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2-12-1971 The onM tclarion, February 12, 1971 The onM tclarion

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The onM tclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Montclarion Voi 45. No. 15 Montclair, N.J. 07043. Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. v Profs OK Contract Proposals

A minimum of resistance on professional organization the part of the Montclair State members on a voluntary basis for College faculty toward state the following organizations: contract proposals was the (Campus) Faculty Association; forecast of associate speech the Association of New Jersey professor Karl Moll, Faculty State College Faculties, Inc.; the Association president. Association of New Jersey College The contract, the first of its and University Professors; and the kind between the state and its National Society of Professors. employes, was scheduled to come The chief advantage to this up for approval at an emergency system, according to Moll, is that faculty meeting yesterday. faculty members could pay their AREAS COVERED in the organization dues in a form of contract include salary and installment sysm spaced out employment conditions, tenure, during the year, instead of paying reappointment and prommotion the fee in one lump sum, as' is ri regulation. It establishes a 24-hour done presently. Moll feels that annual teaching load, and a this system would encourage more specific grievance procedure. faculty members to join the The contract also mandates the professional associations. state to collect dues from THE FIVE-STEP grievance procedure provision is the first system of registering grievances BULLETIN ever established on paper for Minutes before the faculty members. A faculty MONTCLARION goes to member with a grievance (in press, Dr. Joseph Moore, accordance with the contract's president of the MSC definition) can appeal his case to Faculty Association his department chairman or announced the acceptance immediate supervisor. of the state contract If he receives no satisfaction, he proposal by the combined can then go to his dean, or to the faculty associations of the appropriate vice-president. If his NEW FURNITURE? One o f Delta Omicron Pi's entrants in the Ice Melting Contest during Winter six state colleges. complaint is still unresolved, he Weekend takes a seat during the competition. can appeal to the president. / Finally, the grievant can take his case to the chancellor of higher education. If he is still unsatisfied with the handling of his grievance, he can, with representation of the Faculty Association, appeal to the 4 TODAY lower lounge, 6:30 p.m. Governor's Employe Relations EAI LOLLIPOP SALE. In student life building lobby, 9 to FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS MEETING. In faculty Policy Council. 3 p.m. lounge, 4 p.m. Altho this is an innovative step PSI CHI MOVIE. In Memorial auditorium, 7 and 10 p.m. TAU LAMBDA BETA MOVIE. In Memqrial auditorium, 7 and, according to Moll, a welcome SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13 p.m. one, he anticipated some ISC's COTILLION. In the Grand Ballroom of the New ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY FUND MEETING. In disucssion on the exact wording York Hilton. Memorial auditorium, 2 p.m. of the section. AUDITIONS - MUSIC DEPT. In music building, all day. SGA MEETING. In studio theater, 4 p.m. TWO OTHER points of SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17 contention among faculty were DINNER DANCE. Student life building cafeteria, 4 to 10 MOVIE. In L-135, 1 and 7:30 p.m. expected to be the absence of a p.m. EOF MEETING. In alumni lounge, 10 a.m. state commitment on summer MOVIE. Alpha Sigma Mu. In Memorial auditorium, 6 to 11 SIGMA DELTA PHI MEETING. In alumni lounge, 6:30 school salaries and some points of p.m. p.m. the sabbatical leave program. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15 FILM FESTIVAL, English department. In Memorial The terms of the two-year MOVIE. In L-135, 12 and 7 p.m. auditorium, 7 p.m. contract have been under . CLUB feature in Memorial auditorium, 7 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18 negotiation for approximately 20 f p.m. MOVIE. In L-135, at 2 and 7 p.m. months by a Faculty Association TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 MOVIE. Lambda Chi Delta. In Memorial auditorium, 7 committee comprised of GRADUATE STUDY COMMITTEE meeting. In Cosla p.m. representatives from all state Room, 6:30 p.m. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 colleges. MATH AND SCIENCE CONGRESS meeting. In V-155, 4 MOVIE. In L-135, 1 p.m. In order for the contract to be p.m. SENIOR CLASS COFFEEHOUSE. In Grace Freeman officially accepted, it has to be MOVIE. In L-135, 4 and 7 p.m. cafeteria, 8 a.m. agreed upon by a majority of the ALPHA CHI BETA MEETING. In alumni lounge, 7 p.m. SENIOR CLASS DANCE. In Life Hall cafeteria, 8 p.m. combined Faculty Association FRESHMEN CLASS MEETING. In student life building. MOVIE, BOSS. In Memorial auditorium, 7 p.m. members from all of the state colleges. The contract is the same for each individual college. 2. MONTCLARION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971

THR—Master Plan is 'Unrealistic’ T State’s Scheme Would Limit MSC Size, Grad Programs

By D.M. Levine ‘ Develop an "Open College," month. Many are claiming that September. By 1977, Newark area and will operate an Staff Writer where students can obtain higher education department State College, Union, expects to educational tv station by the end MSC President Thomas H. accredited degrees without officials did not consult with local pass the 7500-student mark. of the year). Richardson has labeled Phase Two attending formal classes; college administrators before the But the Montclair State Despite the good and bad of the state master plan for higher ‘ Establish an "interrelated document was released. president believes any clamp on education as an "unrealistic" and group of campuses and colleges" According to James admissions is serious problem. "self-contradicting" document under the arm of Rutgers/New Cottingham, administrative With the shifting population that could possibly stifle the Brunswick; growth of New Jersey colleges. ‘ Expand undergraduate and The document, drawn up by graduate spaces at Higher Education Chancellor Rutgers/Newark and Newark NEWS ANALYSIS Ralph Dungan, and his staff, is a College of Engineering to about seven-chapter working projection 45,000 students; for state-run public colleges. It ‘ Develop six other state assistant to the MSC president, comes a greater demand for higher took 11 months to complete. colleges by 1985; Montclair State — under its own education, Richardson believes. Under Phase Two, the higher ‘ and aid in the development of projections — will have nearly "There has been a long-standing education department plans to: educational television, evaluation 7500 undergraduate students on struggle for local autonomy and I * Lim it enrollments at the six techniques, and community campus next year. If the Higher think it is a necessary factor for state colleges to 7500 students college expansion. Education Department's colleges to determine their own each; THE DEVELOPMENT plan has projection is accepted as it stands, needs." ‘ Strip away graduate programs met with harsh reaction from serious conflicts could develop If all goes according to the Thomas H. Richardson at the state colleges and develop a state college officials who are between state policy and the college's own space projections, Unrealistic Document "Graduate University of New planning to air their views at college's plans. MSC will have room for more points of Phase Two, college Jersey"; Trenton hearings later next "A college," points out than the 7500-student ceiling. officials will be able to let their President Richardson, "is like an PHASE TWO is also aiming to voice be heard at March's strip away the graduate organism with a natural growth. hearings. For higher education degree-granting powers of the You just can't slap an artificial board members, it may be theg state colleges and consolidate ceiling on the state colleges." first time qualified local opinion their grad programs into a MEANWHILE, THE state will be received. colleges will continue along their state-chartered organization called present admissions policies unless the "Graduate University of New an official directive is received Jersey. This would be run under from the state. Glassboro State by Rutgers University. Richardson announce College currently has 5300 sees this step as self-defeating. He undergraduate fulltim e students. pointed out that a new graduate John Davies, GSC's admissions school will require a new your director, said that the college administrative setup. The state expects to attain 7500 students would rely on existing state vdJEKv by 1975, in -accordance with its college campuses to administer pinning, THIS WA Y OUT: The Clove road bridge, meant to aid MSC's own master plan. Essex County the grad programs and also utilize parking problem during its growth phases, may be the last of its Community College has about existing state'college profs. "What kind. Phase two o f Jersey's higher education master plan would lim it 5200 students and anticipates a is the point of that?" asked engagement^ MSC's student population to 7500. larger student body by Richardson. THE PROJECTION, however, has some good points, say some & wedding. college officials. The document calls for constant evaluation of its proposals and aims to accomodate as many students as possible in N e w Jersey higher education—either thru the "open college" concept or two-year community colleges. Along these lines, the master montdarion •mightier than the sword plan is also calling for massive occupational training programs at dassifiedsj And This Week's 'Boo, Hiss' Winners Are . . . community colleges and asks for the implementation of Our first annual "Boo, Hiss!" went out was to start College will freeze and students will go educational television (MSC has 50c a .1 award goes to this week . . . in Hall's emergency generators. But sllllllllip. Why? been given the green light in this general. the infirmary in Russ Hall I'm certain that our campus I mean, what else can you say (where two fevered students master planners are working about a week that begins with a were spending the night) stayed hand-in-hand with the Trenton tv blackout. No boob tube on cold for quite a while. So did the biggies in getting rid of those Sunday Night. No Ed Sullivan. dorms. excess students. I mean, take a, M ontdarion ; / No Glen Campbell. Only half of NATURAL CAUSES look at what happened during Serving the College Community Since 1928 Lassie. Boo, Hiss. Elsewhere in the "Boo, Hiss!" the FDU-MSC basketball game —New Jersey rs Leading Collegiate Weekly Richard Nixon declared department . .. we've got a story Monday night. They played the Maurice J. Moran assignment editor Southern California a disaster on top of this page on how frosh game — fine. Two-thirds of Carla Capizzi Carol Giordano f area earlier this week. One Chancellor King Ralph Dungan the lights went out. Now .. . the Susan Kelly wonders if it was done before or Jo-Ellen Scudese and all his merrymen are trying logical thing would be to let the Mary J. Smith copy editors after the quake. California just to limit the size of MSC. spectators leave the gym before Paula MacIntyre magazine editor Cynthia Lepre arts editor may slip into the ocean yet. Unfortunately, if things keep up the other third of the lights Carol Sakowitz sports editor Of course, the biggest of the Michael Traylor photography editor at their current rate, they won't went, right? Anne Baldwin business manager week's "Boo, Hisses!" goes to have to do a thing. All MSC Not here, frosh. They kept John McCloskey circulation manager Susan Hrasna editorial assistant * MSC's own highly advanced students will have died of going right on up until the very Alpha Phi Omega circulation Michael F. X. Grieco technology, as clearly evidenced natural causes. last light went shplllush. And editorial consultant in Monday night — Tuesday If I ever get a hold of then they tried getting rid of the The MONTCLARION is published weekly thruoul the colleqe year, September thru May, except during vacation and examination morning's blackout. It's the first Urbahn-Mahony-Zvosec (or 2200 people crowded into the periods, by the Board of Student Publications, a division o* the Student Government Association Inc., Montclair State Colleqe / time the MONTCLARION's ever whatever), there are going to be gym. "Boo, Hiss!" (V20ie)y783*9091N° rmal avenue’ M ontclalr. N.J. 07043. Telephone been put out by candlelight. some twisted throats. Why do Subscription rates by mail: $2.50 per academic semester, $3.50 There's one thing worse than all peL.*ch.°° y.e,a r - Advertising rates upon request. Known office of construction in the middle of publication, Montclair, N.J. 07043. TRULY AMAZING of the things that happened this „ The MONTCLARION is a member of the New Jersey Colleqiate It's truly amazing . . . the first winter? The mud will become week. Press Association, Collegiate Press Service, Newspaper Enterprise internationalUn *ed S,a,es student p^ss Service ind United Aress thing they did after the lights insurmountable. All the water Next week. edlloMn-ch'ief^31 opinions expressed represent those of the MONTCLARION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. 3, Activities Director f Fonda Speaks Monday~ If She’s Not in the Clink $2000 Stolen from Jane Fonda, the bone-slender actress-daughter of Henry and self-appointed social critic, may be speaking in Memorial Stepnowski’s Rooms auditorium Mon., Feb. 15 — if she By Cynthia Lepre isn't in jail. director late Sunday night or early Stepnowski explained. "Usually Staff Writer Miss Fonda, who has been Monday morning after the Winter we rely on advance sales, but touring the college circuit in ore than $2000 was stolen Weekend concert. there were an unusual number of recent months to promote her from the apartment of Thomas "The money was mostly door tickets sold at the door." antiwar feelings, is up on charges Stepnowski, student activities receipts from the concert," STEPNOWSKI BROUGHT a for allegedly kicking a policeman cash box containing and allegedly smuggling drugs into approximately $1700 to his the United States. She could face apartment Sunday night at 11 an eight-year jail term if found p.m., hid the money and returned guilty. THE COLLEGE Life Union Board (CLUB) has signed the necessary contracts with the Stepnowski: actress' New York agents, May according to a group spokesman. Beef Up She will get a standard speaker's Security fee of $1500 for her talk, which will focus on the Vietnam war. to the concert. Arriving back at 2:45 a.m., he discovered the livingroom window smashed, the ’Apathy’ floor sprinkled with glass and the kitchen ransacked. "Every corner of every room Marching Band had been searched," he surmized. The thief left with $500 from Winter Weekend receipts as well as the contents of the cashbox. Cancels Shows After notification of the theft, Marching Band will no longer explain "A ltho the budget has the campus security police perform at Montclair State been cut in half, student stopped the remaining cars on football games. Homecoming attendance at the concerts has campus to check identification. parades and other special events, increased by 25-30% each NO DOVE IN HIS KITCHEN: apartment is still disheveled from The L ittle Falls Police according to a notice submitted to semester for the past two years." Thomas Stepnowski's ransacked Sunday night's robbery. Department ascertained that entry the Student Government had been made from the roof over Association last week by Marching the Snack Bar. It appeared that Band members. Black Plans Players Expansion the thief had climbed out from . .In protest to student wide the Davella Mills room, after apathy toward the cultural life of Despite SGA's rejection of The proposals, now in an SGA "wrong frame of reference," and forcing that room's door open. our campus, particularly as certain restructuring proposals. committee, can not be acted upon that altho they could not be Stepnowski is thankful that no reflected by the SGA," the Players hopes for expansion of its by the legislature because they instituted into Players at the one was injured, but expressed members of the marching band, organization and extension of its have been ruled unconstitutional. present time, he is hopeful that it regret "because we are working in have agreed to discontinue all services to the entire college The purpose of the proposals, could someday be "an effective a community atmosphere. It performances, beginning with the community, according to junior according to a Players spokesman, and beneficial plan." could have been someone I fall 1971 semester. Joe Black, recently-elected Players is to provide better organization Black has begun work on the know." As a result of the theft, RICHARD OSHIN, sophomore president. of funds and personnel to bring expansion of the organization by the security system of the student music major and Music about "continuity" in the offering Players' services to "all life building is being reexamined. Organizations Commission (MOC) organization. groups on campus who produce Plans call for the locks to be president, pointed out that THE MAJOR point of the shows, from Pi's Follies to Miss entirely changed. because of this year's budget cut, proposal involves a revamping of Montclair State. Players, he said MOC needed to borrow $6600 to Players' administration to include has people who are aware of meet its contract obligations. a production committee, a techniques and ideas for staging, Teen Suffrage- "Along with the cancellation of managing director, and business box office activities and even One More Time marching band, there will be no manager. The plans, however, seating arrangements." TRENTON—Jersey's 18-year-olds outside concerts next year unless were ruled unconstitutional by ALL MSC undergraduates are may soon get a second chance to there is a raise in the MOC SGA on the grounds that they eligible to join Players. "Players is vote in local elections. * budget." allowed for too much faculty a student organization and as State senators Richard J. "The original charter of MOC control of the organization. many students as possible should Coffee (D-Mercer) and Fairleigh stipulates that the organization This decision left the proposals benefit," added Black. Dickinson (R-Bergen) are working shall receive $4.20 per student. in SGA committee, and according to put the question of the This year we requested a budget to Black, they are "all but 18-year-old vote on the ballot in of $3.90 and we were given buried." Black added that he felt Joseph Black the November 1971 elections. $2.25." Oshin went on the the plans were presented in the Has Plans. GALUMPH THEY ARE also attempting to lower the state voter residency requirements from six moneths to Still Another 1000 Attend MSC in Fall 30 days and the county residency There will be 1000 more people May, has slightly over 1000 Both these projects would submit requirements from 40 to 30 days. on the Montclair State campus members. eliminate some convenient Coffee explained that the next fall. But parking will be no problem, parking spaces. referendum, defeated in the 1968 Mrs. Wilkin beams. "There are AT PRESS time, over 7000 now election, would not normally be According to Mrs. Mary Wilkin, 6000 spaces available to the high school seniors have applied resubmitted until three general assistant admissions director, students. The only problem is that to MSC for admission in the fall. elections had passed. But, by approximately 1500 freshmen will they are far away. So, if you like The deadline for applications is slightly varying the question's be accepted for September. Also, to walk, there w ill be no next week, so the number will wording and adding the residency about 550 transfers—many from second floor, problem." probably rise well above the 7000 reform, it can be legally placed the community colleges—will be Campus construction projects mark, Mrs. Wilkin said. before the voters this November. accepted. call for closing o ff the mud flats Also, number of transfer student life According to Coffee, the new "ALTOGETHER, COUNTING between Finley Hall and the fine applications far exceeds those of bill has several advantages. First, on about 150 readmittances, there arts building from parking. Also, previous years. Last year, 1346 the 18-year-old voter provision will be 2000-2100 new people work is expected to begin on the tra n sfe r applications were will allow young citizens to "take here in the fa ll," Mrs. Wilkin said. math-science building between the received. This year, expectations building part in government at all levels, The senior class, graduating in recreation lodge and Stone Hall. are for 1500-1700 hopefuls. not just at the federal level." 4. MONTCLARION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971.

Cable Goes 'Snap’ and 18 Hours Are 'In the Black

Pizzo Parties, Not Tuesdays Classes, Held Thruout Compus

provided emergency floodlighting A snap in an underground cable Hall. And it caused an 18-hour darkness. The third phase chance of electrocution. for the gym's clearance. All 2200 kept MSC lightless, heatless and campuswide blackout, forcing continued to function. Thus, at 9 p.m., most of the spectators were evacuated without classless early this week, until a cancellation of Tuesday's classes. Public Service employes were campus was plunged into total injury. biblical command seemingly TWO OF the three phases of called on campus to take care of darkness. A varsity basketball EVENING AND graduate started the transformers in MSC's MSC's electrical flow were the problem. Upon arrival, they game to begin shortly between classes in session when the final private powerhouse. knocked out by the snap. The said it would be impossible to MSC and Fairleigh Dickinson blackout began were immediately The underground cable was time was 7:07 p.m., by the clocks work on the two malfunctioning University in Panzer gym was recessed, and an hour-long traffic located between the Temporary in Life Hall, when much of the phases unless the third was also swiftly cancelled, and the jam began as MSC evening Union Building (TUB) and College campus was plunged into turned off—or there'd be a great Montclair Fire Department students made their way out of the ice-paved parking lots and mud flats, thru the windy traffic lanes and onto Normal avenue and Valley road — most of the way without street lights. Traffic flow on the one-way road leading TUB and Freeman Hall was reversed to provide for more speedy evacuation. The five campus dorms, scene of several spontaneous "pizza parties," were locked up by the security department about 10:30 p.m., with one door in each dorm remaining open. Several robberies occurred shortly afterwards. Between 2-2:35 a.m., a Public Service spokesman said, 2671 customers in the MSC area were without electricity as workmen - tested circuits to determine the cause of the power failure. CLASSES WERE not to be held on Tuesday—that was the , college administration's decision on Tuesday morning, when, as the night progressed, the cause of the blackout remained unknown. v Announcements that MSC classes would be cancelled were made over WABC and other metropolitan radio stations. SOME LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT: MSCer shines a flashlight on his But the announcements were face during the blacked-out MSC-FDU basketball game. The dots o f not made early enough, it seems. light in the background are reflections of the photographer's Thousands of MSC students strobe!ight in spectators' glasses. attempting to meet their early Tuesday morning classes were met by security guards holding signs reading "No school today. Turn U.S.A. ALL THE WA Y: In the depths o f a darkened MSC, a Public around and go home." Service hardhat peers into a power room. It was about the same time that the dormitory students, attempting to get their morning Girls’ Dorms Robbed meal in the Life Hall cafeteria, were greeted by a new breakfast food—cold sandwiches. In Monday’s Darkness THE DECISION on also cancelling night classes was not By Jo-Ellen Scudese resident director, assisted by made early that morning, and Staff Writer campus security, systematically students calling the evening •,<- Some enterprising burglars checked and locked all possible division were told to call back made the best of an unfortunate exits. Despite precautions, the later-a decision had not yet been situation Monday night when burglars escaped with watches, made. Later that day, at 2 p.m.. electrical power was temporarily radios and money, mostly taken no one was manning the desks at * out on the Montclair State from the first and third floors. the evening division office or at campus. Wallets were 'eft behind—after the MSC switchboard to give the Two males were sighted by being emptied. interested students an answer. dorm residents in Chapin Hall Mrs. Jeanie Marshall, Russ Hall But, at 1:15 p.m., Maintenance shortly after 11:30 p.m. Monday. resident director reported no Director Joseph McGinty shouted Residents had started to notice stolen items. The MSC security "Let there be light!" And there things missing around 11 p.m. department, working most of the was. The fluorescent bulbs when most were returning from night alongside administrators, flickered on all over campus as the meetings and other activities. was able to lock up th? building words were said and the switches POWER ON campus had gone before any burglaries took place. were thrown. o ff shortly after 7 p.m. Under However, pointed out Sal * instructions from MSC FREEMAN HALL was not as Morgano, electrical director, there vice-president for business and lucky. A color tv was spotted, is only a temporary patch on the finance Vincent Calabrese, dorms uprooted from the lower lounge, snap between TUB and College were locked up by security hastily deposited near one of the Hall. Anotner six to eight-hour around 10:30. Only one of the 6:00 exits. Apparently the blackout will be necessary to main doors in each dorm were left burglars tried to steal the tv, but repair it permanently. The open until midnight to assure that found it too hefty. electrical staff has suggested that * all residents were in. No definite description of the 'NOW WHERE DID THIS COME FROM?' A repairman works on the power be shut off during Mrs. Joan Bakurn, Chapin Hall two burglars was available. the snapped cable between College Hall and TUB. Easter vacation. MON TCL A R IO N /Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. 5.

MONTCLARION

* Phase Two o f the Master Plan Has Some Shocking News - Editorial, Page 6. «• Is Tom Benitz Considering Another Term? - Campus Whirl Column, Page 6. » Feb. 7, 1971 Is a New Day in Infamy - Reportage by M.J. Moran, Page 7. Focus t MSC Students are Educable, Says Jacques Caillault — Letters, Page 7. From «Janitor to President Hay Report Revoking Rights

Montclair State College, it is Associates were commissioned, displayed disillusionment and at for the NJLA's opposition to the said, is breaking the image of a thru Public Law 304, to analyze times anger in discussing the issue. Hay report. They include: state teacher's college and is all state service jobs in New "The Hay Associates never 1. “ Faculty status for librarians moving toward a liberal arts Jersey. Vincent Calabrese, MSC spoke to a librarian or any other in the New Jersey state colleges institution with the hope of vice-president for business and 'faculty' member on this was acquired only after a long eventually gaining university finance, stated: "The philosophy campus," she said. She added: struggle. This attainment status. This movement appears to of the Hay report was to establish "We were hired with the identical reflects a greatadvance in be seriously impeded by the a relationship for all jobs - janitor contract of any teacher on this academic librarianship, and is implementation of a report issued to president, and further, to campus and suddenly it is now the goal of college and by the Hay Associates to the ascertain an equitable range of retracted, we have been university librarians in all parts governor and state legislator. moneys paid." unilaterally changed to of the country. All professional Mrs. Blanche Haller, associate unclassified civil servants." associations concerned with librarian at Sprague library, Mrs. Haller's statements higher education strongly Vincent Calabrese intoned a view that the Hay advocate faculty status for . . . equitable range Associates were unqualified to librarians. judge this situation. This view is 2. "Faculty status enables the important factor in attracting shared and supported by many librarian to function as a highly qualified and scholarly members of the academic colleague with the academic staff. The recruitment of community — at MSC, at the state community, and thus to superior staff would suffer if level, and by national library contribute in greater measure such rank were withheld." associations. to college affairs. For a long time New Jersey has One result of this report, Dr. John R. Beard, head 3. "Loss of faculty status maintained a low ranking in implemented last September was librarian at Sprague and chairman would tend to diminish the national higher education. to strip New Jersey college of the college and university stature of the library, not only Members of the academic librarians of faculty status. The section of the New Jersey Library within the college community, community have predicted that rights revoked include: 10 month Association (NJLA), wrote an but with all accrediting agencies this move will in no way enhance work year versus 12 month; article entitled "A Regressive Step — a severe problem during a our chances for improvement. It sabbatical leaves; tenure (for those in New Jersey Higher Education." period of expansion of has been said that the center of who have not yet obtained it); In it he discusses the role of programs, curricula, sutdent the college or university structure and all rights and privileges given librarians in education and the body, etc. This diminished is the library. With the "core" of to faculty members. repercussions that might be felt as stature would reflect itself in a the structure disturbed, what then In 1968, during the Richard J. Dr. John Beard a result of the Hay report. drastic lowering of staff morale. are the chances for the structure Hughes administration, the Hay . . . regressive step Beard cites four major reasons 4. "Faculty status has been an itself to make advances?

'The Wilkie Plan 9 How to Make SGA More ‘Humane’ By Kathy Flynn will have his powers clearly various interest groups. In other Staff Writer defined. Wilkie states that the words, any organization bound The Student Government purpose of the change is to together by mutual interest — Association is not usually reinforce the “legitimacy of the including clubs and fraternities. considered to be an inhumane SGA.” Wilkie believes frats and clubs organization, but in some ways it Under the “Wilkie plan” a encompass two thirds of the can be. It is evident that the SGA school manager would be added, students. The other third — or does not reach everyone on similar to the position of a “commuters” - is an interest campus. That’s the opinion of municipality’s city manager. The group in itself and should be Jack Wilkie, SGA representative city manager is “totally unrelated reached. Wilkie wants the entire from the School of Professional to politics and cannot make group to be involved, rather than Arts and Sciences. He considers it policy,” he explained. The a few individuals. to be a fault in the basic structure manager makes sure that the Each school, under Wilkie’s of the organization itself. system is functioning properly plan, would have two lobbyists to A member of SGA since and that everybody is doing his directly meet with the senate and Jack Wilkie October, he has viewed its job efficiently, he added. congress as intermediaries for the . . . seeks to define workings closely and believes that Under the plan, the school and school representatives. “We hope student power is needed, as well departmental representatives are that the faculty members in the would be what Wilkie labels three different interest groups on as a means of reaching and retained because of their equal senate will realize the importance Building “A” with all forms of campus as well as some acquiring the views of more importance. “Both have a job to of the lobbyist’s positions. He media working together to inform special-interest clubs. All agreed students. fulfill,” he said. One will increase (the lobbyist) would make sure the school. Information would be that the “Wilkie plan” was a good CLEARLY-DEFINED POWERS communication within the that the senate is doing what the fed to each school down thru the one. Wilkie has drawn up a plan department, as in interest groups. students want. The senators department representatives and The plan is now in committee (currently in the “Committee to The school representative makes would now have great access to into various interest where it is open for modification. Define Duties and Responsibilities sure that various affairs held in going deeper into' the student short period of time. It will then have to be signed by of a Legislature”) to restructure the senate as well as in the body to find out how they feel.” PLAN IN 10 DAYS various interest groups and then SGA in a way that each legislator congress are being held in favor of The center of communications This plan took Wi sent to the floor of SGA. days to draw up. ‘ He then "Under the "Wilkie plan.* a sehool manager would discussed it with Dr. Edward W. Says Jack Wilkie: “The plan is Johnson, Dr. Harry Balfe of the designed to open communications be added, similar to the position of a eity manager . . . political science department, Dr. as much as possible, mobilize it to he would make sure the system is funetioning properly .. .** Huston Elam, dean of the School a high degree and differentiate the of Professional Arts and Sciences, various duties of the SGA.” 6 . MÜNTCLARON

New Jersey’s Leading Collegiate Weekly

Don Pendley editor-in-chief Rich DeSanta managing editor David M. Levine editorial page editor

Vol.45,N o. 15. Montclair, N.J. 07043. Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. Dungan’s Document: A Lack of Insight The slow-paced growth of higher education in New Jersey has largely been the result of constant battling and bickering between the slate higher education hoard and local college administrators. The state in some wav or other has always sought to impose its will upon their slate colleges. \nd unite justifiably. The colleges are creatures of the state, created and funded hv them. The problem, tho, is that the state of New Jersey ofttimes seeks to impose its centralizing force upon the colleges without due respect to the officials who run them. After all, an administrator is well aware of the needs of his own institution. Such is the case with Phase Two of the higher education master plan released last week by Chancellor Ralph Dungan’s office. It took I I months to formulate the goals and definitions stated in Phase Two. The news contained in its pages is shocking to the administrators who weren’t Campus Whirl consulted. Phase Two is basically seeking to stifle the natural growth of its state Ralph Another Term for Tom? Dungan colleges by limiting enrollments to 7500 students at each of the six stale institutions. Editor’s Note: Campus Whirl will the least. QUARTERLY and GALUMPH, Montclair Stale College will have that many students in appear weekly in the Richard Oshin, sophomore the campus magazines . . . JACK a couple of years at the present rale of growth, MONTCLARION. The column music major with vested interests, WILKIE, SGA business administrators are saying. And in view of the current contains news o f general has the greatest ax to grind with department representative, has population trends, the college will have an obligation to interest researched and edited the Benitz administration. He’s some good ideas for reforming accept a higher proportion of applicants than ever by the editorial staff. president of the Music SGA, making it closer to the before. It looks as if SGA President Organizations Commission students. But, he finds, some Thomas Benitz has ambitions for (MOC). members of the SGA hierarchy The document is seJf-contradictorv in that graduates an unprecedented second term. At Their budget was sliced to are dead-set against of two-year schools will be expected to be accepted at least, that’s the view most ribbons this past semester by SGA this . . . COLLEGE LIFE UNION one of the six state institutions under Phase Two. Some members of the Legislature held butchers with orders from Benitz. BOARD officials worrying about rethinking will obviously be needed along these lines. after Benitz made his “State of Oshin, therefore, is most likely their $1500 investment in JANE Dungan’s document is also aiming to strip away the Campus” speech the other to seek presidential office in the FONDA. She could be given an graduate degree programs at MSC, and the other slab- day. upcoming election. Oshin has the eight-year jail term before she gets colleges. Master’s degree programs will be structured Benitz was telling his audience backing of many prominent her chance to speak here . . . DR. under a new setup called “The Graduate University of that he is just getting into the student leaders who felt sorry for ALLAN MOREHEAD is New Jersey.” The graduate university apparently has no “swing of things” and he hinted him when SGA decided to snip back .. . VIC DELUCA making a specific purpose — just to strip away graduate-degree that a second term might set the away. At this point, Oshin is name for himself as SGA’s chief \ powers from the colleges. The setup is foolish, because SGA in the proper direction. claiming the SGA is investigator. After the Graduate; University of New Jersey would still he Sources close to Benitz are not antiintellectual (citing his own MONTCLARION, he’ll look into utilizing the facilities at the state colleges. Money will be talking. It seems as if they’re budget .cut), reactionary and other campus pubs. . . THOMAS spent for a name only. contemplating. bankrupt. BENITZ and friends out to lunch ' ’ * * * The document is obviously of little value; and shows Meanwhile other aspirants for with sales rep from the OSHIN FOR PRESIDENT various political positions are a remarkable lack of insight. If the stale is willing to manufacturer of MSC’s school ! Segments of the campus beginning to creep out of the rings . . SORREL LUHRS out as listen, many college administrators can provide tin- hierarchy totally dissatisfied with woodwork. There’s talk that SGA veep for internal ¡/ proper information which can gear education to the the Benitz regime are already Benitz’s right-hand man, Robert affairs . . . MSC will have 6500 'I needs of the 70s. making their political plans which Watson, may be after the students by September... CLUB should turn out interesting, to say presidency. Watson, a 29-year-old having hard time balancing books. > cop-turned-student, has his foot in Help for the too many doors as it is, so it may only be talk. Lionel Geltman, sophomore, is after the position 2-Year College of treasurer (Gelt, in Yiddish, means money). He’ll try to beat When it comes to governmental spending, channels Dawn Sova’s popularity. must be opened wide enough to help community * * * colleges in their current fiscal dilemma. BITS & PIECES . . . PRES1- For some, the community college is the last hope for DENT THOMAS H. students seeking to gain a higher education. Too often, RICHARDSON reportedly fuming politicians pay the concept lip service without offering over Chancellor Ralph Dungan’s any concrete plans for their development. newly-released plans for state Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. (D-N.J.) is introducing higher education. THR says legislation aimed at beefing up the colleges which are presidents of state colleges were already operating on shaky financial ground. It also not consulted. If implemented, provides revenue directly to states who may want to MSC would be out of the graduate school business . . . Some Thomas Richardson chart a master plan for the two-year eolleges. . . . [iopulurity legislators are out to kill . . . not consulted MONTCLARI ON/F ri., Feb. 12, 1971 7. Monl«*l»rion Soapbox Despite , Reports MSC Students are Educable

To the Editor: exists in every school those confidence that even Montclair campus. The ticketing of these In Times While sitting recently in Dr. students who are interested State students are educable, and vehicles seems in no way to Ronald F. Maas’ education class, more in social activities than in that perhaps someday we can be alleviate the problem. Like These . . . I was told by this department intellectual matters, but that is sufficiently intellectually Most of the obstructions chairman that if the class he was not the point. The point is that independent to walk thru the occur in unmarked lots, while To the Editor: teaching were at Harvard or when a professor, and a dark world without the light of more than enough parking In these times of inflation, why Amherst, he could teach on the department chairman at that, these revered professors to guide spaces remain unused. On Wed., doesn't the traffic office start a assumption that the students honestly believes that the us. Feb. 3, I had to tow away about new trend and lower parking fines were more self-motivated and student body of this school is Jacques Caillault, '72. 12 of these vehicles. from $5 to 3? Parking facilities more intelligent than those of academically inferior to the I am left with no alternative are limited to such an extent that • Montclair State. His latter was money-oriented ivy league but to continue the towing walking a mile to classes from presumably determined thru the schools, he should attempt to No Other policy now in operation, a where you are parked is a treat. results of the college-board rectify the situation, either by practice I find distasteful but I’d rather park illegally on Valley scores on which he seemed to leaving this school to teach in Solution necessary. road and risk a fine from Clifton. place so much emphasis. one that would make better use Joseph Daly, It’s cheaper. I believe that this kind of of his talents, or by trying to To the Editor: Security chief. Angela Vaxmonsky, '72. condescending attitude on the bring MSC up to the standards Since early fall, numerous part of some of our professors is which he obviously feels we complaints have been lodged serious enough to warrant lack. concerning illegally-parked cars 'lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliliitii challenge. I admit that there For my part, I have blocking exit routes from the i Thom as Richardson iiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiH iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii R e p o rta g e ■ Making t Feb. 7-a Day in Infamy ' a Decision \ ¿ á iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii In administration, one is frequently questioned about how iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii decisions are made. “Who decided" that?” is often asked, both by faculty and students. “Just checking,” replies Bill. HeBy Maurice J. Moran Jr. “Just checking,” replies Bill. HeBy “Don’t talk to your mother These are reasonable questions and usually behind the questions Staff Writer runs upstairs. that way,” interrupts Dad, are legitimate anxieties. Sun., Feb. 7, 1971 is a day that “Where are you going?” queries suddenly appearing at the cellar Is the direction of the college planned by a small group of will live in infamy. The time was his mother. stairs. administrators who hatch their schemes and plots behind closed 7:22 p.m. and the television “Got homework.” “Why didn’t “I wasn’t talking that way,” doors? viewers of “Wild Kingdom” you do that before?” “Are you Bill hollered. “I was asking a In the past, I have written about the extensive system of watched the luxurious coral reef kidding? 1 was watching tv. Call simple question.’ ’ student-faculty involvement in decision-making at the college, but I of Australia turn to “snow.” With me when she gets off the phone.” “ Are you yelling at your would like to illustrate the point again by citing the work of two tv gone dead, the terror struck. Silence descends, until Dad father?” committees. American family members had to perks up. “How about something “Kathy, turn that down!” LONG HOURS AT WORK discover one another. to eat while we’re waiting.” He “Katherine, are you deaf?” The Calendar Revision Committee has met every other week With all VHF channels then lights up a cigar. “Now listen, young man .. (sometimes more frequently) since Nov. 5. They convened at 8 a.m. obscured by a power failure in “I wish you wouldn’t smoke Suddenly there was a crackle in Dr. Samson McDowell’s office and worked long and hard at mid-Manhattan, families were that awful thing in my living from the living room. A buzz. A developing a proposal for a new college calendar. Six students and forced to find new means of room,” Mom says, scurrying out zap. “And now” a voice six faculty members (one from each school) and a number of- pacification. A typical — albeit to the kitchen. “Alright,” he announced, “we are able to administrators worked on this committee. fictional — Sunday evening went growls, “I’ll go down to my resume our regular broadcasting The calendar revision proposal which was developed last summer like this: workshop, call me when the schedule.” was but one of the various plans which were considered. I attended a “Daddy,” the mother said to food’s on.” “Thank God,” Dad says, meeting of this committee to answer questions about the her sleepy-eyed husband, jolted In the interim, Mom has settling in his easy chair, “and just administrative implications of various proposals, and I was impressed out of dreamland by the blaring discovered that supper dishes were in time for the end of by the intensity of the discussion and the diversity of the group. A silence of the 26-inch screen. not yet done. Kathy has hung up ‘.’ ” proposed calendar was developed, and I am certain that by now you “What do we do now?” and put the Jefferson Airplane on are familiar with its essential characteristics. Faculty and students “ We don’t need that the stereo. Our America will have a chance to react to, and modify this proposal before a boob-tube,” he replied. “We, uh, “Jesus, Kathy did you lose recommendation is presented to the Board of Trustees, and this, of can play, uh, cards instead. How your hearing aid?” her father Who’s More Honest? course, is what I promised in my MONTCLARION article of Nov. about a game of cards?” A quick screams from the lower depths. “The advertising fraternity is 13. game of gin rummy ensues. As “Sweetheart,” Mom begs, “turn getting a hard time these days Another committee worked during all of the last college year on a they begin to play, the phone the phonograph down for your from politicians who question its proposal for a college-wide governing body. This was a large, rings. It’s Kathy’s boyfriend. father, OK?” honesty. One would think, hard-working committee composed of many faculty members and “Christ, she’ll be gone for “Hey,” Bill proclaimed, freshly sometimes, that none but many students. They produced a massive report and a highly hours,” growls Dad. The on the scene, “I thought we were politicians had the consumers’ detailed plan for a new collegewide student-faculty-administrative remaining members sit in silence. playing cards.” interest at heart.” body. Unfortunately for that committee, their proposal was Bill, the teenaged son of the clan, “I thought you had -Editorial, Manchester (N.H.) subsequently rejected by the various constituencies of the college. gets up and goes to the tv. “What homework . . Mom said. Union-Leader This does not mean that last year’s committee was a failure or that are you doing?” demands the “ I did, but I got hungry. Didn’t * * * its proposal was not important in the evolution of the college’s father. you ever get hungry?” Frameup thinking about all-college governance. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIHI “My presence in this court is NEW GROUP FORMED unrelated to any criminal At the beginning of this college year, however, a new group was M ini He view activities. 1 stand before this court formed to work on a proposal for a new all-college governing board. as the target of a political “Thumb Tripping, ”Don Mitchell, Bantam Books, 95

“ OH H H H .. .!" : The contestants in the Ice Melting Contest could only use body heat. These fratmen won the competition by the skin of their teeth . . .or backs, in this case.

SAID THE RAVEN: "I really do like It In the mornin' much better, yeahhhhh . .." Genya Raven, lead vocalist from Ten Wheel Drive, screeches out her preferences at the WEIGHING IN AT 50 POUNDS': A chunk of group's Sunday night concert. ice-the opposing force at the melting contest-is checked out before the competition begins.

GUING UP FOR THE JUMP SHOT: It's the right place, but the wrong time, as Ten Wheel Drive performs in Panzer g\ Sunday evening. ■ “ THE BOAR'ÚÁ! Freeman cafete¡ MONTOLARION/Frí., Feb. 12. 1971. 9.

"LIGHTS, CAMERAS. . This was the action at the marathon film festival Friday evening. A series of nearly 20 films was presented from midnight Friday until noon Saturday. WINTER WEEKEND • the ice contest mode things o little colder • and the fridoy night flicks kept flowing • and there wos this lody nomed Genyo

Coffeehouse, film festival, and Ice Melting Contest photos by Morey Antebi. Concert photos by Michael Traylor. THE ICE IS WET, DEAR: Dungareed coed applies a little " instant heat" to her soaking pants after taking part in the Ice Melting Contest Sunday afternoon.

"H IY A , BUGS!” : Frank Sulich, Voice of Montclair State chairman, gazes at one of the BOARL'.K! Three MSC coeds man the monopoly board at CLUB's coffeehouse Friday evening in the Grace cartoon spectaculars in Friday night's marathon ían catete. film festival. 10. MONTCLARtON/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. Th p Projectionist9 Thinking back to the 60s

Is it possible to review a hosted and, moreover, he was comic Rodney Dangerfield (the memory? These and other visibly pleased to read us the villain/theater manager), Ina Balin questions came to me as I letters he periodically recieved (heroine/girl in the park), and watched and subsequently from Stan Laurel, a gentleman of veteran European star Jara digested “.” whom he was a great fan (as well Kahout (kindly scientist/ “The Projectionist” belongs to as a fine friend). Later, when the refreshments seller). a breed known as the “little film.” show’s format changed and Buster Of very special note is the These are motion pictures that are Crabbe serials became the staple exquisite editing done by the usually rather small in physical item, Chuck helped us relive an director, Harry Hurwitz. For the scope (to match their limited era we had never seen. fantasy sequences he has taken budgets) and lack “name” stars. LIVES OUR FANTASIES classic shots from hundreds of There is, however, at least one Chuck McCann is “The films (“Maltese Falcon,” “Citizen more ingredient evident in “The Projectionist.” He lives out our Kane”) and beautifully matched Projectionist.” That element, one fantasies by projecting himself them to his new footage. The that stems from the very artists into the film he screens. When he result is funny, nostalgic, and involved, is a genuine love for the isn’t on the job, he also engages inventive. product. himself in a running mind-movie “The Projectionist,” then, can Think back for a moment to starring as the invincible Captain be said to be a kind of “Walter the 1960s. Afternoon television Flash. Also on hand in the film Mitty Meets the Movies.” Walter during that period was a mixed (and in the inter-film movies) are Mitty never had it so good. blessing. Amid the flood of -Chuck Ward. all-cartoon shows there existed occasional oases of laughter. On one end of the spectrum was channel 5’s Soupy Sales, while the relatively quiet comedy of channel 11 ’s Chuck McCann resided on the other. I recall that Chuck McCann was about the only afternoon kiddie cyndi lepre UP AGAINST A WALL: The invincible Captain Flash (better known as show host to actually relate to his Chuck McCann) takes time out from his busy superhero schedule to audience and truly talk “with” kiss lovely Ina Balin. The exploits o f Captain Flash are examined in them. He shared our delight with ‘‘The Projectionist. ’’ the Laurel and Hardy shorts he Directing, American style

One of the major his new-found success. Ellen Words and images spell success contributions given to the world Burstyn's performance as Beth, of filmmaking by proponents of the wife who should be the Producing a movie of a meaning as you see the action Richard Johnson, Robert Vaughn, the “ New Wave" is the woman behind the man — but Shakespearean play is sometimes a unfold on the screen. Richard Chamberlain and Diana unquestionable belief that film is isn't — is unquestionably risky business. Directors tend to The movie is graced with an Rigg- the director's medium. This academy award material. either stick so closely to the outstanding cast. Sir John Gielgud IS WELL DONE truism is accepted thruout Mazursky has cast himself legitimate theater concept that is excellent as Caesar altho All is all, the movie is well Europe and can be seen in the into the movie as Hal Stern, the the finished movie looks like a perhaps a little old and fragile done. It is paced well and the films of Godard, Truffaut, pseudo-hip so Id-out producer photographed stage production or looking for the part now. suspense builds swiftly to the Bergman and Fellini. Finally an who tries to entice Alex into they get so carried away by the Charlton Heston portrays Mark climax of the funeral oration. The American director has caught directing some of the possibilities of the film medium Antony with great depth and events which follow are somewhat on. "rottenest" films imaginable. that the real value of the play is understanding. Just after Caesar is anticlimatic even in the stage play. Paul Mazursky, who made his One gets the idea that totally lost amid a welter of assassinated, Mark Antony returns The director uses his medium well mark at the boxoffice with "Bob Mazursky's knowledge of this realism. to the senate chamber to convince in fleshing out the final battle and Carol and Ted and Alice," type of character is painfully American International the conspirators that he should be scenes visually to add to the has gone on to better things with firsthand. Pictures’ release “Julius Caesar” allowed to speak at Caesar’s sparse dialogue provided by his latest film, M-G-M's "Alex in Alex ambles thru the avoids both these pitfalls. The funeral. Heston is magnificently Shakespeare. Wonderland." wonderland of Hollywood, and director, Stuart Birge, has retained grim as he shakes the bloody hand The production is British and Donald Sutherland, something (in one of the finest moments of all the original language and of each conspirator. His funeral perhaps this explains the high of a wonder himself, portrays a the film), the Vietnam war imagination of Shakespeare’s play oration is truly magnificent. caliber of the film. They always young director in search of a taking place on the corner of while adding the visual The intent of Shakespeare’s seem to have a way with their movie. Alex has a rough life. His Hollywood and Vine. possibilities of the motion picture. words is made clearer than ever own. wife tries to understand him but POLITELY EGOTISTICAL The bard's words take on new before. Rounding out the cast are -Hal Plain. doesn't know where she fits into Mazursky, in his politely egotistical way, has lifted whole 'David Steinberg9 scenes from another film about a director's problems in the world of filmmaking. But it is good Revealed as a not so normal person clean honest fun to see pieces of Federico Fellini's " 8 ’/a " redone “David Steinberg, Disguised as occasionally, his girls. conversation sketch in which a fan the cancellation of “The Smothers in glorious technicolor. The a Normal Person.” is not a normal Meandering melodically with (sounding strangely like JoAnne Brothers Comedy Hour” a few tv culmination of all of this album. Neither is Steinberg’s his Maxwell Smart-ish voice, Worley) calls up to say she’s seasons back, Steinberg is a copycatting is a remarkable comedy near normal. But that Steinberg describes some of his enjoying the album. “Where are talented young satirist who has encounter where Alex actually doesn’t make it bad. dates, “She was a Vogue magazine you?” asks Steinberg. “About the sense to steer clear of the meets the great director. Fellini type - cheekbones two feet above halfway thru the first side,” she As evidenced in this, his most topical material that, because it’s treats his young fan to a her head.” He dreams of going on replies. recent release from Elektra handled by too many comics, is reception as warm as an arctic the “Dating Game”. He owns a records, Steinberg’s brand of often handled poorly. But he does sleighride. red Volkswagen. He feels guilty Another really fine piece is humor is highly individualistic. Be share with the audience one astute Mazursky's talents go beyond about masturbating, “because I’m “The Coast.” Yes, Steinberg talks assured, he has punchlines — but observation. “President Nixon has those of actor and director. The so bad at it.” about that great American they’re of a wildly intelligent ‘a face that looks like a foot.” man must have a flair for the art dreamland — the coast. ‘The nature, and his routines aren’t as Steinberg is an extremely of persuasion, for he not only NEVER A NORMAL PERSON coast is to the William Morris strongly structured as those of talented guy who can superbly got Fellini to appear in a brief This kid, no matter what he Agency what Martin Buber is to most comics. relate to his urbane, intellectual segment of his film but also does, could never be mistaken for the rest of the world.” And then audience. No wonder he cancelled acquired the services of French He rambles self-degradingly a “normal person.” he meets it - the coast - in his appearance at MSC last actress Jeanne Moreau, who about his life, his girls, his Steinberg uses his crazy person. Uh, huh. weekend. joins Sutherland in a carriage education, his girls, the Bible and, inventiveness in ’ a telephone One of those responsible for - Don Pendley. ride down Hollywood boulevard. MONTCLABION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. 11. More MSC Construction is Waiting in the Wings

Good news for those anxiously created parking problems in the awaiting completion of MSC's lot between the recreation lodge building projects—constructions and Stone Hall. Quinn remarked now underway are soon to be that requests to eliminate use of completed. the lot had not been fulfilled as But more are on the way. well as expected, but he feels that ACCORDING TO facilities the situation there has improved, director Jerry Quinn, Bohn Hall is "thanks to students who now two-thirds completed, and will be park their cars elsewhere." finished by the end of May. The In the future, MSC will remain summer months will be used to the scene of construction projects, set up furniture and add finishing endowed by state grants, loans touches. Bohn Hall will open its and bond issues. The new doors to 600 residents at the start math-science building, scheduled of the fall semester. for completion in September The Student Union Building, 1972, will be constructed on the 25% completed, has been redesigned to "better serve the needs of the students," Quinn said. A t the request of a student committee, a bowling alley Quinn: LAST OF THE LOTS: The parking area adjacent to Partridge Hall and Sprague Library may be the last planned for the building will be Bohn's convenient lo t when more construction takes place on campus next fall. replaced by an ice-cream parlor Almost Done. and an arcade. The interest in the alleys was not as great as that for the arcades, Quinn explained. Completion of the union is plot between the recreation lodge scheduled for November 1971. (to be destroyed) and Stone Hall. Campus organizations will move It will house the physics, into the structure at the start of chemistry and mathematics the spring semester, 1972. departments. Construction crews have faced A permanent street from the several problems during the past Clove road bridge to the quarry months, Quinn said. Heat had to parking lot will be constructed be installed in Bohn Hall to during the summer, Quinn said. protect the workers there from Also, the area between Finley Hall freezing temperatures. and the fine arts building will be ALSO, THE installation of the converted to a pedestrial mall in utility lines near Stone Hall have the spring.

Innovative CLUB’s Cinema Plans Newsflicks With the aim of Increasing the committee, which includes student interest in campus film chairman Kathy Kopecky, presentations, the Cinema Michael Quick, and King. STUDENT UNION—GOING UP: The new student union building, housing organization offices and an committee of CLUB is planning Tentative feature plans include arcade, should be completed by 1972's spring semester. several innovations in its such films as “ M *A *S #H ," and programming, according to Jerry "Joe". Possibilities also include King, a member of the committee. film festivals featuring "the films One of Cinema's greatest of Paul Newman, Laurel and • Afro Lit Pamphlet Released problems, said King, has been Hardy, or whatever the students • Quarterly Sponsors Reading getting students to return to the want," King said. • Diet Program Begins He added that program News Desk advertising would also be improved. Plans call for posters to QUARTERLY, MSC's literary Grace Freeman/ dormitory on the "MESSAGES: AN King: be placed around the campus magazine will sponsor a poetry hill leading onto campus. There is ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY W ill weeks before the films are to reading multi media environment no charge. To sign up for the Bring OF AFRICAN LITERATURE appear. The advertising campaign on Wed. Feb. 24, place to be program, call 893-4175. The first More FOR SCHOOLSS," the first major will also venture off campus to announced. Anyone interested in meetings are scheduled for Mon. Films. guide of its kind for teachers and include the community's high presenting on original film , short Feb. 15 and Tues. Feb. 16. students has been published by school students and townspeople. play, poetry or prose reading The PSYCHOLOGY CLUB will the Montclair State College Press. campus at night for the shows. A KING EXPLAINED that should contact W. Y. Fellenberg sponsor two lectures this week for Over 160 volumes are included. plan to generate more interest is Cinema operates on a fixed or any member of the Quarterly interested students and faculty All are in English and are available the production of short newsreels budget each semester. "We try to staff at their office on the second members. On Wed. Feb. 17, Dr. in the United States. The Dased on the life and events charge as low an admission fee as floor of the student life building, Carmen Marina, director of the bibliography is the first to provide around the campus the concerts, possible," he said. He added that before Fri. Feb. 19. Spanish-speaking teacher corps at an annotated section on juveniles. speakers, and students. "The Cinema is a non-profit The Montclair State Nutrition MSC. the lecture is entitled "The It also contains an annotated student will then become the organization, and that any extra Education Service Center of the Psychological Implications and section on adult literature and a actors, and we hape they'll come funds go back into the program. home economics department is Problems of the bilingual program final selected bibliography of to see themselves, and During Tuesday night's power sponsoring a WEIGHT CONTROL for the Spanish speaking," and other Africana among the Sprague consequently, the rest of the blackout. Cinema (who had PROGRAM on Monday or will be held at 4 p.m. in Annex 4. Library holdings. The work was film s," said King. planned to show "Boys in the Tuesday afternoons at 3 p.m. The "The Methods and Opportunities assembled by DR. HE STATED that the films Band") quickly planned to show sessions will be held in the in Teaching Psychology in the GIDEON-CYRUS MUTISO under would probably be shown on three films to dorm students: "Pit nutrition center located in the Secondary Schools," will be the a working grant to MSC's Urban Saturday and Sunday nights, in and the Pendulum," "A Big Hand recreation room of the Home topic of a second lecture given by Institute from the New Jersey Edu accordance with plans made by for the Little Lady," and "I Spy." Management House, opposite BILL CANNICI 4 p.m. cation corps. 12. MON TC LA R ION/F ri., Feb. 12. 1971 Father and Son Sam and Sal — Towing Tycoons

By Diane Forden "Most of the kids are good about Staff Writer paying," said Sam. "We don't Sam and Sal Covello may not accept checks tho, because we've be familiar names on campus, but received some bad ones in the past THIS ISN'T A LOT: MSC student’s car sits in the "road dosed" area.- to the commuters who have had from other people. But if they their cars towed they're well really want their cars they find ’Mud Flats’ known as the father-and-son team the money," he laughed. from Sam's Garage at 118 "MY FATHER'S softer than I Watchung Ave., Montclair, who am tho," smiled the junior This Parking Lot Really Isn’t tow and store cars from MSC. Covello. "They can get away with When notified by the college, more when they deal with him. So The area between Mallory Hall remarked, 12 cars were towed the phone when she was blocked the Covellos tow away any cars far we have two wristwatches and the fine arts building because they were blocking in, "Why should they get away blocking other vehicles and store here. If we're not careful, we'll accommodates 300-400 cars on a roadways and other cars. "Several with blocking students from them at their garage until the have a jewelry store soon." normal MSC weekday. But it's not students had parttime jobs to get leaving?" driver is able to pay cash for the Sam admitted, "Well, this guy a parking lot. to, but were blocked in — so we "That day," said Daly, "we return of his car. said the watch was worth S150. It "That area is not an official had to tow." could have towed 200 cars Sal, the younger Covello, looked expensive, so I took it. I parking area, but a 'road closed But eight of the 12 cars that because they were blocking other explained that they had been figured it's probably worth more area,'" said Joseph Daly, MSC were towed did not have decals cars." asked by the college to tow cars than the $15 fine even if he security chief and parking and two belonged to visitors. The one solution to the parking last September and were required doesn't pay up." director. And students who park "That's one thing we have to problem is regularly ignored by to take out an insurance policy in Both the Covellos agree that in the unlined area are not fined worry about," stated Daly.."We MSC students, Daly said. "We order to work on state property. their job is difficult when people for blocking other cars in — don't want to create bad public have more than enough parking "You see, it's not all profit for rudely try not to pay but is most they're towed away. relations, and these two cars were spaces not being used in the us," he said. "We have a business rewarding when customers "I HAD to make the decision mistakenly towed." quarry area and the lower lots. If to run and we're under contract appreciate their services. "It's not to tow," said Daly. "I don't like BLOCKING-IN by visitors students would utilize these to tow cars, but some people sure our fault if a car is parked to, but I want to bring it to the seems a sore point to many spaces, a lot of time, money and do give us a hard tim e." illegally. We're just doing our job attention of the students that any owners of obstructed cars. "Just aggravation would be avoided." "HOW ABOUT that lady the and we're really helping the kids cars that are obstructing another because they're visitors," said an other night?" laughed his father, whose cars are blocked and can't vehicle will be towed away." angry sophomore girl who came Sam, "The one who didn't sound get out," Sal remarked. On one recent day, Daly to the MONTCLARION to use too much like a lady." "Oh yeah," smiled his son. TEL. PILGRIM 6-1899 "This lady refused to pay the fine, Mademoiselle Handbags re: legal abortions Abortion Counseling, and let off a string of curses, and then Early abortions are safer, simpler, easier to obtain, and Accessories jumped into her car and backed less costly than late abortions. If you think you are 47 CHURCH STREET pregnant, consult a physician without delay. Information And MONTCLAIR, N. J. into a truck. She didn't get too If you want help, call us now. We provide free infor­ far." mation land limited financial assistance) regarding The Covellos have towed 29 legal abortions performed without delay by Board cer- Wicker Furniture r Y * f v v tifie d gynecologists in hospitals and out-patient Referral Services cars from campus this year. They and Baskets of all kinds clinics. All inquiries are completely confidential. set the fines according to the size Low im port prices! WICKERLAND COUNCIL ON ABORTION RESEARCH & EDUCATION of the car and will return the car Abortions up to 24 weeks of 43-A Church St., Montlcair. only upon payment — in cash. (n ea r H a h n e ’s) 7 83 -6 3 4 5 NON-PROFIT CORPORATION SWISS, pregnancy are now legal in 342 Madison Avenue ■ New York, New York 10017 ■ 1 2 1 2 1 6 8 2 6856 New York State. There are no YOUR QUESTIONS ON residency restrictions at cooperating hospitals and ABORTION clinics. Only the consent of CAN O N LY BE F U L L Y ANSWERED BY the patient and the JULY’S WEST performing physician is PROFESSIONALS required. CALL (215) 878-5800 24 hours 7 days FOR TOTALLY CONFI­ If you think you are DENTIAL INFORMATION. Monday Nights Only pregnant, consult your We recom m end only: doctor. Don’t delay. Early the most reputable physicians; doctors offering fair and reason­ abortions are simpler and able prices; services which will be completely within the law; serv­ safer. ices perform ed at accredited hos­ pitals. Bobby B. & Fuzzy Knutt Legal Abortions W ithout Delay If you need information or professional assistance, ARS INT. including immediate Till? registration into available Buffet Served All Night Long hospitals and clinics, BOWLERO telephone: 50 1 Bowling Lanes The the COLLEGE bowl Must Be 21 or over Abortion Information Junction of Routes 3 and 46 Clifton, New Jersey Agency, Inc.

160 WEST 86th STREET classifieds NEW YORK, N Y. 10024 SHUTTER BUGS can snap to their 363 Lakeview Avenue hearts’ content by working on the MONTCLARION’s photography 212-873-6650 staff. Apply to managing editor, second floor, Life Hall. Clifton 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M. NEED MONEY? The MONTCLARION is hiring SEVEN DAYS A WEEK interested, outgoing students to obtain ads on percentage basis. Apply to managing editor, second Phone. 772-9850 floor, Life Hall. MON TCLARI ON/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. 13. So You Still Don’t Have Those Texts? MSC’s Bookstore Hassles M ay Be No O ne’s Fault’

‘The bookstore has no more Accusations of profiteering by copies of.. the bookstore are not accurate, Sound familiar? The complete said Mrs. Faber. "The little profit absence of certain texts—or that we do make goes toward enough copies of them -at the postage" for returning books to College High gym bookstore publishers and payment for generally results in four-letter book-packaging. "Most of the epithets concerning the bookstore's profits come from bookstore's efficiency. selling novelty items, rather than I BUT THE complete fault textbooks," she explained.

I J M » ù M p y f l m 1 doesn't lie with the bookstore, RETURNING BOOKS to says its director, Mrs. Bertha publishers also causes problems. Faber. "Our biggest problem is One policy of the bookstore, said not receiving book requests from Mrs. Faber, is to return unsold the instructors on time." She texts to the publishers early in the added that the bookstore received semester. Thus, texts assigned for some orders for this semester on use toward the end of the the first day of classes. (Mon., semester might be unavailable in Feb. 1). "These books couldn't the closing weeks. possibly arrive until a week or two According to associate English after the semester begins." professor Dr. Douglas M. One faculty member explained Schwegel, a lack of space is this problem as "no one's fault." probably responsible for the need Professors often cannot estimate to return books to publishers. He the size of their classes until suggests a larger bookstore in the several days befoYe the classes new student union building would 'NO ONE'S FAUL T': MSC students line up in the College High bookstore. meet." Also, sections may greatly allow MSC to keep in stock increase in size as the first week "books that all college bookstores RESIDENCE HALL APPLICATIONS FOR THE 1971-72 SCHOOL YEAR progresses, he explained. should have." Residence Hall Applications for the 1971-1972 school year will be available starting Feb. 18, 1971. Residence hall assignments are made for one year only with priority given to the date of application and to students whose homes are located the greatest distance from the campus. UNWANTED PREGNANCY? Applications will first be distributed at the Focus on Housing Meetings which will be held at 7 p.m., We can arrange for an immediate legal abortion in Freeman Hall, and 8 p.m., in Stone Hall, on Feb. 18, 1971. (up to 12 weeks) at an accredited hospital Staffed by Board Certified Gynecologists. Applications will also be available in the College Housing Offices: V IP REFERRAL SERVICE Women's building, Men's housing, the fish bowl Call (914) 337-0142 Freeman Hall ° r 217 College Hall ° r Life Hall Mornings and Evenings All applications must be completed and returned to the housing office, 217 College Hall, by March 25, 1971. Small Fee for Services

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A Waltei Keade Theatre MUSIC MAKER S RKO Stanley Warner $ CENTRAL TOWN If you're in your final year of col- uate career off the ground. COMMUNITY MALL CINEMA ROUTE 4 PEARL RIVER NEW CITY MORRISTOWN BRICKTOWN PARAMUS Find yourself in the United States Air Force CONTINUING FIRST RUN RECORD BREAKING ENGAGEMENTS AT NEW YORK'S LOEWS STATE 1 / LOEWS TOWER EAST B'WAY AT 4btH ST 14. MONTCLARION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. Indian String Snapped at 6 MSC 116.00 — Cortland St. 117.15 Working on 6-game winning and a third. Floor Exercise 1. Schilling, CSC, 7.65; 2. Kroon, . i streak, Montclair State College MSC started out slowly against MSC, 7.55; 3. Coulson, CSC, 6.45; 4. Cortland State in the floor Kuhn, MSC, 5.45; 5. McGrath, CSC, gymnasts dropped a closely 5.3; 6. Molter, MSC, 5.15. contested meet to Cortland State, exercises with Rich Kroon coming Totals: MSC-18.15, Cortland-19.40. S ide H orse 117.15-116.00. in second with a score of 7.55. 1. Sampson, MSC, 7.15; 2. McGrath, * Placing forth and sixth, CSC, 6.25; 3. Kuhn, MSC, 5.0; 5. T h e Indians suffered Weaver, MSC, 4.95; 5. Lozowsky, CSC, considerably as they performed respectively, were Ed Kuhn with a 4.15; 6. Fierro, CSC, 3.6. Totals: MSC-17.10, Cortland-14.00. without the services of Bill 5.45 and John Molter with a 5.15. Rings 1. (Tied) Sampson, MSC, and Balogh, their top all-around man. IN THE side horse, MSC Fiorentino, MSC, 7.55; 3. Lozowsky, He suffered a foot injury Friday regained lost ground with a win of CSC, 7.1; 4. Kuhn, MSC, 6.7; 5. Martin, CSC, 6.1; 6. McGrath, CSC, night, when he fell from the high 17.10 to Cortland's 14.00. Jack 5 .1 5 . Totals: MSC-21.80, Cortland-18.35. bar. Sampson led the way with a 7.15, L o n g H orse Kuhn placed third with a 5.0. 1. Kroon, MSC, 9.15; 2. Coulson, EARLIER IN the week, MSC CSC, 9.05; 3. McGrath, CSC, 8.55; 4. destroyed Glassboro State, Keith Weaver finished fourth with Sampson, MSC, 8.5; 5. Kuhn, MSC, 8.3; 6. Schilling, CSC, 7.8. 101.25-48.52. MSC was paced by a 4.95. Totals: MSC-25.95, Cortland-25.40. Parallel Bars the balanced scoring of all its In ring competition, Sampson 1. Kuhn, MSC, 8.50; 2. Lozowsky, and Tom Fiorentino tied for first CSC, 8.35; 3. Coulson, CSC, 7.85; 4. members, as they placed 1-2-3 in McGrath, CSC, 6.65; 5. Sampson, all events except the high bar. with a score of 7.55. Ed Kuhn MSC, 6.15; 6. Weaver, MSC, 4.90. r Totals: MSC-19.55, Cortland-22.85. Later in the week, MSC placed fourth with a 6.7. H ig h Bar 1. Kuhn, MSC, 8.2; 2. Drennen, LaCampana Photo by Steve Alexis. trounced Oneonta State, In a closely contested long CSC, 8.15; 3. Mallahan, CSC, 5.90; 4. 123.85-106.15. All-around Bill horse event, Kroon finished first Sampson, MSC, 3.55; 5. Coulson, CSC, STILL GOING STRONG: Keith Weaver goes thru his moves on the 3.10; 6. Weaver, MSC, 1.70. still rings in the meet against Cortland State. MSC lost a heartbreaker Balogh led the Indian attack with with a game high of 9.15. Totals: MSC-13.45, Cortland-17.15. to Cortland, 117.15-116. 3 first place finishes, 2 seconds, In the Relays

r i Monmouth Sinks MSC Montclair Frosh Give For 1st Season Loss Queens the Runaround The Women's Recreation :29. backstroke with a 1:17.2. QUEENS, N.Y. - Montclair State was the same. The freshmen won Association swim team began the LAST YEAR against ‘MSC, Miss Relling also holds the team College's freshman sprinters ran a gold medal in the mile with a second half of their scehdule with Monmouth set 5 pool records. In record for the 100-yard rings around other competition in 3:38.5. a loss against powerful Monmouth the meet, the Hawks set records in breaststroke with a 1:23.7. the Queens Relay Carnival last The freshmen teamed with the College, 63-32. The defeat, their the 50-yard breaststroke, Saturday. MSC's little Indians JV to win the 2-mile relay. With Monmouth 63, MSC 32 first of the year, came after backstroke and butterfly. They 200 medley — Stillwell, Relling, took 3 out of 4 events in the Winnicki running the first leg of Sprecher and Montgomery, 2:16.8. December victories against also set new records in the 100 free — Giordano, 1:18.8; Wilker, freshman—JV category. the relay, followed by Ed Lehman College, Newark State 100-yard freestyle and 200-yard 1: 10. Not to be undone, the varsity O'Connor, Frank Winkleman and 50 back — Sprecher, :35.7; Stillwell, and Queens College. free medley. :3 5 .9 . won the distance medley, but was John Fisher, the quartet picked 50 breast — Relling, :36.6; Wilker, :42. MSC mermaids scored only one Four team records were made 50 fly — Baxter, :32.6; Relling, :37.9. disqualified in the 2-mile relay. up a first with an 8:38.5. first and one second in the meet. 50 free — Montgomery, :29; Meyer, The varsity team of Steve by the Indians in the Monmouth :3 2 .4 . MIKE SINNOTT, Bill Terrell, Nancy Relling copped first place meet. Besides Miss Relling and 100 back — Sprecher, 1:17.2; Stillwell, Tom Scanlon and Jim Hemmel Schappert, Greg Weiss, Vic 1 :1 8 .2 . in the 50-yard breaststroke with a Miss Montgomery, who set 100 breast — Wilker, 1:31.5; Relling, combined to win the sprint Mizzone and Kevin McGrath won :36.6. The WRA's freestyler. Sue 1 :2 3 .7 . records with their first and 100 IM — Baxter, 1:18.4; Sprecher, medley with a 3:49.6. Pete the distance medley for MSC with Montgomery, managed a second second, Debbie Sprecher holds the 1 :2 5 .6 . Winnicki took Terrell's place in a time of 10:32.5. 200 free relay — Meyer, Montgomery, in the 50-yard free with a time of top spot in the 100-yard Baxter and W ilker, 2:04.8. the mile relay, but the outcome WRA Routs Hunter Five carol sakowitz The Women's Recreation Association basketball team overwhelmed Hunter College's quintet, 75-23, for their second win of the season. IN A GAME that was no contest for MSC, three players scored in double figures. Mary Hayek was high scorer for the During the Blackout . . . Indians with 7 buckets and two free throws for a total of 16 points. One of the surprising events that took place during minutes, just long enough to repair the damage. (Believe that Denise Wood and Belinda I■ Montclair State College's blackout Monday night was the lack and I'll sell you some programs from the Knute Rockne Bowl Venancio both had 6 baskets and of any incident on the part of basketball fans here to see the cheap.) a foul shot, tallying 13 points MSC-FDU game. Somehow two minutes turned out to be the rest of the each. \ Some 2000 had gathered in Panzer gym halfway thru the night and Dioguardi and other members of the athletic M SC (7 5) GF T freshman game and more were due to arrive. MSC's little department spread the word that the game was cancelled. F icke 2 2 4 Indians were getting the pants knocked o ff of them, perhaps a W ood 6 1 13 Surprise, surprise, surprise. V e n a n cio 6 1 13 sign of things to come, when the lights went out. Schoen 2 1 5 H ayek 7 2 16 They didn't go off at once, just the ones above the baskets, OWN KIND OF WAR Bistromowitz 2 1 5 causing a delay in the game. After a few minutes, the game Clause 2 0 4 rM Prior to the news, the fans waged their own kind of war H o ffm a n 1 0 2 resumed as Athletic Director Bill Dioguardi and Public Service Johns 2 1 5 from across the stands, yelling cheers mixed with an obscenity S w eeney 1 0 2 workers searched for the cause of the trouble. or two. Biscaha 2 2 6 T o ta ls 33 9 75 ONE GENERATOR WORKED At first the stands showed signs of minor confusion, Hunter (23) Three generators provide MSC's electricity, but only one G F T coupled with a little disgust from both sides, but on the whole, M cS o rle y 2 3 7 was in operation at the time of the final blackout. Various no one panicked. Then some enterprising students shined F itz g e ra ld 0 0 0 Russo 1 0 2 stories circulated concerning the shutdown of the third flashlights from their seats, making the gym look like an L e ith 2 0 4 generator and one person working in the electrical office M ara Ido 0 0 0 old-time Hollywood premiere. G la cy 0 1 1 stated that the final shutdown was done on the assumption Meanwhile, on the gym floor, would-be spectators moved St ra n to n 0 0 0 H ill 1 0 2 that the game had been cancelled and the gym in process of along to the stands, greeting friends with: “ Rich, just walk S im m o n s 0 0 0 H u rle y 1 0 2 evacuation. right on by and pretend that you don't see me," or "Tony, say R in zler 0 0 0 But for the fans who packed the stands and the lobby of hi to Pat. You remember her, you met her a couple of weeks K e m e th e r 1 3 5 T o ta ls 8 7 23 Panzer gym, the lights were supposed to be out for only two ago." "Sure, I never forget a face." Score by quarters: MSC 21 16 20 18 75 H u n te r 9 7 3 4 2 3 MONTCLARION/Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. 15. Power Failure halts MSC’s Knight Game

By Jim Dente Furthermore, chances of a the trouble. No dice. They did the Sports Writer rescheduled contest looked even best they could to see to it that Montclair State College's dimmer. darkness befell the 2000 or more basketball team knew it was going So MSC did everything in its fans. to be in for a tough time hosting power (no pun intended) to get When all the lights were shut the Knights of Fairleigh Dickinson the lights operating. off for a two-minute period, they University last Monday, but let's The partial blackout occurred were never to go back on. A not term what took place a with approximately three minutes transformer blew when they "home court advantage." remaining in the first half of the attempted to get the lights back The MSC campus fell victim to freshman game, and the respective on and the fans sat in pitch black a power failure which supposedly coaches agreed to continue the surroundings for some 15 minutes affected parts of Passaic and fiasco even tho the scoreboard before members of the police and Bergen counties. But MSC was not functioning. fire department entered the scene appeared to be the only place THE RESULT was an with their emergency lighting where everything was dark with embarrassing 25-point MSC defeat. equipment. the possible exception of the gym. Meanwhile, Montclair officials THE PREDICAMENT resulted THE LIGHTS over each basket looked into what was hoped to be in the cancellation of evening were out, but lighting over the local trouble stemming from the classes while the same held true center of the court was in working gym alone. Athletic Director Bill for undergraduate classes the condition. It would have been Dioguardi was able to contact two following day. As of press time, impossible for a varsity game to Public Service employes who no date had been announced take place under these conditions. thought that they had detected concerning the rescheduling of the tilt, if there is to be one. Other MSC cage action during the course of the week was a bit more peaceful. The Indians took a pair of encounters to lift their mark to 12-2. The first match was an exciting 83-79 win over Monmouth. Balance was the key to this MSC triumph as the entire starting five was in double figures. lllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll PHIL BACCARELLA led the NEW JERSEY STATE COLLEGE CONFERENCE way with 8 field goals and 3 foul BASKETBALL STANDINGS 2-7-71 shots for 19 points. Rounding out OVERALL the high scorers were Captain W L PF PA W L PF PA Harry James with 18; Joe Lyons MONTCLAIR STATE 6 0 525 390 10 2 999 795 at 15; Bruce Davis, 14; and Tod GLASSBORO STATE 4 1 359 307 12 3 1228 1067 McDougald, 13. TRENTON STATE 4 2 439 371 9 6 1045 926 The contest was decided in the JERSEY CITY STATE 2 4 353 465 7 6 886 944 final minute of play. With 56 PATERSON STATE 1 4 398 407 7 9 1267 1249 Staff Photo by Morey Antebi. NEWARK STATE 0 6 358 492 3 11 841 1080 seconds showing on the clock and GOING UP: Tod McDougald (15) battles a Yeshiva opponent for the llltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll MSC up by a point, James was rebound. Captain Harry James (14) follows the action. McDougald deliberately fouled. He converted was the Indians' high scorer, with 15, in their 12th win in 14 his free throw to make it 79-77. outings. A missed free < throw by Monmouth's Pete Cusick gave the Indians possession and McDougald Moss Returns cashed in with a jump shot to account for the 4 point margin. MSC THEN came back on Saturday in front of its home To MSC Five crowd to destroy Yeshiva, 85-42, By Brendan Su hr so that the team would not be in what is commonly referred to Sports Writer jeopardized. as a "laugher." THE USUAL penalty for Coach Ollie Gelston was able to The patented cry of "Moss is violating a rule is complete rest his regulars before the half boss," will again ring thru Panzer ineligibility for the entire season, came to a close and everyone saw gym, as Willie Moss returns to but because of the nature of the action. The Indian defense did not action for the high-flying game and the innocence in which allow a field goal for a 13-minute Montclair State College basketball the violation was committed, a span in the first half, during which team. He was ineligible for the fall lesser penalty was handed down. time the offense poured in 14 semester. Harry James, captain of the Big straight to open the count to Moss, a 6 '4", 210-lb. senior Red Machine, said,"Willie will give 28-6. from Newark Central high school, us a great deal of help up front, McDougald took scoring honors was a valuable member of the last especially with his rebounding and with 15 points, while Willie Moss two NCAA tournament teams. defense. I think that Willie's came off the bench to sink 13. MSC (8 5 ) WILLIE WAS declared greatest asset for us down the GFT Baccarella 4 2 IO ineligible for one semester by the stretch this season will be his Davis 4 0 8 NCAA rules committee for experience." D u x 0 1 1 Higgins 1 1 3 violating its bylaws. The violation Willie was a valuable sixth man James 4 0 8 M cD ou g a ld 5 5 15 occurred when he played in a on the 24-3, NCAA tournament P rather 2 0 4 Moss 5 3 13 benefit game for the widow of team of two years ago. Last year, S te w a rt 2 1 5 Drayton Bembry, a former high he was a starter on the 23-3, W aller 2 2 6 W ebber 0 2 2 school teammate. Eastern Regional finalists team. L y o n s 4 2 10 T o ta ls 33 19 85 Moss violated the NCAA's He averaged 8.2 points per game Yeshiva (42) eligibility rule on all four counts; G F T and grabbed 250 rebounds for the P oloner 6 17 29 the game was posted in advance, it season. Perl 3 0 6 Faber 1 0 2 was officiated, the final score was MOSS STATED "I will be DEFENSE AS WELL AS OFFENSE: MSC scoring ace Phil W ilzig 2 0 4 posted and recorded and the B e rtra m 0 1 1 happy to contribute in any way to Baccarella (23) shows he can play both ends o f the court in the game Reiss 0 0 0 participating team was uniformed. help this team, because we all R ich 0 0 0 against Yeshiva. The Indians won, 85-42, in a game that could only Totals 1218 42 Ollie Gelston, upon hearing of have one common goal-the NCAA Yeshiva 18 24 42 be termed a "laughter." MSC 47 38 85 the occurence, notified the NCAA tournament." MSC 12-2; Yeshiva 1-11 Montclarion Fri., Feb. 12, 1971. Vol. 45, No. 15 Montclair, N.J. 07043.

SHE STARTED IT ALL: Madam Crane, fortune teller extraordinaire, was the first o f many Winter Weekend activities. X.",

SHE'S ‘ON THE WAY': Loretta Long, performer on "Sesame Street,"signs as autograph. She lectured here Wednesday night.

7 SEE A FORTUNE TELLER IN YOUR FUTURE': Madam Crane checks out the forecast o f an interested MSC student in the student life building cafeteria.