Arts and Sciences and transfer in for the "professional years," as long as
the curriculum was approved by the dean. The B.S. in Medical Technology was
still a four-year program that prepared students to take the licensing exam
given by the American Society of Clinical Pathologists. Courses fell into
the departments of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Administration, Pharmacology, Pharmacog-
An ACP classroom in the early 1960s. nosy and Biological Sciences, Physical
Sciences and Mathematics, Liberal Arts and Medical Technology. Tuition was raised to $600 a year and, although there were no dorms, students could expect to pay about $1,200 for room and board for the year. Many rented single rooms in the neighborhood, and the cafeteria, in the capable hands of Margaret Kirkpatrick, was open five days a week with meals available for $2 a day.
By the end of the decade, tuition had risen to $1,000 a year and many students were renting their own apartments to save on expenses.
Once the five-year program became fully operative in September 1964, that additional year of schooling meant an entire extra class of 100-plus students and overcrowding became a real problem. The Rho Pi Phi fraternity came up with some suggestions to relieve the congestion, including one-way traffic in the halls and on the stairs, outdoor furniture outside the cafeteria to handle lunchtime overflow and a more active Interfraternity Council to alleviate the stresses and strains between competing groups.
With
the influx of new students, one controversial subject was violations of the
dress code, as spelled out in Article 18 of the General College Rules. Many
students decried the fact that "dress shirts, jackets and ties are being discarded
in favor of sports shirts and sweaters." Mortar and Pestle came
down hard on students for "leaving dirty coffee cups filled with ashes for
Mrs. K. to clean up" and noted that students were "too lazy to walk 200 feet
from the card room" for basketball tryouts. In general, it seemed that many
students in the 1960s felt a relaxing of the rules and a lack of school spirit.
ACP students, 1966.
In spite of the tensions, sports and physical
fitness continued to be a big part
of life at ACP. In the winter of 1963, two ACP students walked from Troy to
New York City in response to President Kennedy's Physical Fitness Campaign.
Spurred on by a very successful advertising campaign, many Americans opted
to take the president's famous 50-mile hike challenge. Kennedy was held in
great esteem by many students at the College, who dedicated the 1965 yearbook
to the slain president (there was no yearbook in 1964 as there was no graduating
class that year due to the five-year
requirement).
At ACP, Chris Kaprielian '63 and Leonard DeVito '67 took the president's challenge
and hiked down to the city over a long weekend, in temperatures that dipped
to 10 below, wearing ski masks and carrying backpacks.
Most students took a more traditional route to fitness, participating in an active sports program at the College. By 1959-60, the basketball team was in its eighth consecutive winning season under coach Al White. By the following year, when coach White had to
Intramural basketball, 1967. suddenly leave a game for an emergency
appendectomy, the team kept on winning in his absence - all 12 men scored that night against Berkshire Christian College . With "the best college record in the area" under co-captains Bob Toomajian '62 and Howie Rubinger '63, the team seemed unbeatable.
During
the1964-65 season, the Panthers' second as a member of the newly formed Northeastern
Collegiate Conference, the team broke 29 school records and captured the conference
title, winning White the honor of Coach of the Year.
So it was a huge shock to the student body when the "Husky Skipper," as White was affectionately known, resigned as coach in 1965 after 13 winning seasons and a 149-72 record. While White remained on as director of athletics and advisor to the Athletic Commission, the team continued on under Ed Lynch in the 1965-66 season, and, throughout the rest of the '60s, under coach Willard Rice.
Basketball was not the only winning sport at ACP. A new bowling league, with six teams, was organized by Rich Cognetti '69 and John Palazzoli '64, in the 1959-60 academic year, and, by the following year,
was open to all classes. Eventually, the varsity The "Husky Skipper," Al White.
bowling team at ACP went on to win three North-
eastern Collegiate Conference championships in four years during the decade.
The
varsity golf team, formed in May 1964, captured three straight NCC championships
in 1966-68, and the varsity volleyball team captured the title during the
1967-68 season. Softball, basketball, and tennis continued to enjoy success
as well. With all of the winning teams, an honorary Varsity Club was open
to anyone who had played one full season in a varsity sport and entitled them
to wear a snappy club blazer.
Other new activities were added during the decade, beginning with a college band revived after many years under Richard Daffner '63. The "Rex-men," basically a brass section with a piano, made its debut at a Christmas party in 1960 and played at dances and at basketball games during halftime. With bright red music stands emblazoned with the pharmacy emblem, they cut a fine figure as they launched into the likes of "Swingin' Shepherd Blues" and "When the Saints Go Marching In." The
ACP golf dominated during the '60s ... Glee Club still had about 40 members and
entertained at
concerts, as well as at the annual Homecoming Weekend. This jam-packed event
featured a party on Friday night as well as
an
alumni basketball game, and culminated with a dance and the crowning of the
Homecoming queen, a cheerleader chosen by the Athletic Commission.
The student branch of the American Pharmacists Association had a very large membership with 270 active ACP members at its height. One of the highpoints of the decade came in May 1965 when two members of the chapter ... and the Glee Club was a fixture at holiday parties.
were in attendance as Vice President
Hubert Humphrey, R.Ph., the world's most famous pharmacist at the time, addressed the APhA convention in Detroit .
In 1960, a Wives Auxiliary of the student branch of APhA was organized at the suggestion of Hilda O'Brien '21, the dean's wife. With Priscilla Steed, wife of Gerald Steed '61, as president, "the wives" functioned primarily as a social group, with a goal of familiarizing themselves with their husbands' work and the field of pharmacy in general. Many hours were spent in "wifely chatter" at events such as a "gala Christmas party at the O'Brien's" and bake sales, "white elephant sales," raffles and other money-making schemes. The stated purpose of the club was "giving hubby a night out and treating him [while] raising money for a gift or scholarship to the college."
By
January 1961, another new club for young women was formed at ACP with the
debut of the Alpha Alpha Chapter of Alpha Delta Theta, a professional sorority
for college women studying medical technology. The group, founded under the
leadership of Wilma Rose as president and the guidance of Miss Mountain ,
chief bacteriologist at Bender Lab, quickly became an active member of the
flourishing Interfraternity Council.
All of the frats and both sororities took part in events sponsored by the Interfraternity Council, including picnics at Thacher Park, tennis
Alpha Delta Theta formed in 1961. matches and baseball games, with the big
event of the year the Homecoming Weekend sponsored by the IFC and Athletic Commission.
But
each of the fraternal organizations sponsored their own annual events as well.
More and more, they became involved in the community, collecting Christmas
toys and food for the needy and equipping a pharmacy on the S.S. Hope, a hospital
ship that sailed to Indonesia and South Vietnam in 1960. Frats and sororities
also were involved in assisting the College itself, including fundraising
activities that benefited scholarships. At the beginning of the decade, the
" Ropes" even presented ACP with a 50-star flag to commemorate the addition
of Hawaii to the United States in 1959.
By the early '60s, Kappa Psi was organizing an Open House at the College to interest prospective students in the new five-year Pharmacy program and demonstrate cutting-edge equipment such as ACP's new MiniVac computer, an early computer that went on the market in 1961.
But, as always, there was a light side to the College as well.
Phi Delta Chi sponsored its first twist party in the fall of 1962, capitalizing on the dance craze
sweeping the country. The dance was first 1965 campus queen Kathleen Mack.
popularized by Chubby Checker in 1960 when his
song, "The Twist," reached number one for the first time. By the time of the PDC party, the tune had set a record by resurfacing as a number one hit again. At ACP, t wist parties were a roaring success and featured groups like the Orkets and Larry Jackson's Swinging Knights.
Soon, even the twist was becoming a bit old hat and, by 1964, a group of fourth-year students, "Pharmacy's answer to the Beatles," was playing at favorite ACP haunts such as the Petit Paris and Ralph's Tavern. By 1966, "Pharmacy's own Rolling Stones," Les Figarsky and George Milne, had taken over the musical reins.
Some events concentrated more on the theme than the music, capitalizing on popular culture of the times. Kappa Psi's Sweetheart Weekend at the Crooked Lake House featured "machine gun-toting Clydes and long-skirted Bonnies" after the hugely popular film debut of Bonnie and Clyde in 1967.
One of the lighter moments of the decade was the appearance of an eight-foot tall chicken, complete with trailer, at ACP during Kappa Psi pledge week in 1965.
According to Mortar and Pestle , pledges had to "do a bit of chicken riding during second seminar." Things got out of hand when the pledges and some of the brothers decided to take the chicken downtown at 11:30 p.m. "where they encountered four cop cars and a couple of motorcycles." After an explanation from the leader of the brigade, the fraternity and the chicken parted company. Luckily for the frat, "there was no trouble, as it was all done in fun."
Outside of ACP, students embraced the full spectrum of the 1960s.
Early in the decade, many students were veterans of the Korean war with young families. They played pinochle and ping pong in the men's smoker and showed off their cars in the College parking lot. They listened to jazz on their "hi-fis" and went to see the Smothers Brothers perform when they played at Siena College in 1962. And the preferred reading material for the "Atomic Age Generation" was Frannie and Zooey by J.D. Salinger and Catch 22 by Joseph Heller.
By 1965, Mortar and Pestle reported that ACP "folk fans poured in with blankets and bottles of chianti" to see Bob Dylan perform at the Troy Armory. Within three years students were hanging out at the Eighth Step Coffee House on Willett and State streets to hear folk music, poetry and plays on Tuesday and Wednesday nights.
On the more serious side of things, both the Student Christian Association and the Newman Club started off the '60s with very large memberships. The Newman Club, for Catholic students, sponsored well-attended folk masses, though some students felt they might be "hootenanny with communion," a reference to a popular 1963 TV show featuring folk musicians who performed on college campuses.
Both clubs discussed topics such as religion in folk music and jazz, the relationship of Hinduism to Christianity, chastity versus birth control and the peace movement, which was coming to the forefront as the war in Vietnam continued to heat up.
In early 1965, the United States had begun air raids on North Vietnam and on Communist-controlled areas in the south and by 1966 there were 190,000 U.S. troops in South Vietnam . By 1969, that number had swelled to nearly 550,000 and the U.S was torn by a war that many young people did not support.
At ACP, students reacted to the war in different ways. In November 1965, senior William Buck '66 addressed a seminar group at the College and urged support of the war in Vietnam , circulating a petition that stated:
"We, the undersigned students of ACP, not condoning war as an ordinary course of events . do in this extraordinary situation, give our support to the President of the United States and our fighting men in their effort in South Vietnam . God bless them all."
Buck and Timothy Garrity '66 received coverage in the local news media when they both flew down to Washington , D.C. to present the petition.
By March 1966, the Alpha Delta Theta sorority was involved in Operation Vietnam, sending novels to G.I.s in an effort co-sponsored by the Albany Times Union and Fort Orange Radio Distributing Company. The sorority collected a total of 288 books, which were shipped off with letters from the sorority members.
That same year, Dean O'Brien's last, he thanked the ACP students going into the service "to maintain the freedom and integrity of this country."
As Dean O'Brien stepped down after 47 years as a member of the faculty and administration, one of ACP's own came in to fill the gap.
Walter Singer, a 1948 graduate who had returned to the College in 1966 as associate dean and professor of pharmacy, became the new dean upon Dr. O'Brien's retirement. Dean Singer previously had taught at ACP until 1954, when he went to University of California at San Francisco for his Ph.D. in pharmaceutical chemistry. He eventually rose to the position of assistant dean at UCSF before his return to his alma mater.
By the following fall, under Dean's Singer's watch, ACP and Albany Medical College were touting their new joint toxicology program, one of the only of its kind in the country, where research was carried out under the supervision of scientists at AMC's Institute of Experimental Pathology .
The College also entered the computer age with a $3,000 grant from the Smith, Kline and French Foundation to purchase a "calculator with memory blanks" and "introduce a statistical approach to the handling of data."
There were other signs that the College was entering a new era.
In 1966, the fifth annual Continuing Education program, sponsored by the Alumni Association, featured sessions on hallucinogenic drugs and anti-fertility agents. An orientation program was instituted for freshmen, ACP joined with other colleges to form the Hudson-Mohawk Association of Colleges and Universities, and, for the first time, dormitory space became available. Shared with students from Albany Med and Albany Law School , the dorm featured quads for $550 a year for a double. A real drawback was the single kitchen shared by eight floors, forcing many students to resort to hotplates.
Against the turbulent background of the late '60s - anti-war protests, the women's movement, the sexual revolution and Robert Kennedy's assassination - the Alembic Pharmakon of 1969 was dedicated to peace among men. ACP entered its next decade with a cautiously hopeful outlook as Dean Singer urged students to use their "intellectual power and numerical strength to move your profession in the direction in which you want it to go."