ostcage Paid VOLUME 14 NUMBER 33 STONY BROOK, N.Y. TUESDAY, MARCH 2., 1971 _ton-v At PB.lL h --Ne. York

Meal Plan To Be Optional

By CHRIS CARTY The housing office announced yesterday the approval of an amendment to the food service contract by the State which will allow students to opt off the meal plan and for Prophet Food Company to operate several cash cafeterias and one or more board cafeterias.

Approval was announced late yesterday afternoon in a memorandum circulated to all cafeterias declaring that "the transition will take place on March 7."

The memo stated that "after extensive considerations for the placement of the board deliberation and review by campus officials, local cafeterias. He expressed some doubt, however, counsel and the comptroller's office, the present that there would be enough students left on the food service contract will be al*ered," but was plan to keep even two cafeterias open. He declined careful to note that those students presently on to speculate which would be the single board the meal plan are "responsible for payment." cafeteria should the number be reduced to one. According to Zullo, the forthcoming cash The alteration in the food contract has been cafeterias will result in at least 200 workers being under consideration by State officials of the laid off. Zullo claims that his payroll fists SUNY Central Administration and the Audit and approximately 4 20 workers. The layoffs will Control Agency since the semester break. Prior to probably become effective next week during the the proposal the housing office conducted a changeover period. survey which indicated that a substantial number of students then on the meal plan would prefer to The Drug and Hospital Workers Union, Local has boarding students passing through, while many resident students drop their contract. There are currently 1199 has previously issued statements indicating (bottom) will attempt to trv their hand at cooking on limited approximately 1800 students on the board plan. that they will stage a strike should any of their members be laid off. A reliable source has said that in ongoing discussions between Union A student who wishes to be removed from the representatives and Prophet Food representatives enrollment will be required to fill out a form the Union has agreed to strike only in the event of certifying that he desires to terminate his contract a lay off of more that 100 members. and that he understands his responsibility for board payments through March 6 and to then Administration officials have said that should a submit it to the Bursar's office on the specified strike occur the University would procure an date. injunction through Prophet Food to insure that students remaining on the meal plan are served. The amendment calls for Prophet Foods to 'operate two dining halls for contract bosilersantr A~wofcl-bee^ **^6, «-e e Ago*t~^<~* to operate three dining halls on a cash basis." comment Exactly which dining halls will be cash and which In a related matter, several dormitory fires and board will be determined by the number of the resulting suspension of a number of students students who choose next week to remain on the for violating University Housing regulation in plan. recent weeks has generated concern among administrators and students about the results of A subscription of more than 1000 students to approval of such a plan and the probable increase the contract will, according to the amendment in the number of students cooking in the insure two board cafeterias. Should the enrollment dormitories. Director of Housing Robert Chason fall below that figure, Prophet Foods is authorized said yesterday that the University would have to to cut back to a single board cafeteria. The exact increase the penalties "with some kind of equity" location of the board and cash cafeterias will be for cooking in rooms and suites. determined during the week of March 5 by the distribution of those students remaining on the He also noted that it is about time that the food plan. University and the State realized that there must be some increase in cooking facilities in the Food Service Director Monty Zullo said dormitories to compensate for the increased yesterday that if two cafeterias open as board number of students using the appliances. However, operations they will probably be in Kelly and G he also cited the austerity program as a major quads. He cited the large blocs of students on the hindrance to the installation of any additional meal plan in both quads as the prime facilities.

:

Doesschate Elected Polity President

Phil Doesschate has beaten John Faxon ballot is legal, and Faxon could request a in a run-off election for Polity President by recount by the end of this week. If tile a majority of only 139 votes, an election election board disregards the "No" votes, board spokesman announced last night. then Doesschate has a clear victory. But if The former junior representative was it decides to count them, another run-off forced into the run-off with the relatively might be held to determine the clear victor. unknown Faxon after failing to win a clear The questionnaire that students were victory in the initial Polity election, held asked to fill out at the polls are still being last Thursday with six candidates vying for tabulated-and results will not be known at the post. least until late today. The questions of how Meanwhile in another run-off contest, Polity money is to be spent in the coming Steve Marcus has bettered Robert Taylor year was only a straw poll by the Budget for a position on thp Stony Brook Union Committee, not a binding referendum. Governing Board. Marcus tallied 1038 votes The results of Thursday's Polity to Taylor's 433, with 499 "No" votes Judiciary election have not yet been registered. The "No's' represented about validated. 25 percent of the votes cast in that contest. The turnout in this run-off election was Doesschate's victory over Faxon was by approximately the same as in Thursday's 1057 votes to 918, but there were 127 ballotting, with a little more than 2100 "No" votes. Some students have votes cast. photos by Robert F. Cohen questioned whether a "No" vote on a

- Page 2 STATESMAN March 2. 1971 Page 2 Funds for Migrant Center Deposited inBank: Student By ROBERT REISMAN missing two cars as well as $15.000. A Stony Brook student said to have been in Miss Friedman was described by Chesson as a charge of financial records of the former girl friend of Mitchell who disappeared last Farm Workers Service Center in Riverhead said last October after failing to appear for sentencing on a week that she had deposited two allegedly missing charge of possessing firearms and forfeited $5000 checks from Polity in a bank account of the bail. Miss Friedman told Newsday that she had not service center, but she couldn't remember the seen Mitchell " for many months."She later told a name of the bank. Rinfamsn Mrta-r fie-s+ -_ ;BA_ * . ol »

By BILL STOLLER entered at first and asked, Katz was alone in his room a, A student was hospitalized "Where's the party man. . . is the time of the incident to early Sunday morning after he this Tabler IV? Police said that which there were not witnesses. was reportedly beaten by six four men then entered the room Police said a group of six men men who entered his room. and began beating Katz, had been seen wandering down apparently for no reason. the halls of the dormitory shortly before the attack. University Police said that Michael D. Katz, 20, of Dreiser Both police and Stony Brook Police have not yet College (Tabler III) was Volunteer Ambulance Corps determined if any property was assaulted by six unidentified volunteers were summoned and stolen from Katz's room. males using their fists and Katz was removed to Mather Detectives from the Suffolk possibly a wine bottle after he Memorial Hospital in Port County Police Sixth Squad are opened his door in response to a Jefferson where he was admitted also investigatinig. FUNDS MISSING: The Long Island Farm Workers Service Center knock at about 1 a.m. Katz told with lacerations and a possible also investigating. * (top) is missing $1000 donated by the student body, while a check police that two of the men who skull fracture. He was released endorsed by Arthur Mitchell (bottom) was cashed. The fund shortage was disclosed last week. he said were in their early 20's Monday. photos by Robert F. Cohen USE . STATESMAN *ustodianFound DeadI CLASSIFIEDS A woman janitor was found dead late last Thursday night in the : hallway of Surge building C, where she worked. M r s . Mildred McErlean, 58, wife of University police Captain Philip McErlean was found lying in the hall at about 11:30 nm Delightfully different Italian Cuisine When University police arrived they were unable to revive her and they summoned the Suffolk County Police and the County Medical Fresh Sea Food Prime Steaks RONDA Examiner's office. DINNER _- LATE SUPPER She was pronounced dead at 12:41 a.m. of Bay Shore "Pizr-a.c and Pitchers of Beer" In addition to her husband, Mrs. McErlean, who lived in Centereach, is survived by a daughter and two sons, one of whom Route 25A East serves on the Suffolk Police force and has previously worked for Setauket 941- 4840 i Action.Sport Cycle-Inc.- University Police. Sales, Parts, Service amN w s " l ------on All 1971 models on display

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I TO We are giving a 40% I discount concession to .I t anyone that takes the I1 service as of 2/28 to 3/15 1i Just Rite Liquor Inc. O F and -if not satisfied, I money back within three i Pathmark days. I Shopping Center I Store hours: For info call 7008 or I M-Th 9 am-8 pm, Fr. & Sat. 9 am - 10 pm 7( 7009 (FSA office) I Nr. L-8916 Smithtown, Setaucet, Y. I L.U.,N.Y. Phone 979-0066 'behind the Little Mandarins) 0 ------I------I _ _ _- - - - _-- March 2, 1971 STATESMAN Page 3 STATESMAN $4¢000D Thefts and Vandalism in Unlion By CHARLIE VERMILYEA additional pages, Ince said. There is usually only Stony Brook Union officials have reported that one page to patrol the building at the present time. there has been more than $4000 in vandalism and Union officials hope to have three pages at work thefts in the Union building since September. during peak hours in the building during weekends. I.D. checks have also been instituted at Michael Ince, Union operations manager, said Union entrances. last week that vandalism had been extremely high for the last three weekends. Aside from the usual Plans are also being formulated for a complete number of door knobs, locks, exit signs, fire changeover of the building's lock system, which extinguishers missing or broken, the Union officials say has many faults and possibly excess bathrooms have been vandalized. Ince said that keys. Officials are also considering the installation obscenities have been scribbled on bathroom of scissor gates at strategic areas such as the mirrors with a glass cutter and various items of entrance to the art gallery, between the lounge and toilet equipment have been damaged. He noted the cafeterias and across the counter of the Main that during the last three weekends there have Desk. been unusually Increased numbers of non-University personnel making use of the Due to a lack of funds, these plans and repairs Union's facilities. on doors, bathrooms, walls and furniture will not take place in the immediate future due to the broken doors to the building are While austerity. A budget, however, has been prepared obvious to anyone entering the building by the and will shortly be submitted forAlbany'sapproval. not so obvious to boarded up entrances, perhaps Stony Brook Union Director Robert C. Moeller the casual passers-by are the missing lamps, sand reported earlier this month as the building urns, and missing furniture which Ince says have celebrated its first anniversary that the year 1970 been stolen. left the Union with a substantial budget deficit, The operations manager also said that several stemming largely from the Union Food Service months ago some students intimidated a Union coupled with the State's austerity program. The page and walked off with two coffee tables. Ince most serious effect of the funds cut is its also reported that two electric typewriters have limitation on staff size, Moeller said. been stolen from Union offices; another was stolen but reappeared at the Union's front door one John Pilkington, weekend manager of the Union morning. Last Wednesday night someone took is another Union official distraught over rising advantage of a broken window in the southwest vandalism and theft. "To walk into a room and see door of the Union which was boarded up. The something ripped off or damaged causes a feeling unknown intruder knocked in the boards and of frustration and anger to run through me," he crow-barred their way into the Union's game room said. Pilkington sees his job as trying to help save and made off with about $200 from the six pinball the building for the students, but then seeing machines located there. students' neglecting and in some cases destroying fHOKEN: Glass doon, which wee the main entrane to the Unpn the building has disgusted him. "It's the students' building, are now boarded up. There has been considerable damage To check the increasing rate of vandalism and building and it's up to them," he said. to many of the areas of the building, and I.D. checks have been theft, the Union administration is planning to hire instituted to alleviate the problem of building security. - - photo bylRobert Weisenfeld

Ringcycle Report A Fee for Community Actio 1 By NANCY CALLANAN Community Action projects currently and AUDREY KANTROWITZ funded are: The Student Council, on Friday, *Suffolk Citizen-a newspaper whose Called Outrageous directed the Polity Treasurer to include a aim is to bridge the zap between the action fee in the proposed By ALAN J. WAX $4 community students of the I niversity and the mandatory core student activities fee. people living in the outside community. After meeting Saturday with members of the Ringcycle Meanwhile, Student Council members say This paper, free from any political Investigation Commission, Evan Strager, the financial manager of the they will establish a community action affiliations, is distributed throughout summer concert series called the commission's report outrageous and board to administer all groups engaged in Suffolk County in an effort to make said that the investigators were irresponsible for conducting an community action programs. residents aware of the facts the mass investigation without questioning those people intimately involved Community action programs, those media and press delete. Last year those in the project. engaged in social, educational, cultural running it requested $4000 for Strager, who graduated last year is former Polity vice president. and recreational activities outside the operation. He said, he returned to Stony Brook Saturday to "make my University, include the Suffolk Citizen, a *Wider Horizons-a program which opinions about Ringeycle clear. " He said that the commission's newspaper, Wider Horizons, Central Islip seeks to provide remedial academic failure to question persons on the production staff of the summer and King; Park Volunteers, Long Island service for children coming from poverty concert series was "more irresponsible than anybody in Ringcycle." Farm Workers Service Center and the areas throughout Suffolk County. Polity Robert F. Cohen, Editor-in-Chief of Statesman and a member of South Bronx teaching project. has helped to sponsor this program for the Ringeycle Commission said he would continue the investigation Arthur (Pi) Charo, the sophomore class the past three years, allocating $3300 for even if his colleagues did not. the 1970-71 year, half of which has gone The Commission which investigated the summer concert series representative, said that the Council had for food, and the other for supplies and questioned the actions and financial management of the project in a received a mandate from the student recreation. According to Phelix Baxter, report released last Sunday. Other members of the commission were body through a referendum held last coordinator of the program, funding is Cliff Thier, Peter Coles and Michael Lieberman. November. The student body passed by a not the problem, rather recruiting enough Coles, who is also a member of the Polity judiciary said he would landslide a referendum that sought to set students to work with the children is. like to continue -the investigation but he has other commitments. aside $4 of the student activities fee to be There are only 17 students in the "We're (commission members) not salaried and we don't have all the used for community action programs. program working with the 45 children time in the world." Because we're also students, he said, "there were Charo's motion was passed by a 5-1 every Saturday, creating a ratio of about a number of problems in getting touch with them (members of the vote with Polity Treasurer S. Clive Richard the sole dissenting vote. Richard 1 to 3 as opposed to the desired ratio of 1 production staff); it was a matter of convenience mainly with people said, "I am certain that the Budget to 1. off-campus." Coles suggested that the district attorney's office Committee and the treasurer will take the *Central Islip and Kings Park would be in a better position to do this type of investigation (that mandates of the Council and the Senate volunteers-who travel to hospitals every Strager suggested). The report has been turned over to the Suffolk into consideration." Monday through Thursday night. District Attorney and is currently being studied. County The Polity Budget Committee is Hundreds of students participate in this Coles also suggested that by allowing production staff members to currently working on the 1971-72 program, and, according to Stephanie about entries in the books of the concert series make comments budget. Richard said, "I will go post haste Jansen, vice-president of the group, "The form alibies. "Even if someone like Evan would allow them to in the direction of a $30 fee. If you don't program is working out beautifully, but in the world (about the walked in and gave us all the explanations like it, change it. To me it doesn't matter funding is the biggest problem." She what to do with them because the books) we wouldn't know what the Council does after I propose the explained that volunteers have had to put for bookkeepers or lawyers. (Student) Senate gave us no money budget." Since the majority of the out their own money for supplies. Last weren't the greatest records. I Strager said, "We had records, they constituency wants the $4 fee, he said, year they requested $700, but are was asked to explain them I could have kept better records, but if I the Student Council can put it on as a requesting $800 from Polity for next I think I know more about would have been very happy to. separate mandatory fee. Acting Polity year. people on the commission multiplied Ringeycle than any of the four President Glenn Bock said, "It wouldn't *The Long Island Migrant Farm by an infinite factor." be a good idea to go out on a variety of Workers Service Center-which provides a by P. Ballantine and The Ringcycle Concert series, co-sponsored tangential mandatory fees." breakfast program for migrant workers, was instigated to replenish the Sons, a New Jersey brewing company, Charo said that the $4 community and has students traveling out to the close to bankruptcy as a result of last Polity reserve fund which was action fee would go to a special fund, center each day to help out. Three concert which was attended by an May's free Jefferson Airplane amounting to approximately $25,000. thousand dollars was donated to this estimated 16,000 persons. This amount is more than double what project, but was reported last week by John Halperin, Director of the Summer In a related matter, the community action projects received Center officials to have been part of the in a letter to the editor (see page 7) that the Session, said this year. In addition, 25 percent of the allegedly missing $15,000. report was "simply untrue" in stating that his office commission's community action fund would be set *The South Bronx Teachers for collecting and dispensing" the summer student was "responsible aside for the summer months when there Program-which was established last year In his letter he said that Cliff Thier, a member of the service fee. are no incoming funds. and involves teachers residing in the decided to ignore the facts about administration of the commission Each community related group must communities where they student teach. activities fee. Thier who was in , could not summer submit a budget request to the Board, Five hundred dollars was requested last be reached for comment. who would then submit for Student year to support the project. Summer Session was the only University office The Office of the Senate approval. cited in the Commission's 26-page report. The report said this office was "financially irresponsible." - - -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Page4 STATESMAN March 2, 1971 Prose 4 Sen - C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ountyOfer Summnor Suffolk: No Student Voters Goiter , ersP* fkICrVALRUP- a puftrition Th. accrdMe with your »peIVat rniment rU9^WnS Students p on mobile units bedan Febrlary 8, addres. A change of addscan going be made after registering to vo their to a dfferent Nassau a student Thie BEcnomc Rsah Control Council, th County high school every-day. graduates or Ites so be h pus adees will run into Bureau has ance d the Depatmint of Social 8e , trouble, according to Suffolk They will also be at up in the not permitted to use a campus Menta Heath Board, Pirobation County Election Board officials. student center of Nasau beginning of its fourth Community College, Post, program of u r internship Deprtment and teO Han A student living in a Suffolk Adelphi, and Hofstra Although at present, people positions with Suffolk County County doratory may not uw Unienities. Already from this under 21 yeaw of age may not gove ent age_ es, p-rincipaly Interns in the County his colle e addes for voting program, a total of vote in local elections, then is in social welfare activitis. Executive's OffIce, for example, registration, even though he or approwimately 4100 people have an amendment to the Now York Approximately 20 12-week have been involved in she may live there for almost reitrd. State Constitution providing for internships, paying $100 a week, for the county's neotiation two-third of the year, and this, which has already been will be available on a with the men's Bonevolent election board official said. Election Board officials pased by the New York State competitive bask to Stony A and the Civil Instead, he nust register at his stipulate the following egislature and Senate. Passe .Eiployee's Association, and regulations concerning voting; Brook students. The internship home and vote by absentee by the electorate in November's have attended negotiating ballot, which involves sending an where you register is where you general election makes the period for this year begins June affidavit to his election board vote, and you register in amendment final. 7 and ends August 27. exp why he cannot vote Applications will be accepted Other interns have where he is regsred. from students during March. investigated health needs in The pupe of the summer Suffolk County, evaluated youth A spouse, parent or child of a Organic Farm Started internship progr i to give sices, and worked on social "%A ftU%__- * . ;0_. 16a"-£. *„* *- highly motivated students an e v r o n m e n t type of action for the ecology seie cm"; in many cam, mae fie thisiang ien which T h E n i opportunity to see government it-wh obilization Fund, a New York movement. conclusions of research and mast ie theaier in action, particularly in areas of must bed no hear than tinty based environmental Threshold Farm which is propoals advanced by interns days andno latecio*

------.------. letter. Any student who does not improve at least 3 times Dier of the Sumr Pntw is refunded the entire tuition. More than 450,000 have SOIA~MPTON COLLEGE taken the course, including 25 United States Congressmen. i Southampton, I.Y. 119 (516) 2834000l John F. Kennedy told his White House Staff to take it So i Pease send me Summer Prgram bulletin. did President Nixon. I I am especially ined in: -»179-W I Now see how you compare with the rest of the world: id... rii...T I SodS SciW s Natural Scienc, Tnefher I~~~~~ ess Adminisitr f I 20 seconds - average American 13 seconds- average collegian i Professinal ENWhon, S a I Sciende, liberal Ats I 5 seconds - Dynamic Reader ACAPULCO I gD fi«AMATEAN INEai T COO= IWNWlAN ECKOLOY -aItg.Scupte, CeaisGahis i For details on how you can become a Dynamic Reader $208*s 'C FM STUDENTS come to a Free Evelyn Wood Mini-Lesson this week. l.. -.. * Iff O SSVMER WMORTSCAMP in Basketlall, Tennis, Wrestling, and | I MSES in Sailing&Swkio, Water Skiing Take an Evelyn Wood Mini-Lesson on Te Lyceum av~ow wufs _^UWh__ I Name I Reformed Ckrch fto l«o. -A J-I 1SO IAddress I O0e JAnd, Stony BArdo. Wednesday, March 3, 8 p.m. no Got "G City __State Zip-- I comu " ma Thursday, March 4, 8 p.m. L- -M.» -«^m ^ _ - ,«t. «-M ace_»Mwt J aft Nom * v 91" - March 2. 1971 STATESMAN Paoe5 - -IF- -

Stat II IIesmnl Faoufit Scoo fo1it4r rit lrS qw BY JOAN ARENA VWrMen will hfull prepGe you to write an student, you prbal alrea7 Realize the Bver AMnc the day S Ma'sanfnt a level ftawly ea aidn with its own imprtance of a really "6g4oo he~Ad"j&And issue for the '70-"l shobla1y~ar rolle off fuly trind hih Ine--IgentI staff. in jouralismthat's every bit as the Vpeeie, the pbooes dow at the ipratas it is at those digstn Statsmaoficehaven't As one of our students, you-U leam to sampe Iggr presyou've been going to. Well. weWr We've been deluipd use big wotd like "ea esurte. " which by anlte ad amd preared to teaelh you the art of the lette that our readen base beems dn you ac---lNY Saw in the last rarph You'll INeaR to write phrase like abes headline, so that you'lI be able to make a .in They oame from an walkao feaurecovrin th annual meeting of of the times, ^ge11" a titotsaying99 life. . Sevr claNS of Society. But. h u"folowdhard on the heels of.' and the Douglass College Iedamesday quemton is always the s~ae: "How cam I. other megwl tehia (o rfesoa AtronMorality League Fund Raisers sound like a Sexual Freedom Lau a humbie reader ot Staesan loamnt ume only), catchy space- AlU cliches. deveSW whatever smalltIet I have, and Want to make your first paraIap a WV!y (Thats k wnin the trade as a '6hot bead.)" become a staff writer for ourbeod trleWell, we'll show you bow to 'rto simlatig thoughtprvkg Sound exciinW San it does! Don't lead5, which wil M a dateyour readeM Wellk it'~s ken months of wr but to vrat tinl oporuit&e_ e you by. If finish your article, even whe you halve the Saeancrew has finally come you act today, tbere's a ape"ia added up tittle or In--hing to W* . with a solution to this BONUS in stom for you. The fint 94 dil ma How "What about pntao?" you =mY many imes hae you looked IIrouh that people to get their bests into our ask. Puntat0 cam add a world of Statesman office collection or your first cryo ciM be VWil ee (at excitet to your artdek,beis aboueyno obiainon our saved by your part). Mom back hoein the putting thosee rfsinlfnh Sta -- ,sman'wn"adb on Writing touch a on yourW Brn~xI and thought to younelf: "Say. necs Youll WeM Porno." written by "J", SB's Sensuous all about the period! this in pretty good stuff... . good the colon! The Student, who, is said to actually TYPE enough for Sttsaeven!" Welt, dear sem-coon!Th comma! And moreMII! TOPLESS!! readers. youWr poalright! Butk be Plunctuation isn't the only tool of the writer's trade. You'll want to be fully 'honest with yourseves nowt. Sure youWr prprdto copt Ih the best. That St -sanTalent Tedt good. But, are you mealty Statsman easfunl taning on the actual, highly 1. The Statesman editors have just material? Has your writg style copebsnesmcie in actual ume d~ecided to include a weekly feature on developed that truly prfsinlquality innwspaper offices across this nation of Stony Brook fashions. They assign you to that sets Statesman apart from the 9915oise oulu! You'll receive insde info and do a story on "Hot Pants," the 9 new look Bugle and CiknBedrGzte tra1ining from the prson the pecland in short-shorts. However, you don't'really Take a moment to consider thathosty how to hold it! The type'rter ribbon know what "Hot Pants" are, and are too Thought about it? -Well, now you're and how to change it! But, that-s not the e mb a -a-e- to admit it, so you: 3.The papeOROpn * pain only tranin that you'll ready to bear about all the details of our receive. During gospcolumn. It seems that the last your internship62 at Sttsa' A. Resolve to find out what they are, exciting new course, offered onlythog &Faxmos columnist tended to favor stale news, like School For Wrtryoull have access to stoll into a VwoaIs SWf defense class Lucy and Desi divorce rumors. this newspaper. This'll separate the pros The editor the one singl tool of the media that down at the gym, and casually ask, "Who, says, "we need a new jet-set from image," so the schmcs, as we say in the trade! made journalism what-it in today. You'll Has Hot Pants?"* you: Look through the information cmrefully be able to do your assignments on actual B. Duigyu tyat the4 Infr -mary, at your leisure. Check out all the facts., paper, the implement most often used by write asainexseabout the health A. Dip into the newspaper's welfare and then take the five minute the New York Tinme, and other Satsa highly conditions on capsisedof the fund, and buy smoking jackets for the sucsfu peridias and endorsed Talent Test. Our professional experience by fsonfeature. entire feature staff. has proven that this sipelittle test, the leaders of the journalimn profession. taken in the prvc of your own home, C. Decide to fake it, and write a serious B. Make up a totally false item, will, prove to us if you're simple minded EndoArseme--t piece on the socio-economic, political imlctons of implicating the homeliest. members of the enough to make it in campus journalism. John Buki~n, Newsday education, thermal underwear in editor, winner of many atoal awards, semi-tropical regions. If Sasanrejects faculty in a vice scandal. (They'll be -so thrilled co-author of a dirty book and leading it, you can always publs it in "National - you'lI never be exposed as a Stony Brook University educator, says, "I9 Geographkc. 9 fr-aud!) Leam From the Pros write on paper! Why don't you?" -2. Preious accomplishrnents: Right now, you're probably saying. to *C. Try out this gossi columnists' yourself, "Golly! I sure would like to A. I ah-eady know how to read lng~sh. classic. Use your imgntion to invent pake it biga.awrtr but _I dont know. Fewer P~"eh some horrendous m moa acUtivy, and -I-Now' that we've bfutt you -up to a; B.- I already know to write Enaish v any of the really inn-de, poesoa then ask, "who did it?"'-r Vwexample, fever pitch of excitement, we're not C. Both A. and B. university official sa tricks of the trade, like that swell ginuf at ahwwtl fnA lot womil Amvllllle %I, m5__- Tk-L.99 "What ~responsible the Statesman office!" W< D y m t e e for the mugging of a 12 year old Girl Bl.fear no There's even m~ore to be-learned than you P Scout?" Of course, you never actually .more. Statesman's Famous E School For ever imaie possible. As a Stony Brook . None of the above. came out and said that anyone was reposble, btit sure was an interesting Gershw'ifi i Will Try to RItaise, S USE - qeto wasn't it? 4. Ken u spout the misteaks? T Prufedn Teast: Culta ural Leve, wihOeaeries I. ^ A. What in wrong with this sentence? * - - . * B. What is wrong with this sentence? Bo-v PR ~ r N MIHOLn^ wr.cmmunityOA so far, White added. ^*************5 C. What is wrong with this sentence? »^2^«SSS ^ t°^SL^ Singem»"s f o r t h e operas wil be that, "'We would like a student. anOpraSeris in hops of co mn i n g f ro m . su ch importan response very much. We don't bring^ing cltur on thSono h o uses as t h e Metropolitan want this to be just. for faculty Broogk utueotote tn Opera, the New York City Opera and adults. " o CM M bettering? an d t h e S an t a Fe O pem< T h e Prce fo this Opera. Series relaionbeteenthe nivrsiy orchestra will be the Opera. will hopefully be reduced as GO~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IN ch and^ th urudn o ^ 1 O rc h est r a o f N ew Y o rk w hi these endeavorsn h as re c en t l an to hep uld ae wadincW h t e y appeared I i and gain further support. This THEmIL -. for the arts. And i , concerts in Alice THilly Hall at year subscriptions will met $25 mas8ter Of Gershwin College, Lncoln Center. t t t t h e r for non-University community, explained ha ^hi s f st o Support for this project has $20 for SUSB facultyadstaff: what is hoped-to develop into a com fro the Stony Brook and $10 for SUSB 'students. seies, of cultural offerings He Foundation, Student Activities Checks should be made out to emphasized that, "We must try Board th Center for Arts and the Gershwin College Opera and encourage people to enjoy Letters, and the New o p e ra York State Series and sent to Mr. Lewis . ^ _. Council on the Arts. Mr. White Lusardi, Executive Director, The The senies will be presented .oitedout that income from Stony Brook Foundation, on four Wednesday evenins th We of subscriptions will be Administration Building, Room between March 10 and May 19. th crucial factor in the 224, State University of New fTh-ent inra concentvedrwion.b financing of thiis endeavor. A York at Stony Brook, Stony full-engthincocert beron minimum of 400 subscriptions Brook, N.Y., 11790. White is Included in the repertoire will bemust be sold. available to answer any "Tosca" (Puccini), "Rigoletto" Although there has been a questions pertaining to this (Verdi), "L'Incorranazione di favorable response for the opera series. Poppaea" (Monteverdi), "Ipaeiaccill (Leoncavallo), and #600*** 40^**************************** "Pantomime" (Pouhe). These jCNW operas range from ancient works US~ to the premiere performance of - writen y JoephPouel TOBIAN SERVICES INC. young American composer who 0ou4 K$294 may appear to conduct his own Got the feel of sport car driving without denting HOW-does ' R o u t e 2 5 A , E a s t Setauket your budget. The Fiat Spider has authentic Fiat do it for \~ Moorcyle Bertone body styling, fully synchromoshed stick the price? j ^ ~~~~~~~(Y2mile east of Three Village Plaza) shift, dash tachometer, front wheel disc brakes, radial. fires, -and a fantastically economical price 941-9679 for a fully equipped true sport Spider. So. it todavi FS&l Issued Inmediately Low rates-R AP I RV rT 4 Fetheft,, colliion availabl IV0il l l \ SL Prank Albino N.Y.S. Inspection - General Repairs SALES & SEFRVicE S ^ IN^O,^ ~~~~~10% Student Discount on Repairs Sefaukef Foreign Motor Sales QM-0478 upon presentation of student LD. UA~UN ST- .. C- SrTAllVCT _- *AfCA^ 981-0478'__ *****-***«******************** -^*^"-Imw qd"*.*' ***160 ^y O-'6V~ 74Wyy Page 6 STATESMAN March 2. 1971

Going p the own Esalato ILaos: Regardless of the confl icting bobngs of North Vienm a timewtable here/ and no limitation that shoot Arrerican pilots down? news' eprsover the weekend "4protete incursion"" into the on how much American force will He's stretched his Congressional about who controls what hill in North is apprnly well within the be used to bak the invasion. If authorization on the war pretty far s aa the American-South PetagoI's vocabulary. Already helicopters and bombers can already, there's not much more to Vietnamese invasion continues, it American ground -troops ame being provide support. and Owen sonme go. has becom apparent that the used in small numbers in Laos, for ground troops can be authorized What's definitely neddhere is a ONixon Administration is not the rescue of American pilots for "'rescue." doesn't it become an -reversal of the current Afferican &&winding down the War" bat rather downed flying South Vietnamese easy enough step to use -more policy, one which will get us out of stepping it up while talking it -troops into battle. This is neatly ground troops to secure the area Indochina and mean it. Going up down. called ""protectiveencirclement." where the rescues take place and the down escalator, as Nixon is V ietnamization.- long It all adds up to the Nixon destroy the anti-aircraft batteries doing, is not the way out. misunderstood^ is shaping up as Administration selling the policy by which South Vietnamese American public a policy of troops bear the brunt of the ground de-escalation, while stepping up the ICooking: Wat- Now? fighting. while American forces war instead. At the opening of the fall Administration off icials think provide air and logistical support. Meanwhile, all's quiet on the semester 3500 braved the rolls of about where the students would and official Washington spous student front. Oh sure, -there's a the meat plan. By Mid-January the cook? If they did, they have information about how well things teach-in or two, and a protest numbers had dwindled to 1800. precious little to-show for their are going, while they really aren't. demonstration here and there, but Now with the approval of the consideration. There- have been no Despite the Administration's so far relatively little has been amendment to the food service provisions made of any sort to denials of charges that they are heard from the nation's large contract another 500 students at a accommodate' the cooking conservative extimate will probably population. The burden of our attempting to win that enticing student population concerning the opt off the plan. That rounds out dorms turned makeshift r'estaurants military victory. it sure looks like invasion of Laos and its to 3700 students cooking in the is steadily '-increasing and still .it. Just as Laos was being invaded. war-widening implications. dorms. nothing has been done. Saigon engaged in sabre-rattling The fact is, this "incursion" is The ramifications of 3700 Several Administration, officials along the border with North even more threatening than the one students cooking in the dorms is claim that attempts were made Vietnam, hinting at invasions across into Cambodia. for then Nixon had something not to be scoffed at, nor during the summer to install extra the Demilitarized Zone. With Nixon a timetable for a withdrawkal and ignored. As much as many of us ranges in the, student areas but that would like to wish it so, the food allowing "protective reaction' was forced to stick to it. There's no the proposal was rejucted in problem, and its accompaniments Albany. Now, they claim that there isn't a bad dream. It won't go away. were ways to get around that, with If anything, it will now worsen. Residential Colleg Plan monies. The threat of an electrical fire, of But -now even -that is gone because the sewage pipes tAwcking-up from _RC-P fudshebenfoe under its greasy overload, the smell of the susterity. What ever ihappened heaps of garbage, the insects between the summer and December attracted by -the little tidbits which when austerity was announced? students leave, on the floors is bound to increase. Administration officials can say. And this is just where the that there are ways -to get around University has turned its back on its State red tape and reluctance to responsibility. Before the fund projects which provide it feels Administration ministers to the it has already adequately provided whims, pleasures and demands of for in the cafeterias. They talk its students, it has a legal and moral about additional wiring, additional responsibility for their safety which stoves and cooking areas. But that's it has managed to ignore while all it's been - just talk. assuaging them with options. We cannot see anything more Beore it allowed students to opt critical or important than providing off the meal plan in the fall, did for the safety of its students. ^ ^" O.- .0oft.0- m maim.'m , , 'NOTE: ^""""^^ IBecause of the move of the University mailroom to the Commissary building, we seriously question whether Statesman is receiving all the mail sent to us. Therefore, if you are on campus and wish to write a letter to.the editor, or live or work in the local area and have materials for Statesman, please attempt to bring them down to our office, room 059 Union Building. between 9 and 5 on weekdays, and Sunday and Wednesday nights from 8-12. For the Voice of the People column, letters should be no longer -than Statesman 300 words, and preferably should be type-written over sixty spaces. Let Eah Become Auwae

Editorial Board advertising manager: miChael fox; arts editor: harold r. rubenstein; associate editor: ronny hartman; business manager: etoin shrdlu; contributing editor: bill stoller; copy editor: chris Carty; assistant copy editor: gayle vaughn; editorial assistant: caria weiss; editor-in-chief: robert f. cohen; feature editor: robert thomson; assistant feature editor: jerry resnick; managing editor: nod steele; news editors: tomn murnane, marsha PravdeK, alan j. wax; assistant news editor. alice j. kellman.- office manager: inez dame; photo editor: robert weisenfeld; assistant photo editors: mike arnico, dave friedrich; sports editor: barry shapiro; assistant sports editor: john sarzynski.

Staff alan adler, lana alexander, joan arena, Stanley augarten, susan baar, joel brockner, nancy callanan, mike carman, suzanne coiro, lila czelowalnik, randy danto, ellen flax, james r. frenkel, stove greenberg, harold greenf lold, larry grill, grog gutes, norman hochberg, judy hr nstin stove ingis, marc Jacobs, audrey kantrowitz, scott karson, Stph n onwith, ken fang, mike leiman. cathy rninuse, heyward nash, marsha pripstein, richard puz, robert reisman, stove 4oss, larry rubin, alan schecter, robert schwartz, stove siskind, bill soiffer, david sperling. fred sternlicht, jeff sternman, alan tesster, Charlie vermilyea, robert warren. la~ry Wishik. jan wolitzy______I March 2, 1971 STATESMAN Page 7

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receivedho respon Mr. i chard Tstbed that be bad the Ge ere igr his mind, but we haw NW seen mom' an P" . - I

staf. during the summer. On June 10, 1970, Student Service Fee Committee, of which Dr. Alan Entine, Assistant Academic Vice I am chairman, I asked Mr. Richard for an I think it is quite clear that the There is no question that Polity was President, wrote letters to Politv treasurer accounting of last year's fees. and again Office of the Summer Session is not responsible irresponsible in its disbursement of funds for any financial m anagement that to the Summer SAB who in turn donated may have occurred last year. Newsday, at its money to the Rinugycle Series. But least, managed to get the right version of why did the Office of the Summer the story. In an article published on Session permit the continued use of these February 23, 1971 - the same day as the funds when this was happening issue of the Statesman to which I have The only way to view this is that the been referring appered - Newsday says Summer Session gave Mr. Richard a carte in part: blanche for use of the funds. Sure, Polity could have given an accounting of where the money was spent, but it was the "A committee of four students, asked University's responsibility, as the by the student government of the State originator and enforcer of the summer- University at Stony Brook to look into the management fee, to see that the funds were spent of a series of rock properly. concerts, issued a report highly critical of Robert F. Cohen the student-run series." "The Committee Member said the five-man student board that ran Ringcycle Inestigtion the concerts kept 'scanty financial Conmission records' that made it almnost impossible to determine any loases the concerts might have incurred." "The University exercises no direct control over student spending Change In nal Date but -auniversity spokesman said summer To the Editor: session officials also had asked for an I would like to point out to the accounting of the student summer budget .International Club that their proposed ad had -received no response." celebration of International Weekend on I think this states the case quite fairly. April -24 conflicts with a national peace march in Washington, for which peace I regret the necessity of writing this groups all over the country are preparing. letter. The fact is, howeversthat the - While I can understand the reluctance con&WWWA hc-ed entdly by of moat G s i_ I , Polity and not by this office. Polity political or quasi-political dissnt in the wished to be free of administrative United States, I would strongly supervision, and financial irresponsibility recommend that the International apparently was the result Weekend be shifted to an alternate date, John Halperin while there is still time to do so. This will Diretor of the SummerSeSo_ enable the peace marchers to atteftd our celebration as well, and will not turn away any others. I am not going to state the pros and cons of the case of the peoples of Comm i MemberRends Indochina vs. the U.S. military machine. To the Editor: 'at. is something for every one of us to Mr. HIlperin, in W leter above, read, study, discuss, and draw our clearly states that Polity was permitted to conclusions. However, there is a very colct the summer fee and was asked for large group of people who are against this an accounting of the disbursement of war, and many of them are our American funds. fellow studentsa who are going to be But hy was Polity permitted to .America'sfuture. We are here, partly, to collect the funds without guidelines, since "understand them, so that in the years to they were University fees, and not a -come,our people may understand student activities them fee? And ywere the better than they have in the past. Ia *. *r*- feesselectively enforeed? %S M-- . Bbsa naarso_

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I IjI v - 0I I STATESMAN March 2, 1971 Page 8 .

Z Michener's 0- <** No vel History'' OI O Of Ken} F State

By BRL STOLLER To write that story, they called upon James off the streets by police, when they had What really happened at Kent State last May? A. Michener, and then they printed it in a two absolutely nothnig to do with the petty Don't ask ames Midener and the Ra s part "'condensed" version of a soon to be malicious incidents that a few persons carried Digest, although they swear in print they now. released eader's Digest Press book, the first out. How many of these evictees were in For although Michener has written and installment in the current March Digest issue. "rioting" crowd that caused the mayor to ask published in the Digest, under their sponsorship Novelist Michener is best known for his books for the National Guard the next day? and with their asitance, a two padt feature on like "Hawaii" and '"he Source," where he has Speaking about "professional revolutionaries" the events in Ohio, it's a story that adds little taken vividly historical settings and based novels whom he claims incited the days of protest, he and subtracts a lot from what has emerged upon them, novels so real that he has had to put points to Mark Rudd, who had been there in previously as the true story of Kent State. a dsclaimer in one book reminding the reader 1968, and to Yippie Jerry Rubin who visited in that it is indeed a work of fiction. But now, with told an audience of 2000 The Reader's Digest is fairly well known to April, 1970. Rubin a finsncial and investigative assist from Reader's have a slight limp to the right as well as a "we (less than 10 percent of Kent State's student has moved from the historical know what's right for America" attitude, and so Digest, Michener body), "the -first part of the Yippie program is novel to the novel history. it comes as no srprise that this dited version to kill your parents... mean that quite literally." A lot of the evidence that Michener presents of events leans heavily on the "professional But Michener doesn't report, as the Scranton is not new and a lot of the "new" evidence is revolutionary - outside agitator" viewpoint so Commission did, that "Rubin drew only tepid But what Michener has done, popularly misconceived by Middle America. hardly startling. response when he urged students to join 'the part, is retell the Kent State story Even before the merits of the Digest's case can for the most revolution."' in a dramatic way, recasting the roles of certain be discussed, it can be questioned why the Michener makes a big case out of a local crash editors had to commiin their own study, people, plaing prominence on different pad called the Haunted House, claiming that it some facts, and, i rather than re-publish, albeit condensed, the perspectives, changing regularly housed "outside agtators" and that the story to fit the special report of the President's Commission on general, slanting SDS raids on the campus were staged from that "professional Campus Unrest (Scranton Commission). That interpretation there. His only evidence is that one SDS revolutionries" were responsible for the events. commission was sponsored and supported by the sympathizer lived there. A comparison of the Michener piece and the government most beloved in Pleasantville, it Here's more "evidence": a policeman report of the Scranton Commission shows that relied heavily on evidence grnered by one of reportedly told the mayor on Saturday that he the Commission just said what happened while their favorite guest author's agencies, the F.B.I., had spotted "two carloads of agitators coming in Michener described it, and even where the facts and it condemned those responsible for violence. from Chicago." Just don't ask how he knew are essentially the same, Michener's they were agitiators. The Digest claims the "project" began in a interpretation flavors them. The evidence against Michener's "evidence" is casual conversation between an editor and But beyond that, the most serious criticism of damning. He obviously relied upon every bit of another editor's kid brother, home from Kent the Digest article must come from some of its hearsay and assumption he could get his hands State last springs Senior Editor Andrew Jones "fcs"/ assumptions,and sources. Ads for the on. Sometimes he's blatantly way off track. A heard that one student's version and "sensed March issue say that it brings to light testimony thousand students marching around campus that there were points in his account that did from "key people who have remained obscure - Saturday night toward the ROTC building not entirely square with news stories." But did until now." A lot of what these people have to somehow becomes "a mob of 2000...roaring Jones know if that singular student had been say might better have been left obscure. over the crest." The building was later ignited by close to the events of May 1 - 4? He doesn't say. Michener endlessly quotes conversation a handful of militants. The "professionalism" of Jones went to Kent and "presented his report overheard by people in crowds and "reliable the crowd there is supposedly pointed up by the to editorial headquarters; the decision was made observers" and draws important conclusions fact that a man with a camera, taking a flash to tackle the project." Are they talr ing about a from some of theme picture, was knocked down by several of the magazine article or a military invasion? Tackle Michener talks about a bonfire that led to a crowd, who took his film. But does only a they did, some of it with the help of a female semidemonstration in the streets of downtown "professional revolutionary" take a spontaneous researcher whose credentials include a recent Kent on May 1. It happened on North Water precaution to insure that his picture in a crowd graduation from Vanderbilt University and the Street, where, Michener says, are located the won't become state's evidence, or do other fact that "she was often seen returning from "sleazy bars" students frequent. "So notorious people know that for years policemen have interviews perched on the rear seat of a are these bars," he intones, "that on Friday or posed as newsmen to gather evidence? motorcycle" Saturday nights it is not unusual to find And worse even than all of Michener's For the Digest, the 8000 pages of F.B.I. hundreds of students who have come to them slanting and implications is the fact that the reports, the study of events at Kent by from across the state." What he doesn't tell you Digest itself has a circulation, as they boast, of Commission investigators, and the days of open is that the easier liquor laws in the City of Kent 29 million copies in 13 languages. (Michener hearings in that Ohio college town by the draw young people, including students, from all himself, the Digest says, has published tens of Comission itself were not enough. Because. Ohio. millions of copies in 53 languages - nice match.) events there apparently, they reached the "wrong' His "reliable observers" for the Reader's Digest is gospel to many, who will conclusions. After all, Spiro called the report are Kent students who have grown up in town, believe this commercial yellow-ish journalism, "pablum" and Dick Nixon just about ignored it. one of themthe son of a professor who is also a with all its anti-youth and anti-student So, in the same issue where an article on star "witness." These three students are implications. and generally Angela Davis by a Digest staffer presents a L"delightful," "handsome," The first installment of the two part series in stacked deck of evidence against her and then described quite differently than the "hippies ends with Saturday, May 2, two days before the buckskin. suits and beads, young girl runaways," says "a court of law will find [her].. .innocent killings at Kent. Considering how Michener and L and other who, he implies, are responsible for or guilty"; where the Digest itself writes a the Digest have handled the relatively less the trouble. defense of its famous promotional sweepstakes controversial apsects of the events prior to the neatly leaves much out about the which recently came under attack by the Michener shootings, the coverage of the tragedy itself may t North Water incident. He fails to mention that it Federal Trade Commission; and where the next be father from the truth than the truth itself can t was the order of the mayor to close all the bars allow. installment of Middle America's medical text t after the incident began which sent hundreds presents "I Am Joe's Spine," the Reader's Digest more into the street during the minor trashing "Notebook," a new column by Contributing features "Kent State -'Campus Under Fire' I that was occurring, and that these people, Editor Bill Stoller, will hopefully appear often, which they have billed in advertisements and revicted from establishments where they had paid although irregularly, on these pages with analysis as the story of "what utrul press releases for a night of entertainment, were being hustled Iand commentary. happened, and why." March 2. 1971 STATESMAN Page 9

.|

Help SB's Park East Experimental College Counlters

EBary last semester, a sign was design one for the present area. erected on the fringe of the The designs are more or less Traditional Image of Student tree-covered area between the complete. They call for here are no professors standing Student Union and the man-made Science and Technology and the "birms" (small By RICKI APFEL in the front of a lecture hall Infirmary parking lot. The sign barriers of Individual, Politics and the dirt and rocks) to The Experimental College had pressuring students to work. 'Me prolimed the combing 4E one insulate the park from the street Individual, Religion and its roots planted in the minds functions of the faculty *'EarthPeople's Park Ent. But and parking lot. They will form Philosophy and the Individual, of two college students, Karen members are to guide in the that was all. That was it. a stonehenge-like circle of Rothchild and Andrew Zipser. and Family and the Individual. seminars and to serve as In fact, the sign was erected a boulders, fashioned A recommended, into a tiny Zipser's ideas stemmed from his standard references for the students who bit prematurely, but the People's amphitheatre, with an oriental reading was past experiences at Deep Springs list used as a basis need academic assistance. The Park was to be built, and still is. style pond. upon which the main was Jr. College in California and theme faculty also serves as conductors The idea started as a much larger Many volunteers will be disussed. In addition to this Rothchild from her experiences and participants in the seminars. park designed by two students, needed to construct this park for in-depth study of man's relation at Stony Brook. It was Individual initiative stimulates Paul Nawpocki and Michael Stony Brook. There will be to society was the formation of conceived out of a "belief that .learning. "The Experimental Davis, last year. Michael Ince, shovels, rakes, picks, axes, and common interest or affinity there is something academically College is not a comfortable Operations Manager of the work for everyone. An groups based on the student's wrong with the University. What place to goof off," said Abrams. Union, felt that a park could be organizational meeting of people individual interests. The groups you learn and what you are, are "There is a tremendous amount built near the Union, so Davis interested in making this formed around a wide variety of not separable," said Zipser. group pressure to and Nawrocki wllere as:ked to people's park a reality is subjects including women's of peer The college began in 1968 as a The Experimental scheduled for Wednesday liberation, black identity and the participate. residential program of the most vital evening, March 3, at 7:30 p.m., urban crisis. The third academic College is one of independent study. Each student in Ijecture Hall 102. All program was in the form of an living experiences on campus." had to choose an individual interested parties are urged to individual seminar. The content When studying the original and was to be guided by attend. project and presentation was left proposals for the college one the a private instructor. During .entirely up to the individual. may wonder if all the hopes have spring months of 1969 a become reality. Included in the sees - evvn r This was the least structured proposal for community study aspect of the academic areas. proposals were plans for an FEEL CREATIVE? became a reality. "Too Rigid" in-depth study of education, its Community However unstructured this mechanisms and its goals, a On the third floor of one wing program was the students play-reading group, presentation Submit poetry, acles of Woodie Guthrie College in decided it was too rigid and of films, operation of a special Kelly quad, 48 students of the didn't meet its potential. The book store which would carry and all sorts of wrting Experimental College live and following fall semester an books otherwise not available, on the and talent to States- work together as a community, attempt was made to open it up. hall meeting -to decide and other trying to incorporate into one A group met and decided to no duties of the RA man, Room 058, SBU. The formal floor plan the social and academic worlds longer restrict reading and members. carried through Aaju a att1 a tt12ta tA that are found so separate in a subjects of learning. More wasn't - Yet, education was typical university situation. freedom was given to the completely. I always the question on the floor. Students are guided by three individual. He was given the Judgement Easter Week part-time faculty members Dr. opportunity to decide on the Kenneth Abrams, David Schroer, Abrams said, "It can't be books he wanted to read and to and Marvin Kaukstein. Students judged on how closely it has go where his interest guided him. in Puerto Rico are strongly discouraged against conformed to the proposals. It is no core living outside the Experimental This year there should be judged on the good it curriculum, but there are 1st TRIP College area because this does for the people in it. Most of alternatives. Students can destroys the attempt to relate the students thought the APRIL participate in seminar groups on 3 to APRIL 10 education into day to day life. Experimental College was a good diverse topics including They are also advised against atmosphere in which learning counter-culture and revolution. Laking any outside courses which could take place. Some dropped 2ndTREP They also take part in encounter might prevent them from fully out because they felt it was a APRIL8 groups and experience from each to APRIL 15 becoming a part of the good experience for them but other through sensitivity Experimental College they didn't want any more of it. sessions. community. For some it revitalized their The students learn from a How does this method of that of the academic life and made them variety of media including learning fit in to 8 DAYS - $199 traditional structured university? better students in required lectures, seminars, and individual course work. For others it's Ril us $ 9 f ee Deposit must be rem study. Last year a general theme One semester of the Aden them wperspective on their lxperimental College is in by Feb. 26 of Man and Society was chosen relationship to the educational Have and this topic was explored from equivalent to 15 upper level process. Some who chose the INCLUl v many different perspectives: liberal arts credits. All grades are Experimental College were Economics and the Individual, given on a pass-no credit basis. giving the academic world a last Iconfidence i + Round I ilp Poi Ain Jet chance and left because they couldn't make it here either. r Woody Guthrie College It'll help you through exams, All T- - , They learned in the presents speeches, class recitations Experimental College that they , + Borint'lttni t?^ :'. - All didn't want any more higher with you ,and even just being c.0r co: * d . n' a Daniel Berrigan's education." friends. It's something every 1 A journal was to be kept by room) Lu - ^ ! ties,rI every student and faculty needs. One way to be girl Heolth^-vr'. Pa. Beach member containing a record of confident is with Tampax 'THE TRIAL OF THE each individual's response and tampons. + Free Cc-cAuot 114ty 9 relationship to the program. CA TONS VILLE NINE" Groups of students and faculty Internally worn Tampax meet and evaluate the program * Free Titc * i {- ` '-- ls Sunday: March 7 4 p.mX & 9 p.m. tampons can keep you V For more information call and the work of each individual. Lecture Center Lobby This determines whether a cool and calm even 3 (516) 676-2252 or write Ivanhoe Travel 2 Briarcliff La. No charge - Bring your own pillow student can remain in the when you're the center [G Glen Cove_ program or not. of attention. They can't show or chafe or cause odor like sanitary napkins. They're softly compressed and highly absorbent for protection you j-n ers AHr%, r% on I can uepencu on. I And one more important fact. Tampax tampons were developed by a doctor so you know you can trust them. Even if you've just begun to S2.SOS 11.t 3 ^3.a00 menstruate. Confidence has made Tampax tampons the best- selling tampons in the world. And that confidence can 'ton John: TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION make things easier for you. Poco: DELIVERIN' Emerson, Lake & Palmer I Jimi Hendrix: CRY OF LOVE Seals & Craft: DOWN HOME i Riaht from the start. .. Melanie: THE GOOD BOOK Cat Stevens: TEA FOR THE TILLIMAN Cat Stevens: MONA BONE JACKONE

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TAMPAXo TAMPON- A^I MAOI O°LY BY ItAAII I IAk T^kkp^X itCCRPIOR^TKD. pAL?,AR. M^095. r t 2-0, 1 7 Page I10 STATEMAh Ma'rch 2, 1971

- - Page- 10 f Films "Little Murders Laughter as Pallbearer to th e Death of Pain By HAROLD EL RUBNSTIN Consci _ I, II and mI than Square Thater in New York, it Over the past two year, a a yearns subeciption to was then, as it is now, Jube subversive chang has become Pychology Today. But he Feiffer's first play, and Alan evident in the work of Jules doesn't make us laugh as a ften Arkin's first directorial Feiffer. He is not as funny as he anymore; he doesn't want ua to. achievement (only now the first once was. He is still a writer Find ain't wat day useta be. are in cinematic terms). Th poasessed with more awareness Wben "Little Murdkeg" Pays. though not an assembla of the phobias that attack opeed at the Circle in the of related strips by the cartoonist (as some critics cutely intoned) did lack structuhra 0 development and continuity Reaching for Radix which would have buttressed the with HAN TEICH horrifying but freewheeling Because records cost so much money, and nobody has a ja)b to theme; the destruction pay for them, one is faced with the problem of where to getsone's Pl^yright released satire that music. This is a quick run down of "Heavy Stations" that you nnight lashed into society like a you paring knife il rotten fruit and pick up on your F&M radio. Column A discusses the stations w e n th e can get with a crummy radio, Column B includes those elusive *4 'hard h audience howled at his 'r in people. they did so not because to get" stations that require the most vanced equipment: pli that he gets by. The ugy reality radios. ugin of identification (the characters poory ltimed and produces the were too stylized to be real), but is that much of this is true. It is opposite effect. A ride on the COLUMN A as a rou1ll relief from the pain of a lot harder to get by in New cruel, cold subway has been Whenever you're looking for WNEW (see Column B) y York than in Dubuque. undoubtedly ru into two of its neighbors: WBAB on the right and Feiffer's detailed chronicles of done more times than a adio t he paranoia growing around Alfred survives. oblivious to commuter boarding the E train. WDRC on the left. In fact, even if you've got a pretty good r the worid around him, without a hint of WBAB and/or WDRC him. Watering the twisted garden Alfred's trip to his parents, while it's difficult to get WNEW w as r m w o unaffected by mugging, it is a funny scene, offers no dipping into your business. WBAB from Babylon is a tasteless, loud A k h kept a spirited c as t so fre sh a n d open to his mothers or people. Alfred takes important insight into Alfred. rocker that sometimes has a couple of OK hours late in the eve Unin pictures of shit, for a living. He And WDRC from Hartford similarly brings in some fish smell w ithit genius for improvisational Only the shots of New York Peto theater that oversights were is able to capture it in its essence help deliver the reminders on its trip over the Sound. Except for fewer commercials and st in a way that seems to evade him overlooked. 'Mat was 1969. Feiffer's additions swere these two stations are somewhat below par. WPAC-FM is now 5 eBLI T e when he snaps people. But Patsy with the same loud rock and roll, a perceptable attempt at see NmBi h violence that Feiffer searching for. the streeft has loves him just the same. In him hipper, and the Supremes. WNHC from NewHavenjeatures, chiicken envisioned in she sees the "joy" of "molding In an urban dance of death, rock and Sergio Mendes and WHLI Hempstead theame. happened, not in dark alleyways a n him into the man (she's) in love Arkin again extracts wonderful If you've got a crummy radio, you're left with two reasoinable d tumultous riots, but in the ensemble playing from Elliott glorified with." Her life is a series of alternatives, both in the "college band" (or lower end of the band polluted daylight. The envigorating contests, taking on Gould ( who has spread himself reserved for noncommercial stations). WPKN from Universilty of castrating heroine has now so thin one almost forgot he had a standard bearer for molestors, Indian wrestling, Bridgeport sounds remarkably like WUSB used to: before 8 p.m you become Patsy talent) as Alfred and Marcia d air women's liberation and stalks ensnaring Alfred, get earnest, bungling, kid-sounding DJs plus laughing news, dea t h e e a r t h a s if a Newquist, the All-American girl Rodd as Patsy, and from and some genuine attempts at quality. As the evening prograi s, the scrubbed pot Vincent Gardenia, Elizabeth w as a a brainwashed with hair on her chest, smooth talking radio peg come on. Many are from tipoff to everything a father could want, Wilson and John Korkes (all Bridgeport's fine theater department, and the music rolls on. Y{ale's mind- Over WWRL comes the on burglar in a boy. Yet, she does manage from the original stage WYBC is slightly more pretentious, but generally in better 1taste. hype for discounts to look at tomorrow and not production) who create the most Youll find some boring Ws, but as a whole, this is probably the, best alarms that when activated, will instantly summon the local squint. For all her twisted views brilliantly twisted portrait of station you can get with your puny Ca r. of dominance and sexuality, she American family life since we IA precinct. Supposedly, the system will be more effective than the is the one who honestly seems to stopped believing that Wife With Father was where it was at. catalogueful of locks Feiffer's feel and hope for hope. Patsy Newquist family has on their gets shot. "Murder's" perfect casting door. According to a recent With Patsy's death, a radical (cameos by Donald Sutherland study on living in New York, change occurs in Feiffer's work. and Lou Jacobi and Arkin one should expect his home to On stage, the sobriety that himself) often ease the film over be broken into once every two followed was treated with discontinuous jumps and events none macabre humor and shock that strain credulity. to three years. Somehow is of it makes it down to the ensued from the uneasy . But when someone who juxtaposition of laughter in normally funny, stops begin ftumybone. funny, his friends being to get "Little Murders is not a death. Laughter attempts to achieve a lapse of memory, in worried, and they stare at him as scream anymore; or rather, now if something was wrong. "Little it is a scream The film cries out this case the flaws in the second half of the play. But in the film Murders" chokes the giggles to all those fools who gleefully before it shoots. Feiffer isn't drop themselves into the Feiffer has discarded the humor, and replaced it with a coarse smiling and it makes us nervous. megalopolis for them to see how Sometimes a little levity is what they have trapped themselves in reality that finds its only feeling in violence. Arkin creates we need, whether we deserve it an environment that cannot or not, if only so that we can 90 support oak trees, no less restrained hysteria venting itself people, but is too perversely in shouts, and then shos. The feel something. tmor I thrilling to leave. What makes shock of "little Murders.' no ARE more grovy the film so frightening is this longer comes from jokes made in "Do-Run-Day-Run-Day?" ratizaftion that there nslt hb the wake of horror but our COLUMN B something wong with the urban helplessness to rectify what If you've got a crummy radio, stop here - thisll only make youdweler unfolds in the wake. feel bad. Except for WLIR, they all come from back home. WNEW I is not the failure of the Unfortunately, this descent still in the lead amonth the "heavy" stations, wih WCBS rockngcorporate system. Nine to five is into reality exposes the frailties hard to catch up. It's hard to believe that only a few years ago, only suspended animation and of the script and the events that WNEW-FM programmed -Of Interest to Women" shows about the being that emerges is one covers the change in Alfred and cooking, and fashions with Allison Steele right in there, and WCBS who releases his tensions on the Newquist family flow as had - something they called "ibe Young Sound," featuring the himself and others randomly jaggedly as rush hour traffic. The Hollyridge Strings and Herb Alpert in the "Now Spotlight." CBS isnoncommitted and with a development of Patsy's dream my favorite because they are a timeless station. While WNEW carefree vengeance that defiantly ma into delirowly happy concentrates on newer, more esoteric rock it seems that CBS is mocks the legendary 4-.harms of anarchist is a machine gun that playing mostly good stuff that is both current and old. It is the only Lucretia Borgia and Lizzie sporadically misfires: impact, station that stil plays the Buffalo Springfield, and back Van Borden. The urban dweller has wait, target, miss, hit, blank. Morrison records with any regularity. You can guess the group on none of their style. He is too The addition of .Scenes to four out of 5 sonp on this station. Often they will play 101 minutes busy trying to exist to worry not open up the work for us but of music without any commercials (they pile up after the 101 about constructing a sense of blunt the force of the film. A minutes). class. His achievement is simply Peaceful walk in the park is What is WPLJ? Something new? WABC-AM is the most popular * „ rock AM station in the country, but this didn't help their FM. NO, WABC-FM started off with chicken rock, then added the computerized voice of Brother John with his flowers and beads. He played (rather the computer played) 4 out of 5 songs you've never 'T m imun es ,C o * o s, »Kibm" heard of and never want to hear again. Brother John was heard on a Hle 8^0-0p8 1YDu IZIm many college stations across the country as "fill-in," just as WUSB used the re-broadcast WNEW after the WUSB DJ's gave up and went A series presented by Poe College to deep. Anyway, WABC just couldn't catch on in New York. So they simply changed the call letter to WPLG. WPLJ has a Cops M 4A "'Fi Ct: M s s revlt radio c p M a rc h 4 : Fil m C ity : " Mississippi sharecroppers' reolt couple of new DJ's who are trying to promote a "community o R o y but don't try to visit them in the studio. For Vera n and a speaker from the National Co-ops. Start for the people" image, S U N Y Community Radio WPLJ is still located in the formidable ABC Co-op? 8 p.m. building on 6th Avenue, and is still run and managed by the same gentlemen that created Brother Al. WE'd like to give WPIJ a chance Kibbutzimks March 8. Israeli speakers student summer at being Community Radio, but as long as they keep running Kibbutzmks, and Americans forming their own Kibbutz wi ~~~~~--y ------pa. Psilfilm pm.AS bell-bottom ads, WBAI, the original at this type of broadcasting need SpeaK. rossle rm. 8 p.m. AL:£ not worry. In fact, WBAI recently had some fine actors read "War and Peace" for Tolstoy's birthday. WPIJ is no competition. Let's Communes & Group Marriages: March 11: Film "Taos 1970"-l n I see WPIX owned by the Daily News is now playing an occasional Commune member speaks. Kelly cafe. 8 p.m. X song by Chicago or James Taylor. WOR-FM somehow comes in clear ,^sa ^- when WNEW or WCBS doesn't. I can't believe that God dips . March 12: Group marriage: psychologists & extended family J '' From the bowels of the south shore comes WUR: the best new members speak. 8 p.m. E SIKB C March 13: The way out, or is it? McWhirter, Haight-Ashbury l | rw et FM station Since this is Long Island, the DJ's are undentandibly a a music is passable indeed, and there are few psychiatrist. Anti-commune speaker, commune members. & I T H A^ T bland, bt the choice of s t o a n p m station is new and hasn't built up a trade hi ri s I . Role-playing sessions and motivations commercias because the I E W yet If you can rig up a good antenna on your graduation present prob d R by2un psycholog istsc iP R E V I clock radio, this station is a good bet if Johnny Michaels' A^ ll ^ Aena^a"c mely f t Dlou une cpt mac I 1SATURDAY C)F OUR P^ntook A on CBS and the Frog Man, Scott Muni, ae on. And if rock is giving " metngs at Kdly B basement lounge except March 11ATTR bCTION you a pin. ty WLB-FM for a change of pace. Thi is the onlya TATTR _ » ' fun-time jazz station around and feels just right sometines, even if 1 _T__:30 P.M. you are not into thi ype of Inusic STATESMAN Page 11 March-- 2.- 1971

What's a Car? How to Be An Automotive Genius

By KEN LANG interior room. The reason -for aerodynamics, became In prior automotive columns, this, as for the relatively larger streamlined coupes, (Dodd we have assumed that our interior of foreign sedans Charger Daytona with pointed readers know something about (Volvo, Toyota, Austin nose and wing-mounted spoiler). cars. For those of you who America), is "space utilization." Lately, the high cost of theme don't, we present this feature to Remembering our "three box" supermars, as they are known, give you a working knowledge of explanation, if one allows the coupled with outrageous same. engine "box" to be just 1ag insurance surchages, have Basically, there ame two types enough to fit the engine and resulted in smaller modes, of car bodies, sedan and sports, moves the wheels to the edges, it cleverly called "Junior and power. With one exception, existing sedans (vw Karmann Ghia) to one more fitting the with all others falling into a makes for a bigger pssenger Supercars." Ordinary compacts there are no domestic sports middle ground. Sedans are get intermediate (302-360 cubic sedans. Among sports sedans are almanacs idea (Porsche 914/6). box. When combined with Most purists, blithely utilitarian vehicles, best front-wheel-drive, inch) V-8 engines. The resulting Alfas, Mini-Cooper S's, Fiat 124 this also remembering their beloved described as three boxes, a small expands cars are slightly slower than Coupes, 3.5 and 6.3 Mercedes trunk space. This helps MG-TC's (this may put me on box up front (engine), a small explain the popularity of foreign supercars, but are proving (except the Limo!), Mazda the "Road & Track' hate list,- box out back (luggage) and a cars successful with lower prices and R100's and many others. If (also, the intolerable waiting but I remember the MG-TC as a large box in the middle (people). list for better insurance breaks. The first enough of you write in, well Mercede's). machine that destroyed my In some cases, the engine is in When some bright engineer examples were the Nova SS396 gladly supply a total listing. Half .back and the luggage is in front. and the Rambler SC/390. They the fun of a sports sedan are the kidneys with its rough ride, discovered how to strengthen b r o k e d o w n w i t h When that occurs, we crafty the front and were phenomenal in straight line lack of identifying scoops, real pillars of a all-too-frequent regularity and automotive writers call the result bedan, no middle column was acceleration but suffered from spoilers, and paint jobs, which possessed a gearshift that swore "rear drive." (Classic example - needed, creating an excess of "understeer." may mean the neighbors don't the hardtop. me off manual transmissions Volkswagen Beetle.) Rear drive Some brighter designer Understeer is the tendency for a know, but then neither do the put on a forever), consider only puts all the motive equipment rakish slope developing car to go straight in a turn, highway patrol. The sole the convertibles as sports cars, over the drive wheels for coupe. Now since some idiots necessitating more steering American example does have tending to forget the great traction, increasing luggage and insist on putting middle pillars effort. Now a little understeer is funny paint and phony scoops, Mercedes 300SL Gullwing, with interior space and saving on some coupes, we have nice, but the impression one gets but as the Hornet SC/360 is an honest-to-Teutonic metal driveshaft weight. Most cars are hardtop coupes (no pillar) sedan is that the little beasties don't basically a 2-door sedan, it Jaguar built with the engine up front coupes (pillar), hardtops and ever want to turn! Luckily, the qualifies. If you're roof. Porsche 91 1's, XKE and drive train transmitting sedans. Where the rear becomes new breed of Junior Supercars contemplating one (priced under 2+2's and Lotus Elan 2+2's are power to the rear wheels. This is such that a hardtop becomes a have excellent handling. Among $3000), do yourself a favor and also sports cars. Unfortunately called "front engine/rear drive." coupe is the same point where a the breed are the Duster 340, delete the trick paint and wierdo for patriotic Americans, our Anyone seeing an advantage to stream becomes a river, i.e., the Hornet SC/360, Nova SS350 and hood. only sports car is the dammed this system should write Comet GT302. Unfortunately, Automotive Almanac defines adman's province. expensive Corvette. Foreign Statesman Automotive and tell Since coupe almost all these neat tricks come sports car as "a car of taut, denotes sports cars start at $2000. Since us. A third system has engine 'sportiness," it also explains in coupes with extravagant paint responsive, and precise handling and drivetrain up front, "front why factories put large V-8's jobs to alert neighbors (and qualities and p sed of -a sports care is a 2-seater, the wheel drive" found in Saabs. only in the coupes. fuzz) that you own a "hot" car. sprightly performance. A car next step might be the Another system has the engine Over a decade ago, the dying If you could have a Duster 340 which can serve as an extension mid-engine configuration, just ahead of the rear wheels, Studebaker Company produced" in a plain 4-door Valiant body, of the driver's sensibilities." providing superior handling, this called "mid-engine," you might then have a sports Unfortunately, admen take found a car that would influence with Porsche 914's the forefront in some sports cars. a u t o m o b ile desi gn sedan. different views so that "sports of a new age in sports cars. Sedans and derivatives, come tremendously. The car, the A sports sedan is simply a cars" can be anything from --- in assorted sizes. Supposedly, Avanti, couldn't save the IV!I overall size relates to interior company, but the idea of a room, but many compact sporty four-seater with a long foreign cars offer interior room hood and short rear deck superior THE to larger domestic LAKEVIEW INN produced an excitement that models. To begin with, there are Detroit couldn't overlook. Not I er ^1 the subcompact models, long afterward, Corvair "Monza" ! (Volkswagen, Vega and Pinto), was produced. Ford put a V-8 in Appearing this weekend March 5, 6, 7 offering seating for four in a the hardtop Falcon, and with small (under 15' overall) size. limited expectations produced a also March 12, 13, 14 Next are compacts (Maverick, two-seater - hardtop named Hornet, Toyota), with more Mustang. The success of Mustang room for four passengers, plus created an entire market of sales, an occasional fifth in a 15-16' for those who wanted sports car ». size. The intermediates allow the image with more room. fifth passenger and larger luggage space in a 16-17' size. Greater The second great impact on » a_ Detroit was created when "big" than 17 mark the realm of the * (Buddah Recording Artists) full-size sedan, and luxury V-8 engines were dropped into personal cars. the intermediate sedans. Some Minimum age 18 with college ID. One of the ironies of intermediates stayed as sedans THE LAKEVIEW INN 239 LAKE SHORE ROAD, RONKONKOMA automobilia is explaining how and hardtops, (Plymouth Mercedes 300SEL's can be (Directions: Siouth on Stony Brook Rd. to Portion Road, turn right to Lake Shore Rd.) ___ I "- .. - ---- .-- -- -.. ------slightly smaller than domestic Roadrunner), others, aided by h -----2 0000 ------00- go^**&& ***^040in000000*' *"000000*00****** intermediates and have greater wi nd tunnel-tested -4~~~~~~3 *J

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^veXT~~ULS&M_l=r%- IA n d *;.. tJom Mfsam AL clw am Cel ircwtv per ydL Store hours 9:30-4 p.m. BABYSITTER WANTED: Mon.WeV. time Moe LPOwn" at %wnp apIys g»wo radial tires, folding -top.' AM/FM Thurs. & Sun. nights. Call465-4773 in. March- 5 8 p.m. James College | ~STATESMAN radio, $1990. 928-1859 eves. Tuesdays thru Saturdays (closed Mondays). Located at the factory after 4 p.m. Lounge. Reifrshments, and square CLASSIFIED one block south railroad crossing on dancing called by McKerley. All NEW TOYOTA for sale. Superb PHOTOGRAPHY, all types. passport welcome. S1.75. tickets available Hours condition. Must sell, Need bread. Wilson Street in Port Jefferson Monday thru Friday Station. photos, applications, formal Wed. 9a.m.-5 p.m. Union Lobby. 9amn%-5 pon Asking $35. call Elliot 4453. portraits. call any time 4253. Kevin. RATES 00 YOU SING -(with a group or $2 for 15 word or Wess; OPEL KADETT 1900. 4/speed, good NEED A SECOND HAND BICYCLE reasonable price. Please RESPONSE: A 24-hour telephone some form of accompanimentV? Are condition. Now brakes, tires. battery, urgently at you interested in performing? Please S.85 for nwit'ips call 246-4438. Thank counseling and referral agency. Dial Insertions; , payment starter, radio $950. 7246. you. 751-7500. contact Jean or Toni at 7104 (9-5; required LOst& Found M-F). 1965 ROVER 2000; AM radio, REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE and Notices free. stereo 8. Rebuilt engine, new superb condition. Suite must gell. COPY DEADLINE Asking $12.73 plus tax. Call Al 4351. APPLICATIONS FOR FALL 12 noon two days prior Michelin X tires. 64.000 miles. LOST & FOUND STUDENT TEACHING IN to dat of puikation. $1050. PE 5-2511. ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS must be FOUND MED SIZE dark completed and returned by March HOUSING retreiver/setter dog, near Tabler. Call 12. Applications will be available in FOR SALE Steven 4938. SSB 440 and Surge Bldg. H starting PERSONAL GRAD STUDENT MALE to share Feb. 22 and should be returned to ADULT TRICYCLE 2/speeds. brand two bedroom apt. Washer Dryer and LOST BABY BRACELET "-Birbara" either office LOOKING FOR PEOPLE to share new. - great sentimental value. Call 5292. by March 12. upstate land in a living situation. Excellent for campus. Call utilities included $80/mo. Pt. Jeff.. 751-5508 before 11 a.m., M-Th., or Sta., HR 3-6621. Evenings before DEPT. OF MUSIC presents Chamber Desire towards action, less talk with Box 254. E. Setauket. LOST BLACK PUPPY part Shepherd some money needed. Saher living is 10:30. _ Concert Saturday March 6. SBU and Labrador, answers to "Blue Theater, 8:30 possible through honest effort. May STEREOS LOW LOW PRICES on Boy."" 3821. p.m. '71 target. Larry, Marsha 4878. WANT TO LIVE OFF CAMPUS? tape on orders on 12 or more Sony Clean house will charge little rent if RESPONSE: A 24-hour telephone SLHL80 $4. Call LOST SEVEN KEYS in a black R.L.S. Happy Birthday. Putting your PR150 $3 and you'll do light housekeeping. Call counseling and referral agency. Dial 6442,6426, 6427. cowhide case on Feb. 11. either in 751-1500. foot in puddles sure beats putting it 822-5296 evenings. Hum. Bldg., or between Hum. & in your mouth. Happy 18th. A.J.K. FOR SALE: 2 burner hot plates with WANTED FEMALES TO SHARE Union. If found. please call 4754 or FILM "Ashes and Diamonds" Lec. 3690. ANNE: It's good to have you back. heat adjustment $8. Call Florence HOUSE with others in Rocky Point. Center 100 8:30 p.m. 7804. Call 822-5296, Majlck evenings. LOST SPIRAL NOTEBOOK with ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED in personal paper near "G" SELLING ALL ORIGINAL 1941 FAMILY NEEDS important living on a Hebrew hall for next year, BOBW. Congratulations! From your FACULTY quad. Call Ron Jackson 5974 - 5375. Ford Woodie. Want 1949-54 Ford. 3/bedroom house to rent with option call Carol 5750. devoted hall. Will buy Toy trains 4829, 7531. to buy. Call 246-7183, Mr. Steele. FOUND WATCH LAST SEMESTER. nice to know that FILM "Major Dundee" with Chariton JUDY L. It's AMPEX STEREO CASSETTE Call 8040. Heston, Tues., March 2, Toscannini Joshua is here. Malick RECORDER with two speakers. Like College lounge, 7:30 p.m. new. Call Larry 7205. SERVICES I.D. BRACELET lost this week on campus. Please call 4123. THE UNION ART GALLERY AUTOMOTIVE GIRLS NEED PANTY HOSE? ANYONE FROM THE 50th State ANNOUNCES "Light, Color & call BROWN SPLIT COWHIDE COAT and Guaranteed to fit. All fashion colors who grew up there please Motion" by Lewis Lusardi, color THE CAR that should have died 928-2683 nights. All Islands good. with brown fleece lining with keys in March 1I-March 11. *Special didn't! 1960 Peugeot in supercar $1 pair. Call Sue 4136. pocket. Keys most important!! scopes, R E M O V A L Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday 403. low mileage (broken odometer) SONY SLH-180 tapes while they last PERMANENT HAIR Reward. Please call 5720. 11:30 am.-2:30 p.m. In addition, best offer 928-3625. Mr. Balloon. medically approved electrolysis, & Thurs. evening 6-8 p.m. $4.50 tax incl. Call Bill 6433. _ PLEASE NOTIFY STATESMAN Tues. Physician endorsed, Complimentary Closed Sat.& Sun. 1 966 6 FOROD GALAX-IE SAY STEREO ALL BRANDS low Consultation, Pon & Pencil Building, IMMEDIATELY IF POSITIVE CONVERTIBLE V-8 57,000 ml:, 6 RESPONSE HAS BEEN MADE ON condition $850. Need prices, full guarante systems, color 751-6448. _ MEETING OF GO CLUB Tues. eve tires, excellent tV, tapes, compacts. 751-6136. YOUR AD. 3690. room 2:14 Union, 7:30 p.m. ForInfo hardtop. Must sell. Call Murray at and STUDENT TUTORING Biblical call 4119. 246-5640. PENTAX MOUNT LENS: Steinhell Modern Hebrew. Call Jeff Kofsky 4376. Conditions arranged Fastback Hurst 100mm f3.5 $30. Call Dave 4589. NOTICES APPLICATION FORMS FOR THE 1965 CUDU 273 Supplements course work. _ 1971 Suffolk County Summer 4/speed, 200 HP, new brakes,55.000 WILSON LACES FACTORY Internship Program will be available mi., good condition $850. Call OUTLET MILL STORE. Special this INCOME TAX PREPARED at your F VOU "EAVe To starting March1 In the Economic Murray at 5640. week 112"* widepolyester White or convenience. 698-2425. Research Bureau, SSO-326. The Ecru washablelace for tablecloths or deadlire for applications Is March 31. 1963 MGB now engine and tires, fair curtains $2.49 per yd. Also millions HIP ORGANIZATION flauntit get For further Info concerning the condition call for Information. SH yards lace, ruffles, sequins and matching t-shirts or sweatshirts from program Inquire at the Bureau. 4-5303 at any time days. cmbroidery trims at factory prices. $2. Call 567-0046. SB OUTING CLUB will give an old 1969 MGB blue. only13.000 ml.. 42" width dress laces starting atS.25 Women's bas- .Winter Recap' 'ketball results and Statistics - Fordham o- in F r iday's l ver SB, 28-26 Statesman !. 1

Page 12 Statesman March 2, 1971

- -- Pats End With 73-60 Win-; Record Advances To 15-10 By MIKE LEIMAN The Stony Brook basketball team closed out their season with a decisive 73-60 victory over Franklin Marshall, Saturday night on the loser's court. The win brought the Patriots final record to 1 5-1 0.

Despite a poor shooting game for the entire first half. At the as the game progressed, and (22-79), the Pats were able to close of the opening 20 minutes everyone saw at least four lead the contest from start to the Pat lead read 34-25. minutes of action. The Patriots exhibited a finish on the strength of a the second half, Franklin In balanced scoring attack as three powerful defense. "We took Marshall used a press in an and figures. Howard away their offense with our attempt to narrow the margin, men hit double threw in defense," said Coach Roland but the Pats were still able to had 14, Andy Simmons Massimino, explaining how his move well. With seven minutes 13, while Bill Myrick led the team held Franklin and Marshall to go the advantage reached 15 squad with 17. It was also a to only six field goals and 25 points, so when the teams team effort off the boards as the points in the first half. played give and take from there players boxed out well. the difference in the scores Steve Danhouser, the injured Foul Shots remained constant. backeourtman, did not accompany the team on the trip. of the Pats' scoring Most Foul Trouble He suffered a dislocated knee came from the foul line, FROM 17r: Pat star Brian Davidson attempts to sink ball in punch and torn cartilages in Wednesday the charity The game went smoothly for recent game. Patriots finished season 15-10. as SB players visited night's victory over Yeshiva, and at the the Patriots as the home team photo by Robert F. Cohen stripe for 49 opportunities he will wear a cast for the next on 29 of was never really able to get close basket, converting three weeks. them. The leader in this in the later stages of the contest. department was Roger Howard, Only the absence of Art BOX SCORE Cark Captures Tourney who tallied 10 of his 14 points Baclawski, sitting with foul from the stripe. trouble in both halves, Baclawski 2 0 4 In recent years Stony Brook has established complete threatened any difficulty. Howard 2 10 14 supremacy over Metropolitan Squash Association The Patriots jumped off to a Simmons 5 12 Without Art, Coach 2 opponents. But before last Sunday, no Patriot has ever 12-6 lead at the outset and held Myrick 6 5 17 Massimino made good use of been able to garner a Stevens Invitational Tournament an eight of nine point advantage Davidson 1 8 both Eric Shaniro and Ron 3 Championship. Late Sunday afternoon Chris Clark, the l Willard 1 4 Hollie up front. In addition, 1 Pat's racquet ace, ended the victory drought by Shapiro 1 2 5 SPORTS CALENDAR Gene Willard, playing in his last defeating the tourney's defending champ, Larry Hilbert Hollie 1 2 5 college game, "ended up a good of Fordham, in four games. Joe Burden, Stony Brook's Jones 0 1 2 Women's Basketball career and helped out in the last number three player, nailed down the championship of Holownia 1 0 2 Thurs. March 4 away at Molloy five or six minutes" according to the consolation bracket. Friday's Statesman will detail Koch 0 0 0 the story of these important individual triumphs. 7 p.m. was able the coach. Massimino TOTALS 22 29 73 to completely empty his bench Squash Thurs. - Sun. National March 4-77 Intercollegiates The Women's Recreation Frosh Sneak By Suffolk, 74-71 at Williams Association is sponsoring Intramurals a Squash tournament on Intermittently March 10 and 17th at By MICHAEL VINSON 7:00 p.m. For info call If the reason that the freshman basketball team did so well could be summed up in one Spring Sports column has become as important to the Lull Ann Marie at 4261. word, it would have to be teamwork. The assist players as the points scored. This coupled with an overabundance of talent enabled the team to compile the best freshman record in the history of Stony Brook. They wound up Bronze MedalTo Judoman winning 89% of their games, finishing up with 16 wins against 2 losses. The team ended their season by Suffolk fans also felt compelled defeating Suffolk Community to make their presence known. Box Score College last Friday night on With the help of police stationed Suffolk's home court by a score at the game, things were brought Murphy 16 of 74-71. The Patriots were met under control with no great Nastusiak 14 with a vocal contingent of harm done. Ryba 12 rooters, possibly the largest McNellis 12 number of Stony Brook fans to It was an unfortunate end to a Green 7 watch a freshman game this tremendous season. One can Kaiser 6 season. only speculate on the value of Scharnberg 5 this year's freshman players to Burke 2 The Stony Brook fans had a next year's varsity team. lot to cheer about as the Patriots ripped off the first 10 points of the game and battled for the rest of the half to go down to the Racquetmen Blast Plebes locker room with a 45-30 lead. Steve Nastusiak was the big gun The Stony Brook squash team traveled to West Point for their last for the frosh in the half pouring annual encounter with the Cadet Plebes. A couple of hours and an in five field goals and two foul 8-1 victory later the reason for eliminating the Plebes from the shots for a total of 12 points. Patriots' squash future was evident. Competitively West Point's The Patriots exploded to a 20 version of freshmen were no match for even a severely weakened Pat point lead but then fizzled out. contingent. Passing became erratic and. Stony Brook may be dropping the Plebes from their future plans offensive rebounding stopped, but that fact will not erase the name Army from next season's bringing Stony Brook's scoring of engaging big-time opponents, got attack to a halt. About eight schedule. The Pats, in the midst turnovers later, Stony Brook's the nod to take on the 'big boys' of the Army varsity next time lead dissolved and the game was around. medal in was foul shooting John Fiqueroa, pictured above, recently captured a silver tied at 65. It The Patriots took the trip upstate with a make-shift line-up and That fine performance that again provided the winning the New York State Judo Championships. even a stand-in coach . The racquetmen were without the services of the top judoman on Stony Brook's varsity team, margin for the Patriots, as Kevin enabled Fiqueroa, Stu Goldstein, still out with an injury, Joel Gross, sick with the flu, to qualify as a member of the New York State National Team which McNellis, Billy Burke, and Jim and Mitch Perkiel, taking the day off. The squash team's erstwhile will compete in the Senior Judo National's being held in St. Louis Murphy all connected on foul later in the year. shots that provided the winning coach, Bob Snider, was so sick with the case of the flu that he gave Fiqueroa (Shodan) 1st Degree Black Belt competed in the margin. to Gross that John Ramsey was pressed into service as interim extremely competitive Unlimited Division for Black Belts in the New 'Chaperone.' Chris Ryba, battling the pain York State Eliminations. The impressiveness of Fiqueroa's third of a bad back throughout the For those racquetmen that did compete the match was not their place - Bronze medal finish is emphasized by the caliber of the contest, deserves recognition for Clark, playing one, Mike Barkan, that garnered the first and second place medals. The Gold severest test of the year. Chris 'judomen' the fine game he played. He winner was last year's National Champion and the Silver three, Charlie Schweibert, five, Steve Rabinowitz, six, Arnie Klein, medal collected, 12 points and pulled garnered by the "All France" Champion and last year's seven, and Steve Elstein~nine, all chalked up easy straight game wins. medal was down a big 12 rebounds. finisher. Both of these judomen are (Yodan) Joe Burden, number two, and Danny Kaye, four, were extended to second place National The frustration for Suffolk four games for their triumphs. Stan Freifeld ran out of steam, as he 4th Degree Black Belts. was too much to contain. As the Championships, Fiqueroa becomes the Kommel posted a By placing in the State final buzzer sounded, Suffolk lost the team's only match in five games. Paul of Stony Brook Judo to accomplish such first judoman in the history players started swinging. Some straight game win in an exhibition tenth match. a feat. photo by Mike Amico