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1-31-1972 The onM tclarion, January 31, 1972 The onM tclarion

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The onM tclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE HECKMAN BINDERY, INC. N. MANCHESTER, INDIANA ^ Staff Writer Staff groups, the State Board of of Board State administration the and groups, t n e d stu hn uto wl jm fo its from jump will tuition when as well as and colleges state the be community will affected $250 per year. Institutions Institutions year. per by rates $250 tuition increase to 21 Hile JamesD. By mlmne i tefl semester fall the in implemented Jan. on voted Education Higher ITRS ECM: ab i ws ut bd oe u ntr wloe i te e semester new the in welcomed nature but joke bad a just was it Maybe WELCOME: WINTER'S Rutqers University. Rutqers weather. 98 Te ot ie il be will hike cost The 1968. Thursday night with a freezing blanket o f snow. Students on campus that evening found even colder even found evening that campus on Students snow. f o blanket freezing a with night Thursday V V Despite vigorous protest from from protest vigorous Despite hs s h frt increasesince first the is This CLASSES. Spring Semester begins. Semester Spring CLASSES. TODAY USA, ERAY 1 FEBRUARY TUESDAY, 7 p.m. in Panzer gym.Panzer in p.m. 7 .. nteSui har.Tces $1. Tickets 8 theatre. at Studio the in opens p.m. production period Innovative DONNER. 2 FEBRUARY WEDNESDAY, p.m. 8:15 at Varsity p.m., 6:30 at Freshman ______FENCING. Newark College of Engineering at MSC Engineeringat at of College Newark FENCING. gym. Panzer in MSC at Monmouth BASKETBALL. cl on io r la tc n o M o. 6 N. 6 otli, .. 74 Mn,Jn 1 17 ^ 1972 31, Jan. Mon., 07043 N.J. Montclair, 16 No. 46, Voi. u t o I Rie $250 Raised IsTuition ______

y63 or Vote Board 6-3 By mksre ad fre" Lee a farce," a were and meetings smokescreen "The officer. relations and public Crane,SGA Sam president, SGA Lee, Terry State Montclair colleges. various said in a later interview. "We "We interview. later a in said were representatives College ae o ics te esn for reasons the discuss to came from representatives student education, and higher of chancellor per semester.per b e tw e e n Ralph Dungan, Dungan, Ralph n e e tw e Trenton b in held were meetings $300 to $175 of level present Prior to the board's vote, vote, board's the to Prior YNSIS Gasoo t S a 73 pm in p.m. 7:30 gym. Panzer at MSC at Glassboro GYMNASTICS. the Studio theatre. Studio the 3 FEBRUARY THURSDAY, the Studio theatre. Studio the in p.m. 8 at production period Innovative DONNER. AUDY FBUR 5 FEBRUARY SATURDAY, in p.m. 8 at production period Innovative DONNER. the Studio theatre. Studio the 4 FEBRUARY FRIDAY, DONNER. Innovative period production at 8 p.m. in p.m. 8 at production period Innovative DONNER. datebook costs of educating an estimated estimated an educating of costs funds from the state lottery lottery state the the from if asked funds When year. next revenue and the anticipated anticipated the and revenue did say Dungan and possible shoulders his all shrug was and but solutions, increases the would help ease the financial financial the ease help would of shortage the were hike hecontinued. nothing," strain, Dungan purportedly did did purportedly Dungan strain, entrants college more 16,000 o ase. Tee s' any isn't "There answer. not more money coming in from the from in coming money more THE REASONS given for the the for given REASONS THE \ cai ht b Gu Ball uy G by Photo n tclario n o M

h dy f h vt. rn was Crane ’vote. the of day the ridiculous," heconcluded. ridiculous," majority of the funds are going going are funds the of majority nto st e cofers i' —it's s r ffe o c te ta s "The o t Crane. in said ," ry tte lo n Tetn tt College State Trenton Auditorium. and State spacious the move to decided board the proceedings to the more more Rutgers the from spokesmen There, to proceedings room during the hearing before before hearing the during room were greeted by State Troopers students Troopers State by "The greeted were attended. who "'ho treated uc like criminals," criminals," like uc treated "'ho e ad Cae ecie some described Crane said. he representative MSC only the 150 students packed into asmall into packed students 150 scn meig a held was meeting second A LRO' editorial CLARlON's tn ad comments and stand n h tiin ie by rise tuition the on a Cae SGA Crane, Sam on‘page4. officer relations public ■ ---- Jersey, was sent to Trenton last Wednesday according to to according Wednesday last Trenton to sent was Cahill Jersey, T. William Governor between meeting a for calling a Cae SA ulc eain ofcr Te message The officer. relations public SGA Crane, Sam n rsrsnaie o te tdn Ascain f New of Association Student the of respresentatives and "not excessive." "not was It tuition. in rise substantial a against Governor the by ae anucd ht ail nosd h $5 increase as $250 the endorsed Cahill that announced later a meeting with us .. for the purpose of exploring further further exploring of purpose the for .. us with meeting a uto possibilities." havetuition you that imperative is It “ that governor the informed rtss Raise Protests O T- N O M e h T ^ — The telegram also referred to a statement made earlier earlier made statement a to referred also telegram The In reaction to the increased tuition policy, a telegram, telegram, a policy, tuition increased the to reaction In nPne y. * gym. Panzer in RSLN. eakRtes et MC t p.m. 2 MSC at meets Newark/Rutgers WRESTLING. ENSA,ERAY 16 WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY HEARTS. OF QUEEN RDY FBUR 11 FEBRUARY FRIDAY, tdn lf bidn dnn ro. r Eugene Dr. room. dining the building in p.m. life 8 at student induction Society Honor SocialScience National INSTALLATION. MU GAMMA PI Schneider is guest speaker. isguest Schneider ' ______

oe 63 n ao o te hikes. the of favor in 6-3 voted the against case their pleaded and asked that other means of of means other that asked and increases, according to Bill Bill to according increases, raising revenue befound. revenueraising increasetuition to not board the restraining order prohibiting the the prohibiting order restraining olgs ed, ihrsn urged Richardson heads,colleges nrae Hwvr te board the However, increase. lhuh hr wr n legal no were vice-president. there SGA Although Asdal, rud t spot h case, the support to grounds ln wt ohr f state of other hike. with the Along against statements Asdal commented, "We intend intend "We commented, Asdal Jersey, (SANJ). SANJ may start start may SANJ (SANJ). Jersey, cmag o cnatn local contacting of campaign a tuition hikes violate the rights of of rights the violate hikes tuition the believes SGA The appeal. to legislators to overrule the the overrule to legislators afford the higher fees." higher the afford those especially students, the h Suet soito o New of Association Student the MSC president, has made several made has president, MSC cannot who college in now board's findings and veto the the veto and findings board's will explore is working through through working is explore will increases. i iy A iiA T / h SA re t oti a obtain to tried SGA The Dr. Thomas H. Richardson, Richardson, H. Thomas Dr. TE AES h SGA the AREAS OTHER ------

N " J 2. MON TCLA R ! ON /Mon., Jan. 31, 1972 Faculty Polled On $50 Fee

A questionaire is being "A lower charge might be that additional inflow would be circulated asking faculty and made available if compensated by cars leaving staff opinions on reserve parking oversubscription of the parking periodically during the day. The spaces by Vincent B. Calabrese, area is permitted," Calabrese approximate cost for vice president of business and said. oversubscription would be $30. finance. The oversubscription would No specific date has been The note accompanying the be based upon the assumption announced for the final decision. voting slip explains that, in response to several faculty requests, the o ffic e has investigated the possibility of constructing a second parking MSC Educators level over the lot immediately north of Panzer gymnasium. WHILE RESERVE spots Montclarion Photo by Carol Ann Sakowitz would be created for over 140 Establish Journal THROUGH THE PORTALS OF DARKNESS: Viewed through the cars, the approximate cost of the windowed door, students listen intently to a speaker in the guaranteed parking spot would innovative period's Seminar in Black Dialect class. be almost $50. The Montclair Education The main topic of the first Review, a professional journal issue is "accountability." Among • Interracial Board Formed concerning the needs and the several articles dealing with interests of northern New Jersey this subject is "Accountability in • Lindsay Ex-Aide Made Director educators, has been started at Education" by Felix M. Lopez, a News Desk "Montclair State. psychological consultant from President Richardson Named to NJEAPost Dr. Bertram C. Lindemann Roslyn, N.Y. Also appearing in and Dr. Robert B. Williams, both the journal is "How Relevent is T H E BLACK-BROWN- least one year prior to receiving Education Club. The other of MSC's School of Education Relevance?" by Frederick C. WHITE Relations Committee is the grant and that the research officers are JUDY BARTLETT, and Community Services, are Neff of Wayne State University. in the process of formulating a project the student be working vice president; TERRY serving as editor-in-chief and Frank Merlo, MSC education studenty-faculty complaint on be approved by the associate editor, respectively. professor, contributed an article, YACENDA, treasurer; MARIA board. Facilities to register institution he or she is attending. The editors emphasize that "SCSD Revisited," in which he complains will be available in the Applications can be obtained MASCIULLI, recording the journal is designed for evaluates the School window at TUB and at Fishbowl from: The Edwin E. Aldrin secretary; and KATHY HOGAN, educators at all levels. The Construction System in the student life building. Any Fund, Office of Student corresponding secretary . . . DR. purposes of the publication are Development Project. student who has a complaint Financial Aid, New Jersey JOHN V. MOORE has been to stimulate discussion, suggest MSC faculty members Earl about interracial problems Department of Higher new innovations, and provide a appointed chairman of the Mosier, Ralph Walter, George interfering in some way with his Education, Trenton, N.J. 08625. rallying point for the Germanic-Russian department. Heiss, Robert Pines, Nicholas education or suggestions for Deadline date is March 1, 1972 articulation of the concerns of . . . T he CENTREX MicheUi, Joseph Venturini and improvement of educational . . . JIM LOVENDUSKI, a educators. Edwin Mills comprise the conditions is asked to contact junior, has been elected DIRECTORY is being Besides presenting the ideas the board via the available president of the Distributive distributed . of leading educators of the state publication's advisory committee. com plaint box in the and nation, the journal will School o f Humanities . . . emphasize "the new look in Although a definite schedule FREDERICK M. CARLIN education at Montclair State has not been announced, the former aide to Mayor John V. College." According to Williams, review will be published Lindsay, of New York has been it will stress the "contemporary, periodically. The first issue has appointed director of the new innovative, and responsive" been mailed to educators in the office of developmr.it and aspects of modern education. area. college relations. The new office save combines college development, alumni relations and public m oney ( montclarion New Jersey’s Leading Collegiate Weekly information . . . DR. THOMAS on H. RICHARDSON, president of Jo-El Ten Scudese arts editor MSC, has been appointed to a Diane Förden assignment editor textb ook s Miguel Mina business editor one-year term on the New Jersey Kathy Blumenstock Education Association's everybody knows that the way Carla Capizzi E ducation and Professional Richard De Santa to save pn textbook costs is to copy editors Standards Committee . . . The Joanne Ferrari get used copies... and we’ve Joan Miketzuk appointments o f DR. Men of A.P.O. circulation ALEXANDER VOLOTTA as got the largest selection around. Michael F. X. Grieco editorial consultant chairman of the business Barnes & Noble means money Joanne Surowicz editorial assistant administration department and Carol Giordano DR. GEORGE PEARSON as saved on books... over a mi 1 lion Donna Goldberg layout editors Cynthia Lepre chairman of the physical in stock. And don’t forget to Don Pendley magazine editors education department have been bring last semester’s texts and Carol Anne Sakowitz sports editor formally announced . . . 30 sell them for cash. The MONTCLARION is published weekly thruout the academic RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS of year, except during examination, vacation and innovative periods, up to $3500 are being offered by the Student Government Association, Inc., of Montclair State under the EDWIN E. ALDRIN College, Valley road at Normal avenue, Montclair, N.J. 07043. Telephone: (201) 893-5169. FUND. The only restrictions on Subscription rates by mail: $2.50 per academic semester. application are: the student be a ib Advertising rates upon request. Known office of ‘ publication: resident of New Jersey for at Montclair, N.J. 07043. Th6 M ONTCLARION is a member of the New Jersey Collegiate FRENCH TUTORING. Press Association, Newspaper Enterprise Association, United States Guaranteed results from Student Press Service and United Press International. The experienced tutor, French noi*u‘ iiooksixme M ONTCLARION has twice won the All-American rating in the major. Studied in France. flWi auntie & iftdi Ntm* Associated College Press Competition. $5 an hour. Call 429-9418. HOURS... from Jan 31st to Feb 10th The editorial opinions expressed represent those of the executive daily 9:45 to 8:00 pm Saturdays to 6 editor. MONTCLARION/Mon., Jan. 31. 1972. 3. Visiting Harvard Educator Holds Innovative Black Dialect Course

By Joanne Surowicz Afro-American studies, flew in feels most comfortable. As a undergraduate work at Wayne Com m unication Sciences at Staff Writer from Boston two days a week to legitimizer of black English, she State State Universsity where Federal City College in Nothin in a long time don lit conduct the class during the is convinced that acquiring she was required to take a Washington, D.C., attended one up the English teaching innovative period. As interest in language skills is the main corrective speech course because session. A legitimizer like Dr. profession like the current hassle her subject grew, the class priority, not changing speech of her "regional accent," she Smitherman, he spoke on new over black English. An nothin in expanded to include not only patterns. If "It's me" is received her Ph.D. at the developments in the field of a long time don lit up the undergraduates, but graduate grammatically acceptable, the University of Michigan. Dr. sociolinguistics. Communication Sciences students and many Montclair black expression " It bees me" Smitherman then returned to THE COURSE ended with department like the Seminar in State faculty members. should also be permissible. Wayne to teach linguistics, presentations of individual data Black Dialect that been given by including a seminar on black collected by the undergraduates. Dr. Geneva Smitherman. DR. SMITHERMAN strongly The young professor was idiom. She joined the faculty of Students' projects ranged from Dr. Smitherman, of Harvard believes that everyone should born in Tennessee and grew up Harvard University last June. analyzations of Black speech in University's department of use the idiom in which he or she in Detroit. After completing her EXTENSIVE WRITINGS by communication media like the this linguist on Black English Flip Wilson Show and Sanford have been published in the and Son to scientific Negro American Literature comparisons of pre-school and Forum, Black Culture: Reading educated speech. One black and Writing Black and the student who collected street rap English Journal. Her own dialogue from her home in full-length work The Black Jersey City commented, "This Idiom, is now in progress. whole thing was a lot of fun." Her class sessions included Dr. Smitherman takes her first-hand tapes of black work in this field and her goals language studies, black literary seriously. She hopes to bring works and experimental teaching about a "more receptive and devices for black students as well tolerant attitude toward native as the expected linguistic dialect and different modes of background of the dialect. Dr. speech." Orlando L. Taylor, a professor in An that sure a bad rap fo any t h e Department of sistuh to be say in! r \

Artistic? Yet With A Practical Bent? The MONTCLARION needs advertising personnel JUST LIGHTS: Cars are visibly missing with just the many street lamps forming star-like patterns as the — and we're willing to offer a commission. Get temperatures dropped these past few nights. Weather service just gives more o f the same forecasts - cold some practical experience to go along with your and more snow. business administration major. Come up to the MONTCLARION office any time, second floor of the student life building.

Prepare For Midterms Now! S lu d c illS

International Rev. Elias Gomes Conducts Meditation

“A Discussion of the Gospel Society According John” presents a lecture on the technique of TRANSCENDENTAL

Tuesday afternoons at 5 p.m. MEDITATION as taught by Partridge Hall Room 118 Ylaliarishi Mahesli Yogi

■ A few minutes daily practice provides deep rest and relaxation. ■ Spontaneously unfolds creative intelligence for more dynamic activity. ■ Easily learned by anyone to enrich all aspects of life. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 3 i p.m. and 8 p.m. RUSS HALL LOUNGE MONTCLARION (ênnnlm DtUacyf GeneTPater New Jersey’s Leading Collegiate Weekly

Voi. 46, No. 16 Montclair, N.J. 07043 Mon., Jan. 31, 1972

M J. Smith executive editor Susan Kelly managing editor James D. Hile éditorial editor

and

Imagine paying $300 per semester for tuition and not receiving any improved service. It shouldn’t be too hard to do since this is exactly what will happen next semester if Trenton has its way. MONTCLARION Soapbox Governor William T. Cahill and Ralph Dungan, chancellor of higher education, have conceded increases in tuition due to costs and the belief that It All “Ads” Up- students should carry more of the burden of their education. To the Editor: intersection at Normal avenue 1. An additional green The Chancellor met with student representatives I find the continued and Upper Montclair avenue. arrow will be installed from the affected colleges not for any meaningful placement of ads for term papers College personnel have been to allow south-bound negotiation or dialogue but merely to fulfill a for sale in The Montclarion aware of this problem and have traffic on Valley road promise made during the height of last December’s unbelievable. You are, in effect, been working with the Essex to turn into Normal County Traffic Department to strike. This action must be considered at least in encouraging the practice of avenue during the plagiarism which is self-defeating correct this istuation. Current time sequence bad faith if not outright arrogant on the part of for the student willing to indulge plans for this intersection ordinarily reserved for Dungan. in such deceit, and which include the installation of a Normal avenue flow. Further, we question the very necessity of the victimizes the great majority of conventional three-color traffic 2. The intersection will increases. Funds from the highly successful lottery hard-working students willing to light, instead of the existing be widened such that are not being fully allocated to higher education. learn through effort. To run the b lin k e r arrangement. In an additional lane will The latest official statements showing only 40% of ads becau^ you need the addition, widening of the be constructed on the total profits being spent in this area. The money, and to attempt to intersection is planned so that an Normal avenue by remainder is being placed in a general fund for disassociate yourselves from the additional lane will be provided removing a portion of state use Another interesting aspect of the fiscal effects of the ads on the for left-turning traffic. the hill from the problem is Governor Cahill’s endorsement to spend reputation of the College and on In addition to improvements property currently some $7 million in aid to private colleges—aid its students, is self-delusion at this intersection, the owned by the college worthy of any five-year old. (My following improvements are which would otherwise ease the finanical situation. at 860 Valley Rd. apologies to five-year olds!) being planned for the Valley The implimentation of this tuition policy, is, in Vincent B. Calabrese The educational process must road and Normal avenue our opinion, premature and arbitrary. It can only Vice President be based not only on intellectual intersection: Business and Finance diminish the educational opportunities open to the ability, but integrity as well. To citizens of this state. aid those willing to do anything m u There is still time to prevent Trenton from to get through denigrates the Kill A I I enacting this foolhardy venture. We urge the SGA worth of degrees given at and its President Terry Lee to join other colleges in Montclair State College, and sending lobbies to the capital to persuade the there are far too many honest A Ghost But- legislature to defeat this action. students to allow this to continue. To the argument that During the week of Feb. 14, NO MANIPULATION to eliminate such ads is against the student body along with the freedom of speech, may I point faculty will be asked to ratify Now, with no student input, A Chaotic out that which should be Dr. Thomas H. Richardson’s All we are asked to approve an obvious — that freedom of College Coordinating Council. All-College Coordinating anything carries w ith it This proposal, we are told, is the Council! Dialogue has been b inale- responsibility, and publicizing ghost of a now defunct program. lim ited administratively to those who would foster a Last year, there was a Study ‘‘suggested revisions” which had Semesters end with the usual last-minute rush to practice which is illegal in any C om m ittee for All-College to be submitted to the office of finish term papers and cramming to pass that final a c a d e m ic com m unity is Governance, which met weekly Executive Vice-President and which will offset the grade you got on the irresponsible and reprehensible. to discuss the need for such a Provost by Jan. 6. Who has midterm. However, a new twist was added to last How much do you get for body, its powers and screened these revisions and representation as well as other term’s chaotic finale—student strikes at several of running the ads? Is it truly such decided which are valid? The areas of concern. There was the state’s colleges. an enourmous sum that the same method of construction for this considerable thought and program has been wrong. We What originally began as a local dispute between amount cannot be saved by a small reduction somewhere in dialogue between students, must not be manipulated into students, faculty and administration over tenure at your budget? Is it truly worth faculty and administrators op this major revision in college Jersey City State College, quickly mushroomed the degradation of our academic this matter. structure. It must be stopped. into state-wide action after the circulation of then community that must result One might ask, what were the rumored tuition hikes. from the existence of this ad in results of all that work? In Further the SGA has proven We applaud Terry Lee’s efforts to keep things your paper? checking the record, the it can work effectively on behalf cool on campus. The establishment of a Rumor Anna C. Pai, Ph.D. representatives believed Dr. of the student body in dealing Control Center did much to lend rationality to an Assistant Biology Professor Richardson’s proposal was both with faculty and otherwise emotional situation. It is unfortunate inadequate for the needs of the administration. We must not give that several students from William Paterson College To the Editor: students. Since the up this individuality and violated our hospitality by misrepresenting The November 12, 1971 issue adm inistration realized the cohesiveness as students, for a themselves as spokesmen for the SGA. Their of the MONTCLARION proposal would not pass a governancd program which splits included an editorial campus vote, it was not put to a actions warranted their eviction from campus. us drastically into six different commenting on the dangerous referendum. constituencies. MONTO LA RI ON/Mon., Jan. 31. 1972. 5. 4 h i « » M S j i o I O’er the Land of the ...

By William Vernarec The prisons are overcrowded. new weapons research! Richard we aren’t spending enough on A free society, spies on its CINA Chairman But the stock market must rise. Nixon is running for re-election. defense. He is shocked that citizens, infiltrates organizations, Public services in Newark are The industrial output must We have recently invaded secret papers like the Anderson churches, rallies, and campuses. grinding to a halt due to outdistance each preceeding Maine beaches. It was just files were made public. How free George Wallace is running for insufficient funds. A new quarter, as must CiNP. Will we practice, of course. is a land whose government (of president. satellite was launched last week forever measure our successes in WAGE PRICE SPIRAL the people) keeps secrets from itself? that will be used to relay live an ever enlarging GNP? Will we Everyone wants prices to stop The continental shelf still is broadcasts of President Nixon’s forever measure our successes in rising, yet no one wants his SPIES EVERYWHERE being polluted. Our rivers are trip to China, and of the an ever enlarging GNP? wages frozen. It is ironic that still turning into sewers. Cars Olympics in Japan as well. Suddenly Edmund Muskie is Democrats who for years cried That government wants to still keep spewing exhaust. Beer Hubert Humphrey is running for concerned about deficit for wage/price controls now survey the books of the cans, bottles, billboards, president. spending. scream against it. To he sure, the Unitarian - Universalist skyscrapers, bombs, missiles, Horrors uncovered by ZERO POPULATION pay price board, which Association because its Beacon people, more people, more more reporters at Willowbrook The need for c<#htrolled continues to feed Press printed Sen. Mike Gravel’s . . . Will the real Howard Hughes shocked even J.Q. Public. Is population levels becomes more profits-oriented management, as release of the Pentagon Papers. please stand up? Willowbrook an exception or the and more apparent? Yet, what well as already overpaid labor is rule? Is J.Q. Public willing to state, or city, wants to grow at a -sham. Who among the A pay to have conditions changed? an average slower than the prospective presidents would Henry Jackson is running for national rate? John Lindsay is have the strength, and the president. running for president. support, to put the teeth needed Recently, the Peace Corps’ In his State of the Union to make inflation fighting $80 million budget was slashed message, President Nixon calls m achinery work? George to a point where about one-half for increased defense spending. McGovern is running for of the volunteers must be Oiif ‘technology’ is already president. brought back home. What is the capable of blowing us off of the Ashbrook doesn’t like the An Open Bill price of a B-52? map. We need to spend more for Nixon trip. Also, he feels that

By Morey Antcbi Sin ilia Staff Writer Whereas: the administration seems interested in student opinion, and Whereas: the student body has little actual voting power in We’re Only Human the decisions at Montclair State College, and Whereas: there appears to be little probability of state action on this matter, The MONTCLARION is not be able to use or, altered students trying to do the best Be it enacted by the SGA that the MSC Board of Trustees perfect. It never has been and slightly, might be the solution to job we can in our spare time to be petitioned to form a co-op board consisting of never will be. a problem that we have been inform fellow students. nine trustees and nine students, The students of Montclair wrestling with for' some time. A LEARNING EXPERIENCE that this co-op vote trustee , on all matters, State College are not all alike. Some may be a bit impractical that the trustees legitimatize the decisions of the They never have been and never for the MONTCLARION. But it One of the only ways that the co-op by voting unaminously in favor of its will be. doesn’t hurt to ask. MONTCLARION can determine decisions, Because the students have The MSC student is entitled student needs is by that the student members of the co-op be elected such a high level of individuality to the best newspaper the staff experimenting with different by the entire student body, and there are so many varied can humanly produce. ideas and features. that each student be allowed to vote for one activities occuring every day on And human we are. Most of F o r example, the student co-op candidate, campus, the demands to make the thirty-odd staffers of the editor-in-chief’s weekly column that thos candidates with the top nine pluralities the MONTCLARION equally MONTCLARION work on will frequently become a report be elected, meaningful to the entire student outside jobs to say in school and to the readers, explaining that these co-op members bring the legal board body are totally impossible. Two try to get to classes at least innovations in the newspaper’s and views of the students as determined by an newspapers with full-time staff a week. format. all-campus student forum, would not be sufficient. We are no more perfect than that the various viewpoints of the students be SUGGESTIONS WELCOME the newspaper. Occasionally we This is just the first of many represented proportionately by the student Everyone has an opinion on d o n ’t hear about stories, changes that will be talking place trustee at the co-op meeting, how the newspaper could sometimes they get lost in the during the coming semester’s that each student co-op member be held to that improve. Some of them we may I shuffle. We are just a group of pages of the MONTCLARION. viewpoint in voting, S a m 4 rain*» that if viewpoint revision is deemed necessary to co-op postpone meetings until a new forum is convened to assess student views, State’s Total Disregard that all meetings be open and videotaped for future viewing by interested persons, I would like to express my SOUND PROPOSALS to middle and lower income that at no time should the number of student complete disgust with and loss The main purpose of the students. The proposals were co-op members total less than 50% of the board, of faith in the state officials, the students was to delay the sound and reflected the that the co-op consider its first priority of governor and the chancellor, and decision until new tax revenues responsibility taken by the involving faculty and community members in the in their handling of the tuition were decided upon or found. students. deicisions of the board. issue. Their contradictory One representative from the statements and political Governor’s Liaison Committee T he proposal passed flim-flam served only to cloud suggested a lower figure of $150 regardless of the move by Dr. the issue and confuse the per year with increased state aid Wolfe to table it. students. Their rush to push through the proposal further ' w e kûm é t o e e x u p /er A CQuuTûweMZDgMEDOmJcëCa r" ‘ B U rr THEN/ VJE'RE WOT (ftretwitn^Uaj^e $hr cecrwH tiiae, e/or a t a TVAAT y ê s u l a t e d ! displayed their total disregard ¿ep.RiJi'.UpXì# v c-ppniEiPD t i we ,c~c> TO o u k ------1/------for student opinion. On Fri., y 'v V m cph s o M e n v e s I' m CLASS® ie eCUiEPULÉ^'" Jan. 21 the student K£A.U_V (jcnMEREP "THE 'WAY tAY £aOD - w e W E E AL LY representatives were treated as ou^ sTUPeOT l iv e s V u e s u i -a t ep ! crim inals, surrounded and escorted by members of the f ^ 7 State Police. It is only due to Dr. Wolfe and Mr. Fuchs, both members of the Board, that these wrongs were corrected. I M é m thank them. * ■ ! i ■— * — * —1 ‘ j 6. M O N TO ARtON/Mon., Jan. 31. 1972

Donner ” A World Premiere Bows Studio theater. By Deborah Lombardi the best cast I have ever seen in a "There are 16 people and six Staff Writer college play." The production of children - three boys, three girls Dr. Jerome Rockwood Robert Bruce Murray's plaÿ, — in the cast and everyone is paused in his work at the Studio "Donner," which will have its important. Everyone is onstage theater last Wednesday and said premiere performance on Wed., all the tim e," explained the proudly, "This production has Feb. 2, 1972 at 8 p.m. in the casually dressed speech and theater professor. "The success "Two Gentlemen” o f this show sits on the shoulders of the actors," he A Vitality All Its Own stated. The actors portray the group of pioneers who were trapped in the Donner Pass by a blizzard. The party had left Springfield, III. in 1846 for Sacramento, Cal.; it was while crossing the Sierra Nevada mountains by a new route that they were trapped by a blizzard. Almost all of the party were wiped out, the survivors turning to cannibalism. ALL IN THE MIND Montclarion Photo by Carol Anne Sakowitz. Dr. Rockwood, kneeling on the edge of the stage, gestured toward the central playing area ONE-ACTS and said, "There is no set — a good actor can create the scene "An unusual film course" course conference number in the audience's imagination. In All Frederico Fellini is 2802. The three credit this play we go from desert to fans, take note! This course will meet Tuesdays lake. We could have built sets, semester, English 474, 11:00 - 12:50 a.m. and spread sand on the floor, hung a "Modern Drama on Film," Thursdays 11:00 - 11:50 sun or dropped confetti-snow w ill feature all of a.m. The course is a free from the ceiling, but they would F ellini's films through elective in humanities and not have been real." "8 1/a". Films included in will be conducted by Dr. the course are "Variety Theodore Price of the The enthusiastic director Lights," "The White English department. Open called "Donner" a "very Sheik," "I Vitteloni," the to all students who register powerful play, but not one for matrimonial bureau before Feb. 4, 1972. people with Queasy, sensitive sequence of "Love in the stomachs." The production will City," "II Bidone," "La Players Photo by Friedman-Abeles. run thru Sun., Feb. 6, with Strada," "Nights of MSC's Player's will have For he's a jolly good fellow: In a scene from "Two Gentlemen From evening performance at 8 p.m. Cabiria," "Boccaccio '70” an open meeting for all Verona," actors Jose Perez, John Bottoms, Raul Julia and Clifton and a Saturday matinee at 2 (the Dr. Antonio interested students Thurs., Davis enjoy a brief respite as they sing atop Valentine's Letterwriting p.m. Tickets are available at the sequence), "La Dolce Feb. 3 at 5:00 p.m. in the desk. box office located in the lobby Vita," and "8 ’/a". The Studio Theater. The only problem with "Two of the Studio theater. By M.J. Smith Gentlemen" is Mel Shapiro's Staff Reviewer direction. Highly reminiscent of would 's "Midsummer S.Q. fi. have enjoyed this version of Night's Dream" of last season, "Two Gentlemen of Verona." MONTCLAIR 6TATK COLLECE Shapiro seems to have borrowed Granted, he wouldn't recognize various ideas such as the playful much of the dialogue as his but end where the actors trade "Two Gentlemen" has a life, frisbees, yo-yo's and paddle SCHOLARSHIPS humor and bubbly vitality all its balls. own. AVAILABLE - FOR While the introduction of The plot is pure Shakespeare some Spanish rantings and INTERNATIONAL with mistaken identities and the frequent use of black dialect standard mixed-up love affairs. M R O G R A M Æ does add a feeling of the inner STUDY AND TRAVEL It begins in Verona with two city to the play, much of the friends, Proteus (Raul Julia) and music does not. For a team like 'cVI °J^TRAVEL Æ jP SUMMER 1972 Valentine (Clifton Davis). While ("The House of Blue Proteus pines away for his lovely Leaves"), and Galt McDermott Julia (Diana Davila), Valentine (“ Hair" —and anything else decides to set off for Milan in you'd care to mention) to come search of his fortune. up with such an uninspired score Proteus follows Valentine to is discouraging. The only real the Big City and eventually falls bright spot is a choreographed in love with his girl, Sylvia 50's num ber th a t seems THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM (Jonelle Allen). specifically designed to Money grants are available for you to study or travel in almost any country of the Typical chaos ensues with a capitalize on the current wave of world thanks to an S.G.A. appropriation to THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM (ISP). pregnant Julia, a flaky crown nostalgia but at least is ISP supplies financial assistance to students interested in traveling or studying in prince who thrills falsetto, a memorable. The rest of the returning Japanese war hero and another country. Upon returning from a foreign country, ISP students are given the lyrics are lost in one hazy blare. opportunity to share their international learning experiences with the college community a gilded bicycle complete with Producer housed IF INTERESTED, COME TO . . . INFORMATION MEETING, TUES., horn. this popular refugee from the February 8, at 7:00 p.m. at DRINKS ALL'ROUND Summer Shakespeare in the Park S.G.A. Office, Student Life Building

The acting is superb all in hopes that it would raise some Preliminary application form dealine - Feb. 10 around but special praise should extra capital for the free shows. Final application form deadline - March 3 go to Miss Davila who, as Julia, By the way, as far as I can demonstrated all the lucidity of discover. Two Gentlemen's a woman who has just downed a Playbill is the first to have a half a quart of gin—straight. colored cover since 1930. MONTCLARION/Mon., Jan. 31, 1972. 7. /MSC Inducts Eight Into Athletic Hall of Fame

By Joan Miketzuk Gifford captained the Voted MVP of the baseball Sports Writer Indians' basketball team for team in 1958, Speary is the only Montclair State's Athletic three consecutive years. The Indian to lead the team in Hall of Fame grew to eight only MSC player to lead the batting for three consecutive members at last Friday night's hoopsters in scoring for four years. He co-captained the squad homecoming game against consecutive years, he also won for two years and in 1958 had a Mount St. Mary's. The inductees letters in baseball and football. batting average of .426. were Thomas Flagg, M ilt Mirsky, THE ONLY baseball player in The new inductees were Alan Gifford, Manny Senerchia MSC history to reach the major chosen from the 42 nominations and Jack Speary. leagues, Senerchia played received by the selection The other MSC greats, outfield, third base and pitched committee of Len Morris, Al Chester Pittser, Lee Walsky and from1950-1952 for the Indians. Picker, Frank Tripucka, Jack Gene Stempler, were inducted He capped his varsity career with Sayer, Bill Dioguardi, MSC last October during the football a .352 batting average and signed athletic director, and Dick homecoming ceremonies. with the Pittsburgh Pirates of Stahlberger, MSC sports FLAGG, NOW an education the National League. information director. professor at MSC, held the school record for the 100-yard dash at 9.7 seconds for 20 years. He was also named the school's best all-around athlete in 1940. One of the first Indians to be chosen for the Little AII-America basketball team, Mirsky copped the honor in 1940 and 1941. In addition to basketball, he excelled in football, track and baseball, compiling 13 varsity letters at MSC.

Montclarion Photo by Guy D. Ball. Montclair State (40) GOING FOR IT: Montclair State's Tom Dux (21) and Cal Blue (13) G F T Bistromowitz 1 2 4 double-team a Newark State opponent in an effort for a rebound. Fu ller 3 0 6 H ayek 5 2 12 Whether or not they got it isn't known but it is known that Johns 3 0 6 L a Vorgna 1 0 2 Montclair broke a six-game losing string with Wednesday night's M cC arthy 0 0 0 M eln yk 1 0 2 victory. M osolino 0 0 0 Schoen 1 0 2 Sweeney 0 0 0 V enaneio 3 0 6 D an niely 0 0 0 Chinese Delegation Totals 18 4 40 i Chinese (104) Mei-Yun Liang 3 0 6 L ily Ying 9 0 18 Ousts Indians, 104-40 Yao-Ting Nieh 1 0 2 Li Young Dov 1 2 4 Su-Chen Chen 4 0 8 Ling Ching 3 0 6 Shioio-Ching Wang 0 0 0 Despite a first period rally by with 12. Ann Fuller, Ellen Johns M e i-Y u n H o 0 0 0 Tai-Jung Hsu 4 0 8 Montclair State's women's and Belinda Venacio each Mei-Fong Chen 1 0 2 Shui-Men Chuang 17 2 38 varsity basketball team, the chipped in 6. Ya-Chen Ku 4 0 8 Shueh-Yun Wang 1 0 2 Chinese National Olympic squad Yee-Yin Chow 2 0 4 The Squaws will return to the Montclarion Photo by Guy D. Ball. handed the Squaws a 104-40 loss T otals 50 4 104 court tomorrow against HERE’S THE PLAN: Montclair State basketball coach Ollie Gels ton on Jan. 16. MSC 18 6 8 8 40 Glassboro. Chinese 20 30 20 34 104 discusses (20) and Rick Brown (4). Coach Cathy Paskert's team had previously triumphed over St. Peter's of Jersey City, 75-16, and Adelphi University, 52-28. THE CHINESE team, led by Shui-Men Chuang's 38 points, seized an early 2-point edge and continued a running attack to wear thin the Squaw defense in the lopsided victory. The Chinese domination on the boards was apparent as Mary Hayek finished as the only MSC player to score in double figures Intram ural Applications Applications for men's intramural teams in basketball, bowling and volleyball are now available in the athletic office. Basketball and bowling applications are to be returned Mon., Feb. 7. The deadline for EL YING STAR T: MSC's mermaids got o ff to an optimistic start this season, winning their first few meets but were handed a heavy setback volleyball applications is Mon., last week when they lost to Monmouth College (above picture) by more than 40 points. The loss was the fourth consecutive to the Feb. 21. perennially strong Hawks. M ontclarion Mon., Jan. 31, 1972 Montclair, N.J. 07043 Vol. 46, No. 16 Indians Edge St. Mary’s

Homecoming for Montclair State's basketball team couldn't have been better, or more exciting, for its returning alumni as the Indians edged Mount St. Mary's in overtime, 75-72. The victory was the second BOTH TEAMS tried to hold consecutive triumph for Coach the ball for a final shot but neither succeeded. George Ollie Gelston's squad. The Randall intercepted an MSC hoopsters had snapped a in-bounds pass but failed to six-game losing streak at Newark convert. With seven seconds State last Wednesday, 79-53. remaining, MSC's Jim Higgins missed two free throws and St. MSC hosts Monmouth College Mary's called for time but could on Tuesday, February 1. not score. FRIDAY NIGHT'S thriller The Indians opened a was highlighted by the strong five-point lead in the overtime play of Tom Dux and the session on the rebounding of outside shooting of Bruce Davis. center Joe Lyons and the The Indians led most of the defensive play of Davis, but first half. Manipulating around Mount St. Mary's refused to go their opponent's two-three zone down easy as they came back to defense, MSC worked inside tie. until midway in the half. Closed The crowd chanted the out, the hoopsters were forced K nick's familiar "dee-fense", to settle for the poorer-percent- and the hoopsters gave them just age shots. Mount St. Mary's that. Steals by Davis and Dux, figured out the Indian's who finished with 19 points, man-to-man defense and wound iced the game for the Indians. up leading 36-35 at the half. LYONS, DESPITE missing Davis found the range from some playing time in the second outside in the second half and half after being shaken up during within two minutes had scored a collision under the basket, eight of his 27 points. The lead ended the night with eight changed hands until, with less points and Todd McDougald, than two minutes left in the who fouled out with four grme, the score was tied at minutes left in regulation time, 65-all. had 11. Mount St. Mary’s (72) Montclair State (75) G F T G F T Randall 5 5 15 Kane 5 1 11 Baccarella 0 0 0 Roccetti 3 4 10 Blue 0 0 0 Bonasz 4 1 9 Brown 1 1 3 G oodw in 7 3 17 Davis 12 3 27 Molinaro 0 0 0 Dux 6 6 19 Witherspoon 3 3 9 Higgins ? 3 7 Capprosecca 0 1 1 Lyons 2 4 8 Sweitzer 0 0 0 M acDougald 5 1 11 1 2 O T T W aller 0 0 0 Mt. St. Mary’s 36 29 7 72 Riley 0 0 0 Montclair State 35 30 10 75 While You Were A w ay— JANUARY 16 Coach Cathy Paskert's basketball team became the first women's squad in Montclair history and the second in MSC athletic history to play against an international squad. The Squaws clashed against the Nationalist Chinese Olympic team and lost, 104-40. The women managed to save face, though, even in defeat because in 1970 the men's soccer team lost to the University of Tel Aviv in MSC's first international confrontation. JANUARY 26 Indian fencers found victory especially sweet as they edged Newark Rutgers for the second straight year, 15-12. The win was the third for the defending North Atlantic champions in five outings. Sabre fencer Glen MacKay, who led the team in previous meets, took his first loss of the season. MacKay is

Montclarion Photo by Guy D. Ball. now 14-1. JANUARY 28 TWO: Montclair State's super-guard Bruce Davis (10) gets o ff a shot (despite efforts to the contrary by a Tom Dux hit for 14 points as the Indians downed Newark Newark State defender) and need we say more. Davis and friends broke a six-game losing streak with a State, 79-53, to snap the worst losing streak for MSC in six 79-53 victory over Newark. years. MSC's longest string defeats came in the 1930-31 season when the Indians lost eight in a row.