00 'IOr ftft- WEDNESDAY APRL 9 1975
Statesman Stony Brook, New York %%.- Volume 18 Number 68 Distributed free of charge throughout campus and community every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
-A -w - -- olN, - - - - - I It Dick Gregory Fine Arts Funds Cut Back; Dick Gregory, political activist, comedian, social c o m m e n t a t o r, Construction Halt Results Presidential candidate in construction worken spew te w 1968, spoke to a full house By DAVID GILMAN In an alleged attempt to balance the on Long Island, on everytig down to in the Gym Sunday State budget, construction of Fine Arts their sandwiche," said Whie. "Th evening(right).The event Phase IIand of the Social and Behavioral construction of these c naonly sponsored by the Student Sciences Building has been "suspended add to the economy of LoMa End." Activities Board was indefinitely by the Bureau of the According to White, the coasxuction successful in captivating the Budget," said University spokeswoman companies offendd vry low -b"k In an audience, enlightening the Alexis White. attempt to receive the eoutaet for the listeners and spurring a The consequential loss of potential Behavioral rScieocef Building aM for up revived interest in the employment to hundredsof construction Fine A Buding. e oozte it at N be am Kennedy assassination. This workers has aroused the concern of decided not to pod need the jobsb^ add Mite. week's Take Two focuses University administratos and of on Greg H construction subcontractors who were slated to receive the projects. Ralph Howel Jr.,, pene g tde White said that the work stopage EW. Howe_ Cowstuc m , *e would have "a whole multiplier effect" Elm which ofwd the lowet ba xw te on the economy of Long Island. "Mhe (CGontiued on page 3)
Polity Budget The Polity Senate will begin two days of deliberations and hearings regarding the 1975-76 Budget this afternoon. A list of the Budget C o m m i t t e e 'I recommendations and the schedule for appearances by groups before the entire Senate appears on page 9. AN AR TST'S ENDITION 0 M- .
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I 1 4 -r 19- - _- --- h- 1' i' --i r i , ; "I- --,--- , s% fF Proposed Constitution Receives P lolity Appoval By LYNN McSWEENEY "in the same way well be j utyig The main lounge of Sanger College was the site their activity fees in a few days for ye. of hours of debate, the resignation of the judiciary Sanger Senator Jason Mano sald, 'Toduaen chairman and a written protest reprimanding those ue represnted in the Sena. w 1ere _ senators who did not show up for the begins. The Council is only he constitutional conveNation Monday night at a branch of the government, not the , combined Polity Senate-Council meeting. The which is the Senate." In l i , that proposed Polity constitution was passed at the "Freshmen in the ounc _=1't -nt meeting but must still be voted on at the next men students to begin with." senate meeting. Mount Senator Bny S sd, e Cowl The major change in the proposed constitution is voted on by all, but teir Job is to cary cut th over the existing one is the new definition of the plicies of than who ae _ III , LAI., he- Executive Council. Under the new constitution the Senate. TbeM qep tioW [for Is in Executive Council would include the Polity the Senate.91 president, doe esident, secraetry, and treasurer, MIS acta p1ower of fCthe u dr and the newly-created office of vic sue r. It propaNed constltuton woud emai doe ae. would replace the four alm representatives with A new on of the t wasla "three at large members, all elected by the Student was th in trodum of a cdeck upo th Polity." Judiciar whkh caed ludiia a a Treasurer Ronald McDonald and Fhan A to announce hism Representative Robert LatOr voiced tion to (ory on pp 3). Aleaobedw tohe art the constitution during the meetg oiad which dates ta Senat cm W NW objected to the provision which not Judiciary les by a 2/3 vote ot t f sats" guarantee each class its ow repneentative. "How Alroenr agPes, "It e h can you justify the bact that incoming f men Unlk any other Judiciary in the wodd, it cbe will not have somebody to represent them in the vetoed." government?" asked McDonald. However, ding to langmuir 8 k According to Later, "here will still be no one Minai, this does not refer to Judl unyi but to represent freshmen in Polity when next year's to the Judicia by4aws. Stat-Mn pno »yY Al Tari freshmen enter. This Council at hlar won't be Mangineisi id, "Judiciary rules a not ralkW Their decisions on what is constitutiona Is faAL. CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATE: A joint Council-Senate represented by freshmen." meeting was held to discuss and support the new proposed Polity President Gerry Manginelli said that the This provision is meant to 'wvent offt4iwail Polity constitution. lack of a freshman representative will be justified (ContinuW on pff 6) -I 1% - I~~~~~~~~~~ PI News BrieIs Roncallo Back to Private Life By AL TRONER I Angelo Roncallo found Secret Pacts with South Vietnam? himself out of politics for the first time in January 1975 when Senator Henry Jackson (D-Washington) said yesterday that he has his Congressional seat in New learned of wert agreements between the United States and South York's Third Congressional Vietnam and called on President Ford to mwe them public. Jackson District was taken over by said in a Senate speech that he will call administration officials Huntington Town Supervisor before one of his subcommittees if the "documents embodying or Jerome Ambro, a Democrat. reflecting these secret agreements" are not made available Ambro had beaten Roncallo in voluntarily. November 1974 in the The ofticials to be called presumably would include Secretary of predominantly Republican State Henry Kissinger, who played the chief role in negotiating the district, which spans parts of Pads agem ent on Vietnam. both Nassau and Suffolk Jackson, a candidate for the 1976 Democratic presidential Counties. nomination, said his information on the alleged secret agreements Roncallo's defeat uw comes from "the bet of authority." "In faitess to President Ford, I attributed both to the general think it is only recently that he found out," added. Jackson anti-GOP tide that raged Long aid that the agreements "envision fateful American decisions" but Island in November, and to his that their "'very existence ha never been acknowledged" even to indictment earlier in the year on Congress. charges stemming from actions he committed while Town of UNEF Mandate to be Extended Oyster Bay Republican Leader, a post he resigned from in Diplomatic sources reported that Egypt, Israel and the big powers January, 1973, when first agreed to a thre-month extension of the mandate for the United elected to Congress. Even Nations Fore (UNEF) separatIIg Egyptin and Israeli though he was acquitted, the troops in the Sinai. But Isrel circles at U.N. headquarters in New stgma did not leave. Board of Assessors was an act of York denied the reports. The current m Ndae expis April 24 of Roncallo also served as Nassau the District Attomey's offe. I seem to think the nature of the patronage. Do you feel this to be this yea. County Comptroller before indictments were political. They 80? Officials in Jerusalem insisted today that the idea of new territorial being elected to Congress were used on a fund-raising R: Obviously. I think the first withdrawal offer to Egypt was only "theoretical" at present. But following the New York State basis and it was my opinion that I was criterion was: Am I qualified to qualified sources said the Iselis were thin g of withdrawing even reapportionment due to the a victim of circumstances in this hold the job, and I think I was. deeper than was proposed during Secretary of State Henry 1970 census. He was the first respect. If they want to change As a result of that I was given Ki-r'-'s Uns es peace shuttle lost month. The sources said Congressman from the new the method [of raising the job. It's still axiomatic that the new proposal would call for vacating rougiy half of Sinai from Third Congressional funds], District. which is presently legal and political organizations run on north to south. But it would hinge crucially on Egypt's readiness to Before then, Otis Pike which everyone uses, and if it patronage. The Times says that end the state of war with Isael and would come only after Egypt (D-Riverhead) and James Grover was wrong for me to solicit firms Mr. Beame is bringing the proved its peaceful intentions with actions. (R-Babylon) were Suffolk doing business with the town or Democratic party back to the County Is two Congressional county, then they should pass clubhouse by patronage. This is representatives; Commimmion Acts for Aged Grover's district laws indicating this. how you hope to organize your extended into eastern Nassau. S: You're in favor of strong political organization and make Morris Abram, chairman of the Moreland Act Commission on With the increase in population, campn-fundig laws then? it effective. But there's no Nuning Homes, told a news conference ytday he wao"outraged, Suffolk gained a share in a third R: Yes. There is no reason why question that my appointment _adned and terribly conned" by the Oibf govenmment to congressional district. those laws shouln't be pased. was patronage. assle adequate srvics to the aged. The caIrman had called the But don't use one individual as a S: But does it serve the people confeece at commission headquarters to release the text of a letter S: How did you get into politics, method of trying to establish a best? be had written to Governor Hugh Carey ou the direction and new law. If the legislature wants R: It doesn't serve the people if scope of the cmma n's inquiry. Mr. Roncallo? R: When I got out of law to enact these laws, use the unqualified people are put into "We must try to find out where the pd bity lay that school I recall there was a local pressures of public opinion upon the job. It serves the people if preventd action, that penritted the fest g soae to become issue. On my block there were the legislature to enact these appointments are qualified. I VxWrnous," Abt-n said. "And when we find that person who no sidewalks. The town had laws. They should set up certain would have to take that on a ~fled to act, we want to put that person before your cameras and passed an ordinance to put instances where it would be a case-by-case basis. ask: Why?" sidewalks in, and the majority of conflict, where R: Looking at the Energy Crisis The irman said the commission lacked authority to close down the political the people didn't want them. We parties would not deal with we'll have to swallow a bitter ning homes. However, he said any nursing home activity the pill. Well have to accede to the commission suspects is minal wanted to keep it as suburban as businesses which deal with a will be referred for possible inevitable off-shore oil drilling, prosecution. possible. A little issue like that municipality. became a big issue and I went S: In the last election the in order to maintain -our present down to the local Republican Democrats scored some quality of life on the Island. I'm More Aid Asked for South Vietnanm club to complain. The substantial successes at the polls. hopeful that we can get fai-safe councilmen were down there What would you attribute this machinery so our Island won't Army Chief of Staff General Frederick Weyand has recommended to? get spoiled. I think the Island to President Gerald Ford that Congress be askd for at and, I guess as a result of my big least $550 R: It wa a result of the will continue to grow and I hope million in immediate, additional military aid for South Vietnam, mouth, they wanted to know why I was interested. I said I was Watergate scandal, and some of it will grow in an organized plan State Depatment sources said yesterday. The recommendation by interested in my own personal President Ford's unpopular so we don't become another Weyand, who returned over the weekend from an inspection trip to interest - that was it. I decisions and we suffered for it. New York City. I want to keep South Vietnam, would increase by$200 million the aid being sought continued to go to club meetings I know we suffered for it ... I suburban life. by the administration for the Saigon jpvernment to make mm I knew what was received 58,000 less votes on the S: Do you think that it is Weyand reportedly told Ford and Secretary of State Henry going on in my own area. Republican fine. They stayed possible to keep the suburban K msr that the South Vietnamese army is still capable of fighting S: It appears that in Nassau the home and didn't bother to vote. pattern as you go further east? and if given the necay aid could hold off further North Republican party has had a S: Do you thmk that the R: Yes, with the proper Viea attacks. stronghold for many years. Do election of a Nassau as well as a planning. 'Me Bi-County you see this tendency toward Suffolk D.A. of the Democratic Planing Board has some good Living Cost Up 135% one party government as good party will result in more ideas We can keep that quality for the public? vigorous prosecution of of life here. The typical urban American family of four requires $14,300 R: I think the party represents a corruption? S: Do you think there should be annually to maintain a moderate standard of living, the Labor type of philosophy and the R: I'm sure they'll pursue every more stringent controls on oil Department said yesterday. This, after the wost inflation in 28 people are in agreement with avenue possible to uproot drilling? years, is $1,733 more than the previous year. The same family can that philosophy. The people corruption. I hope that they do R: Very much so. Unless we five at an austere level for $9,200 or at a level allowing some luxuries didn't like what was going on in it fairly, and in both parties have the safest methods possible for $20,800, the government said. The s calcutd for fall 1974 New York City and moved to where and if it exists. I hope we shouldn't allowit. It must be before taxes, rose 12.4 percent for the austerity budget, 13.5 Nassau. They liked the type of that it does not become a fail-safe. percent for the moderate budget, and 14.2 percent for the higher government they had in Nassau political spectacle, because if it S: Do you believe that Long budget over the previous year. The changes were the biggest county. As a result they does it will hurt, not help, them. Island's tax base will change? increases in any year since the Labor Department began publishing registered in our party. : Is it If they are looking for honest R: All over the U.S., the method its urban family budget in 1966. good? Certainly, if you don't government they'll have to of taxation will have to change. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, was at a rate have people watching pursue it on a bipartisan basis. 'Mere will have to be some of 12.2 percent last year, the steepest rate since 1946. Consumer government you can have Those people who are corrupt radical reform. The people who prices have risen another 2.7 percent since last fall.The budgets do corruption. We have had deserve the penalty of their can afford to will have to carry not represent bow families actually spent their money, but reflect scandals in the county and in the action. I don't think that in more. In the Bi-County area, it's assumptions about the manner of living. The are based on a city city of New York. I don't think today's atmosphere I could the homeowners carrying an family with a 38-year-old father who is an experienced worker, his that they are of major condemn anyone indicted before intolerable burden. There should nonworking wife, their 13-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter. proportions. You'll recall that they were convicted. be a fairer way to finance S:There have been chages that education. Conpild ad Edited from the Anociated Prs by Ls Berger. last year there were a number of
Page 2 STATESMAN April 9.1975 Polity Judiciary Chaiman Hax-ds in Resignation
By DAVID SPIGEL proxy. Almenar said that this turnout was related to a Judiciary Chairman Carlos Almenar announced his iack of communications with the result that "a lot of resignation Monday soon after the Senate had voted senators didn't know about the meeting." Minasd 25-7, one vote more than the 3/4 majority needed, to disagreed with this saying that Monday's vote on the pur a new Polity Constitution on a referendum to be proposed constitution was announced at the Senate held April 17. meeting of March 20, and in three Statesman articles and Almenar is opposed to a clause of the new proposed announcements. constitution which states: "The Judiciary shall establish Almenar charged that during the meeting "[Vice all rules and procedures for the operation of the President All Federman wouldn't allow you to debate." Judiciary, which shall be kept on file with the Polity However, Federman said that he '"went around the floor Secretary. The Senate can veto any Judiciary rules by a twice, allowing 30 seconds for a question and one 2/3 vote of the filled seats." Almenar interpreted this to minute for an answer ... no one objected to that at the mean that the Senate can veto a Judiciary ruling, which, time." he maintained, "is not allowed in any democratic and Almenar claims that the new constitution, which was constitutional country." formulated during last weekend's Constitutional But Languir Senator Mark Minasi, a supporter of the Convention, will harm freshman students because of its new constitution, said that under the proposed elimination of the post of Freshman Representative, constitution "the Senate cannot overrule Judiciary which "traditionally has fought for freshman interests in ruling." He added that the proposed constitution the past." LANQMUIR SENATOR MARK" -tAS referred only to the Senate overruling Judiciary by4aws. Lack of Provisions Opposed oompromise." He added tat no am- Was Almenar also disagreed with the way the Senate Freshman Representative Robert Later, along with bappy and that m e ffi at th s s meeting in Sanger College was carried out. Almenar Polity Treasurer Ronald McDonald and Judiciary noted th-al onrl- 2 of toa 1satr voted manv by member Roxanne Row, also expssed opposition to good." lack of provisions for a eman representative. While Almenwr hb _ d istenon to ftmt VW Minasi said that he would "back putting In a freshman propose constituto and I 1 f g representative," he also said that "I like this COmittee to Throw the Bums ad r Constitution because it is Senate-oriented. The Council Out." is obsolete, there is no need for it." ^""' * * ~~~~- * The proposed constitution, if ratified by the student body, '"will eliminate the power of the Council, putting Career M-eetir most of the power with the president," said Almenar. Almenar said that individuals running for the three at-large positions on the Council in place of the present Coming Soon- system of four das representatives will "support the RICHADKORN Polity president because they don't have to run against By Caer Confenee WIR specific opponents, and that will result in a coattail The second Stony Brook begi Monday April 14. effect for the president" take place next week Later agreed with Almenar. He said, "I'm completely A~sssnt Ca=u Developmet Audrey WOmS against the proposed constitution." He added that the said that the nce d to hIelp Stony Brook students obtain inoration to as | "Council is completely impotent under the new "The i constitution.' them in making career do Hoever, Minasi described the proposed constitution as a "good conference will not be a -_t otfie," oid Williams The primary purpose of the on ren is to. provide students and coWImuit * mbers h Fine Arts Construction Disconlinued; career saidmseng, Assistatc Vim President Alan HEtine. Howewer, Btine said ditd students "could make contacts how. [ c .d Job and Cultural Losses Foreseen lead to jobs.. Entine said that ommunity bae ao (Continued from page 1) "probably be turned down." felt the crunch from the sdon Md t ee Social and Behavioral Sciences Building, said the A total of four projects have been abandoned by the counseling could be beneficial to them. building contract "was never even awarded." Howell Bureau of the Budget in addition to the two at Stony The conference was planned in Icmbber said claimed that the funds necessary to begin construction Brook. One of these is at Buffalo State University and Entine. Williams and Entine agee t 9ony were appropriated last year by the State Legislature. the other one is at Purchase State College. University Brook undergraduates have done tee bulk of the Therefore, Howell said that the construction of the President John Toll claimed that the completion of both work in organizing the event. Stts eled in Social and Behavioral Sciences Building is "well within structures is vital to the growth of Long Island, and is an independent economic studes m hage the budget." detrimental to the University's ability to accept new beea extremely helpful, said Enfte. 'They Howell, in explaining the effect such a work halt students. written reports on employment -Iport in would have on the economy of Long Island, said that his According to White, the completion of these two various industries and en t firm stipulated that the construction would span two buildings is essential to the growth of the University. represented at the conference, " besaid. years and would employ 100 workers on the "To delay these buildings would cramp us because we More than 100 business and n t construction site, and another 40 off the site. "These accept many junior college graduates, and to complete agencies have notified the conference coars men will now be unemployed," said Howell, "and the these two buildings would complete the academic core," that they will participate at te o e. potential jobs will be disbanded " she said. Representative for the Suffolk Co -I April 9. 1975 STATESMAN Page 3 A=- - - l AT TIWC Staunwmu *sm-v an -as A I i AgMnt SIZZLER-VW FRHI IN 1975 - CAN YOU DO IT AT HOME FOR THESE UNBELIEVABLE LOW PRICES? Rw NM Re NOW TOP SIRLOIN 3-1W L 2 FISH PLATTER V 141S THE SIZZLER 9i4« 2.99 STEAK SLOBSTER 4S* &9 NEW YORK 3MS 3.19 STEAK f CRAB NEW1 32 T40NE MB 3.S0 FISHIERMAS PLATTER 3:0 34* SUPR SIZZLER NM SHRIMPOINNER 2:9 2.BS (12 ox.) hwoI 39- STEAK &SHRIW M 3 M GROUND BEEF 2:B 1.0 SUPER BURGER B 1.ml SIRLOIN STEAKA^90 29B LI$ HAMBURGER *9e sk c STEAK ANDWICH 2MB 1.- HI AOTEINS 1.2 FILET MIGNON CHILDREN UNDER 12 TOP SIRLOIN R-.2MLWPW L.99 -GROUND BEEF RW» TSaNWM 99c uo an GALS BURGER LUNCHa'Ml .1.49 1-F. - STEAK LUtCH'bft2-9 LUNCH SPECIA s GO-D mm. - SAT. ILL 4 PM. EACH LUNCH IINCLUDES FRIES. SALAD &BEVERAGE - - WF-qMV-Wr* <=P~o AWV < TE HOCKEY TEAM ( I WE ARE UNDEFEATED IN LEAGUE PLA Y! [TOWN SIZZLB& ( 133 W. MAIN ST. I COME TO THE GAMES AND SEE EXCITING BEER &WINE AVAILABLEI { SMITHTOWN, N.' Y. ! HOCKEY. 724-3084 Next to Spiral flaircase Uni-sex Hm.,yPA:- Wed., April 9 Vs. New York Tech 10:30 PM ^ Nibbled by a Horse Sat., April 12 Vs. New York Tech 10:30 PM I Pupils in a suburban school of- < Wed., April 16 Vs. Suffolk C.C. 8:15 PM I ten walked to a nearby pasture, Sat., April 19 VS. Farmingdale 8:15 PM I where they would stand beside ! Wed., April 23 VS. Suffolk C.C. 8:15 PM the fence and commune with the horses. One day, one of the horses reacbed over the fence and nipped Sat. & Sui., April 26 & 27 PLAYOFFS a little boy on the car. U I In short order, the boy's parents 00000 I aimed a damage suit at the owner of the pasture. All games are at easy to reach Raquet and Rink. Take the LIE to exit 49 and take Rt. 11(0 south. Turn after Railroadbridge that has Raquet and Rink sign. It's right at the end of the street. (Conklin Ave.) 00000000000000P0 0000000W00000 - - - Ab ^ "h.- ^ .fi_--AN.- "M..ob< -PI IMW --Wl~~~~~~~~~~w Saturday, April 1; ! , ADMISSI From the > t \ FREE _our son was outside the fence, niahauishnu doing nothing wrong they point- ed out in a court hearing. "Te i defendant should have warned the children that the animal was But they offered no evidence to !) CHINA 4- prove that the horse had ever mis- behaved before Denying their claim, the court said the owner was entitled to asnume-until I ^. DAY ) there was reason to think other- WSHNU STB wis-that the horse would not hurt anvbody. tEXHIBITIONN /f Vido&io 4 EeftdBy 1:00-8:00 p.m. >, r V Hones, because of their tradi- f Union ^ Eternity's Breath-Parts 1 & 2 tionally peaceablc disposition, Ula's Dance/Can't Stand Your Funk generally do set this -benefit of the : CULTURE SHOW Cosmic Strut/On The Way Home lb Earth doubt" But, of course, there are circumsance in which a horses , 8:00 p.m. Union Aud. owner can and should foresee ^.I1h.-"Oh.-1.0- ^ 9bH^HAIb^N1N9 N^ f N^N hN trouble. I Thus, the proprietor of a livery 4 . stable was held liable for allowing WUSB MUSIC DEPARTMENT PRESENTS: an inexperienced rider to go out on a hon known to be tempera- Mahavishnu Special: Includes an interview with John mentaL The court said the tumble McLaughlin. Sunday, April 13 at 2:30 p.m. that ensued could have been fore- Special: Music and interviews from a reason- George Harrison seen and prevented by Guide for time and date. able exercise of caution by the recent tour. Check Program pro;grietor. Album GiVa WayS:Alt of April! Tune in for details. Then too, the law will take into account the behavior of the vic- Progressw Rock: Sue Weitzman, Chronos, Paul tim as well He himself is expected Ber anski, Quayle, Brocoly Spears, Tom Vitale, Kirk to take elementary precautions for Ward PC 33411 his own safety. As one judge remarked: Jazz: Lister Hewan-Lowe, John Salustri, Kim Watson, Led by Mahavishnu John McLaughlin, and featuring That horns ar not especially Dave Nierman, Dave Jabblon, Tom Vitale, Bill Dorr, Eric Jean-Luc Ponty, Michael Walden. Ralph Armstrong and iteligent, that they are easily Asmundson Gayle Moran, the Mahavishnu Orchestra has created a sartledf that their principal means new milestone In music. "Visions of the Emerald Be- Rita Glassman, John Hayes, Michael Battiston, of defese is to kick, have for cen- ClessicSl: yond": unmatched excitement and musicianship from Mettalinos turie boen amon the simple facts Charlie Trench, Valerie the most influential band of our time. of life. People who approach W*k-Up MUSc: (Talk. News, etc.): Calvin Shepard. ho frm the rear, without fAMt On Columbia Records and Tapes aking ctheirpresence known, are Pete Maybeck, Larry Levy, Mangia Battiston, Mike very apt to be kicked." Gaiman, Bruce Bruce Available at Times Square stores Folk: John Erario Disco: Gary McDougal and Record World stores A puble serviOe feature of the Mid-Late Sixties Messag Music: Norm Prusslin New York State Bar Asociation Appearing at Stonybrook University- and the American Bar A'socia- From Your Musical Friends at WUSB 820 AM The Gym, April 13th tiom. Written by Will Bernard. Where Music Begins in Stony Brook! 0 1974 American Bar Association MARCA REG. - *"COLUMBIA." Page 4 STATESMAN April 9. 1975 I A CTI ON L INE } Proposed Constitution Supported I I (Continued from page 1) The ceiling in our suite bathroom leaks whenever there i I by-laws." However, Almenar said, "Mhe Board of rain or melting snow on the roof above. Trustees has the final say over by-laws If a call to the quad office does not result in the solution of anyway ... so that excuse means nothing." a problem of this nature, one may contact Assistant Director Siskin charged that both the present and the of Housing Frank Trowbridge, which is what Action Line did. proposed constitutions give no power to the Trowbridge promised "to check into this and send someone to Judiciary. 'The Judiciary has to be an impartial fix the leak as soon as possible." body, [because] they can veto anything they want," said Siskin. The fire alarm bells in Cardozo College B-wing have not According to Manne, 'The Senate can check the been working properly for almost a year. This is certainly a Council, and the Council can check the Senate, potentially dangerous situation. Please see that it gets fixed. but there's no check on the Judiciary as of now." Action line contacted Assistant Director for Safety Alfred Almenar objected to another provision in the Gray. In response to this inquiry, he said that vandalism and same article which stated that "no member of the thefts had been the cause of problems with that system but Supreme Polity Court may hold an offiek in the that he was not aware that the bells were not functioning Student Polity government other than that of a again. The Simplex fire alarm bell system in Cardozo was justice." Almenar said, "It's for the Judiciary to serviced and repaired. decide how it restricts its own body." Almenar said the constitution and the In the Action Line column today (3/12/75) it was stated Polity-Senate Council meeting was "a sham, a that the Gym parking lot is a 'private peking lot belonging shaft, and a railroad." He resigned as judiciary to Stony Brook." This was cited as justification for towing chairman, objecting to the fact that the away cars. But ist Stony Brook a state institution and part of constitution was decided in "less than 36 hours," the State University of New York? How can Stony Brook be and that there was a time limit put on debate. both private and public at the saue time? Remand Read rl ITY T IH^IUHMK RONLD _JLo Assistant Director of Safety and Action Line contacted the Also, in response to the poor attendance at the giving them teoa VW dMoffM w said Security Alfred Gray, who clarified the ambiguity. He Constitutional Convention held this past weekend, presently duwe. Th e office be nod not private, so to speak, that although the Gym parking lot is Siskin read an announcement, which thanked for the Jud y ot R. X , Od a M it is a restricted parking area which is reserved for use by " . . . those members of the Council who didn't to blih a libon" om e betwee COCA, faculty and staff members. bother showing up at the Constitutional SAB and Poityw -0ped. - Convention, but made it their business to come Tab w pen for th upcomin My car was broken into and the thief turned on my lights. here to vote against [the constitution]. This points Springfesked the Senate for $200 white In turn, my car battery went dead. I called Security to make up just why legislation should reside in the had not gtten fom th Pg aevices be towed away the next day. I later i mm my car wouldn't Senate." A half-dozen senators added their Committee (PSC). by Pi r found out that Security gives jumps to cars with dead signatures to Siskin's. In addition to evluatin the (700. A motion to gnt them this moqey filed batteries. Why didn't the woman on duty tell me this? proposed constitution, tile procedure for the An announcement wu also unde by G¢nt Action Line contacted Security and found that their upcoming budget was discussed. Also, a motion stating that commuter Senator Linda LaViolette e explicit policy is not to jump cars. They do not carry jumper was considered which would give COCA and SAB no longer a senator wof the Ma et to cables in their cars. Instead, Security may refer the car owners a desk in the front office of Polity instead of excesie a Ce& to a local service station. Boo of the Week On the night of the "Commander Cody" concert, a CSEA Negotiating with State, student's car was broken into and her tape deck stolen. She attempted to report the crime to a Security officer nearby Albany (AP)-A lawyer for required to pay such a fee, ev state. who told her to report the incident the next day, i.e., Monday. the state said Tuesday the state though thev too benefit fraom But R _ s he It appeared that the Security officer was engrossed in a does not object in principle to contrat improvements wonby wanted nore spiftc crossword puzzle. The student eventually got her way after a the concept of an agency shop, the public employe union at te informationo ette bitter argument. one of the key contract demands bagning table. Crossword puzzles are enjoyable to many'people, but the of the Civil Service Employes "We are not opposed to work before ae to It He issue is that this incident is an example of Security's all too Association (CSEA). agency shop in theory and in said he Pa ted t often lack of concern with students' problems. Too many An agency shop provision concept," lawyer . Howard know how much the f11cy times, students are abused and ignored by our protective force. would allow the CSEA to charge Rubenstein told a three-member shop fee would be and how t To solve the problem of lack of security on campus, let's start non-members the equivalent of fact-finding panel appointed to would be hnp with a change of attitudes of the members that we have. union dues as a bargaining fee. iron out a contract dispute The CS'As contract propoad Non-union members are not now between the CSEA and the did not it Into iecfts on the issue but a CSEA lawyer »ud during the bearing that th Senior Ball This Month union would Mm to ehap University Relations is seniors who will pay $30. non-union members the same sponsoring a graduation ball this DeWaal said that there will be no amount of money OSc YOU IO month "in honor of the senior complimentary tickets issued. union membe pay in due,,and class" in coordination with the All proceeds go toward the that such a fee could be charged Stony Brook Alumni Stony Brook Alumni through payroll deduon. Association, said University Scholarship Fund. Rubenstein, I p ng the Relations student employe Gary The alumni weekend will be a state's postion on DeWaal. two-day event beginning Friday, noted that Governor Hugh C "It's being handled entirely April 25 with a "Rock and has said he has no objecdions to by the Alumni Association, said Raggin'" in H Quad Cafeteria the concept. DeWaal. He said that there are which will feature a dixie land Rubenstein' oents ca no representatives of the senior jazz band, "oldies" songs from durin the third day of bearing class participating in the WUSB and refreshments of before the fact-findg p , planning of the event. DeWaal, a bratwurst and beer will be whih is expected to take up the junior, is arranging the affair available. The gration ball question of health in with University Relations alumni will be held Saturday night at when it meets again i on coordinator Wes Periotus. the Old Field Club. "We threw around the idea" Polity Information Director Chairman M e Bernewitz of inviting Polity members to Joe Gerberg, a senior, said that of Manhasset, Jonas Sivr of participate in the planning of the he will not be attending the North Merrick and John ball, said DeWaal. However, the graduation ball because '115 McConnell of Ithaca Went the 1 Alumni Association anticipated puts it out of my reach, as well first 2 A ddys of their hean on that Polity might be as, I suspect, many other grievance procedure which the unresponsive to the event and seniors." However, Gerberg said CSEA is eing under a wage decided that "it wasn't worth that the affair "is a good thing reopener cloue. the hassle" of requesting Polity's to have. I think people could get The union said it wanted assistance. The concept of a into it because this is the only tougher 'picing" powers over Statesman photo by Al Tarigo graduation ball originated a few time of the year for them to get disciplinary hearings and an months ago when the alumni all dressed up and have a formal automatic administrative hearing Loop Road Reopened association decided to organize evening." for any state employe who the prom as part of its annual But a senior who did not wish receives a discipline notice. said, "I don't THE GATES ARE GONE FROM LOOP ROAD as construction on alumni weekend, he said. to be identified The union also id it is the new high temperature hot water heating system proceeds near Approximately $300 to $500 trust University Relations. I seeking a 15% percent wage Roth Quad. Loop Road has been closed since the beginning of the is7 expected to be grossed as don't think that their interests boost for most of its employes. semester to allow for installation of pipes. With the opening of the profit if the full participation of lie with the students." He said The state has offered a $260 road, the bus routes have once again, been altered. The construction that he "would like to keep bonus in lieu of raises and a has shifted to Mount College, where the bus turnaround, Mount 200 persons is realized, said parking lot, and Heavy Engineering parking lot will remain closed DeWaal. Tickets will be sold at arm's distance" from University deferment in payment of salary past the end of the current semester. $35 per couple, except for Relations sponsored events." increments until the end of July. April 9 1975 STATESMAN Page 5 & EL f mi mnw w- B APRIL 10, 1975e I Hi lBHR fi*OrBUi proudly presents| "--Announcing the First A _^ STONY BROOK | the GRAND OPENINGofE ^" SHESH BESH TOURNA _ sponsored^ by Hillel ,ZAPSSTEAK OUSE our firsti| all inclusive night club. ___ HH_ To be held on Wednesday,, HONE To enter, call Danny at 6-7209 o SHOW: 7:00-11:00 PM| M~~EVERY ;751-7924, or put your name on t THURSDAY NIGHTj list in the Hillel mailbox in the We Provide: " room 258 in the Union. All entri Dl *Continuous enleriainnm ;by April 14. Prizes will be aware ent four finishers. i __ 0|l * Delicious sirloin steakE a MdQmmdddd *Baked potatowith sour cream and chives * Steak & Brew's famous salad bar and breadE * All the beer, wine and sangria you could possibly drink * Including tax ALL $ 95 WITH $ f.5 FOR l STUDENT LD. 0 Smithaven Mnall B~rEd T u hopes to see you every Thursday night for & our 7-11 show. { For information and reservations, call 979-8544. r ww]A » w L w Arq ALnd 4hr- LY Page 6 STATESMAN April 9. 1975 ____^ mm~mm^ »--2^^ ~ - - '~KRcauajpU9 M9MJ17QM I Editors-Jonathan Friedman, Gerald Reis; Director Appointed Editorial Assistant-Sandi Brooks. The Faculty Student Association (FSA) has WUSB on 91.9 FM appointed Tom Moffett as the new services Second Moon? director. According to FSA Administrator Lou Bauer, Moffett "will be responsible for the management of all FSA auxiliary services and Titan, the largest of Saturn's 10 moons, may Wednesday Nights will assist the FSA administrator in monitoring become as familiar in name as our moon, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 7:00 - LOCKER ROOM - all contractual services provided to FSA by thanks to scientists at Stony Brook, whose Rachel Shuster recaps this outside companies." recent discoveries about the feasibility of 3:00 pmn. - CLASSICAL week's Stony Brook sorMUM Before coming to Stony Brook, Moffett landing on this outer solar system satellite may MUSIC with Charlie Trench. events. worked for the New York Telephone Company. affect future space exploration and provide new 5:15 - GRAPEVINE - Hear 7:30 - WORLD - OF insights on the origins of the solar system and about the latest upcoming ENTERTAIMENT. The best He has also worked for Grumman and happenings on campus from the entertainers froin Hoy10od, Hazeltine. life itself. Lady in Red and the Sweet Broadway and Las Vqs with Engineering Professor Robert Cess and Earth Painted Lady. Randy Bkom. Nursing Lecture and Space Science Professor Tobias Owen are 5:30 - RELEVANCE - Host 8:30 - THE NIGHT OF THE Columbia University Assistant Professor of reporting the presence of weak bands of Roife Auerbach interviews DAY BEFORE - Host POW methane in the spectrum of Titan. Their data Aryeh Neier, director of the Bermanski. Pediatrics Catherine DeAngelis will discuss American Civil Liberties Union, 11:30-WUSBSPORTS "Who is the Nurse Practitioner?" as the final on the appearance of these bands indicates that who discusses privacy in the U.S. 11:35 - MORE FAR OUT lecture in a weekly series conducted by the the surface pressure on Titan is greater than 6:00 - WUSB NEWS MUSiC-TOM Vftale. Health Sciences Center. sea-level pressure on Earth. 'Me professors were 6:30 - CANDOR - in-depth FRIDAY, APRIL 11 - DeAngelis, director of mte Pediatric Nurse assisted in their research by Jerry Woodman, a interviews of timely topics. 7:30 - NEW RELEASES - Practitioner Program at Columbia Presbyterian Uniity of Texas graduate student, who Mark Zuffante airs new material 8:20 am. - GOOD MORNING, Medical Center, will speak on Monday, April helped in the telescopic sightings of Titan at of rock groups. CAMP STONY BROOK - U.cle 14, at 7 pim. in South Campus F 147. thatt cwtius' McDonald Observatory. 8:30 - BEGGARS BANQUET Bruce Bruce Ives us music. The high suface pressure deduced by Cess - Host Ken Cohen fills your the. , tfi kns, reports, and explais the and Owen means that exploration of Titan by appetite with some progres Statesman Elections sounds. - hv"lnt qf po Io * l» Statesman has elected its new editors for the space probes is a relatively simple procedure. 11-:30 - WUSB SPORTS 12:00 p^. vA" . i 1975-76 academic year. They are: The braking power exerted by the atmospere 11:35 - POLYPHONIC DIMENSIONS vltaie. ,. . ;*-- '" Editor-in-Chief-Jonathan D. Salant; Managing on an entering probe would be sufficient to OF MY MIND allow scientific experiments to be made during with Kirk Ward. Editor-Ruth Bonapace; Associate (wsfn^f' - ^.. Editor-Rene Ghadimi; Business descent Alternatively, according to the professors, a parchute could be deployed to THURSDAY, APRIL 10 Managr-Jason Manne; News Director-David 8:20 am. - THE MORNING Gilman; News Editors-Rachael Komblau, achieve a soft landing. "In effect, it may be STAR ROMANTIC with "ichaO Lynn McSweeney, Dave Razler; Off-Campus easier to land on Titan than it Xs to land on Gaiman. WCNSOAY A»RL9 News Editor-Lisa Berger; Special Projects Mars, which has a very light surface pressure," 12:00 p.m. - ALL THAT JAZZ 5:00 pJm.; CLASSICAL Cess said. with Dave Nierman. MUSIC wh Mike 8aftton News Editor-Jayson Wechter; Feature/Arts 3:00 - CLASSICAL MUSIC 6.30 G RAPE V WV"O _C. Director-Michael J.S. Durand; Arts Methane was first discovered in Titan's with Valerre Mettallnos. and community . = Editor-Stephen Dembner; Feature atmosphere about thirty years ago and since S: 15 -GRAPEVINE produced by 04WbA Rubiw. Editor-Barbara Albers; Photo/Graphic that time had been considered a major 5:30 - HEAR ME ROAR - 7?.-0-SPORTS *tDixt Topics from the -Women's Director-Louis Manna; Photo Editors-David constituent of Titan's atmosphere, but the new Center. Spears Friedman, Ken Katz, Gregg Soloman; Sports evidence implies the existence of large amounts 6:00 - WUSB NEWS Editor-Stuart M. Saks; Assistant Sports of some other gas. 6:30 - OPEN FORUM -with FOLK-ROCK. Host - Ken V Debra Rubin. I%- Cohen. . il I~~~STONY BROOK STUDENTS PRESENT THE SECOND ANNUAL |C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~areer (Infrmain Conferenc I~~~~~~~APRIL 14th THROUGH 18th *~~~~~~STONY BROOK UNION I~~~~~GUEST SPEAKERS JH~~~~~~~~Representatives from: C_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~~~~~~~Business Arts and Humanities Science HJ _ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~------_ H ~~~~~~~Communications------and-- --- Media------Recreation------~ Consumer~ ~ ~ Groups:~ ~ ~ ~ w j| ~~~~~~~Environmental Control Govenment Public Services fits ~~~~~~Manufacturing Marketing and Distribution Personnel Services | ~~~~~~~~Health Construction Education |H~~~~~~~~~Transportation |~~~~~~SCHEDULE6 WILL BE POSTED |~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ALSOMWID-CAREER COUNSELING AND INOMTION |~~~~~~FOR MORE IN FORMA TION CALL HI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~James College - 246-7782 Career Development Office -246-7024 April 9, 1975 STATESMAN Page 7 - I ------MP= a BOX OF MLUNCHKINS * The Stony Brook Jewish a Association will a Student a* sponsor a bus to Manhattan * * on April 13th for * Soviet Solidarity Sunday. Those interested, call Shira at 6-4596. i HOT- I 2Ad60 d€ I 12 Managerial Assistant . I . I Positions I 2464 I Available for Fall 1975 I I I f R^ooW R"Zd4nU O4#) I I I _otailerd iob descrintions I Monday-l I applications will be I S24 Hours I lable at the I *--**-**-I I Roth Quad Office Thursdav, April 10 Now -w de -OM - l Friday, April 1 1 APPLICA TIONS are being accepted for the Rl #lobfers are Needed tohklp with tkl | of temporary postition 4 t15 CED ^w#7.,^ STUDENT BLOOD DRIVE | Student Government Secretary ;a te R ;ed 244d ofei 1 «kieh will be hold April 1tih in tla If . | For full infornation: Call Eise diDonato, "6-7049)en~wo<»~^ , oPlias eall Maddy at 6-7899.0J 246-3435. LO _am __0 -_ ___w- _ Ba - - FSA SERVICE COMPLAINT LINE 246-3672 UNION AMUSEMENT MACHINES BOOKSTORE LAUNDRY MACHINES POST OFFICE VENDING MACHINES BARBER SHOP CHECK CASHING FOOD SERVICE MAIN DESK BOWYLING, BILLIARDS 24 HOUR SERVICE STARTING MONDAY, APRIL 7TH For refunds, or complaints in person - Room 266, Stony Brook Union Monday thru Friday, 9 AM -5 PM - . -- - du Page 8 STATESMAN April 9, 1975 Proposed Polity Budget for 1975-76 Fiscal YearP, t I . The following groups will present their budgets to the HILLEL 2,444 10:50 Punch and Judy 1,805 -. 3:20l$ Polity Senate on Wednesday, April 9, in the Union HOTLINE 1,552 11:00 Refunds 3,500. 3:30 Auditorium at the time indicated on the right. . HEALTH SCI. CTR. 15,000 11:10 *-11-4 t, llrX INTERNATIONAL CLUB 3,194 11:20 STUDENTS ACTIVITIES BOARD 1975-76 TIME PIRG 5,000 11:30 Major Concerts 41,150 3:40- ATHLETICS PROPOSED POLITY ADMIN. 81,114 11:40 Theatre 11.150 Men's PROGRAM AND SERVICES 25,000 Speakers 14,080 Administration $ 3,055 2:20 COUNCIL Classical 5,500 Baseball 4,530 2:30 Informals 19,525 Basketball 6,874 2:40 The following clubs will make their presentations on Coffeehouse Circuit0 Crew 2,225 2:50 Thursday, April 10 in the Union Auditorium. Moods 3,239 4:10 Soccer 3,608 3:00 Publicity 0 4:20 Squash 3.002 3:10 PUBLICATIONS Swimming 3,456 3:20 Blackworld 4,062 2:20 SASU Administration 8,000 4:20 Tennis 1,352 3:30 Fortnight 12,667 2:30 Stony Brook Drana 2,805 4:30 Track/Cross Country 4,650 3:40 Polity Darkroom 7,000 2:40 SCOOP 13,098 4:40 Women's Soundings 2,270 2:50 Student Travel 2,250 5:00 Administration 1,147 3:50 Specu la 14,350 3:00 Basketball 2,944 4:00 Statesm-F 7) 7 i q 7A A -I0 The following clubs will make their piesmtations on Field Hockey 2.500 4:10 Thursday in the Lecture Center. First Aid 614 4:20 Gymnastics 7,491 4:30 Union Governing Board 27,100 8:10 Softball 2,370 4:40 Women's Center 32,94 8 :;20 Tennis 1,504 4:50 WUSB Clubs Wider Horizons 2064 8:40 Football 17,636 5:00 TOTAL $678,104 The following clubs will make their presentations on Wednesday in the Lecture Center. RECOMMENDED TO PSC Women Against Rape **f,,* ' y^, Ott 7,630 8:00 Amateur Radio ^ 9:00 Hockey : Kanzen Goju Karate 1,230 8:10 Fredorn Foods .;..> -t-OPS i Men's Gymnastics 1,480 8:20 SB V . ; 9:20 Outing Club 3,310 8:30 Unkivsity ChorusV , .. ' %. & - -- M -- - I ; UGB CALENDAR Wed., April 9 Thurs., April 10 Fry., April 11 Setv, Apial 12 \ iSun.., f e v -Age* ftA; , WNeI A11 RALLEPYHOURS **- 9 I II M m I I - - - ------ l A noV~^ wlnAhf,iofrHff r Health Prefewelo£ s soeot-y Wihe km " YE.S* fIn 27lX Meeting foo -6soiw. /it X, A Wed., April 9 8:00 PM ROCK & ROLL Every ) I Chem. Lee. Hall Rml16 Sunday Night II Topc: z I With MEDICAL SCHOOL &A INTERVIEWS BONNIE PARKER R^'fh^fff I 3 VILLAGE PLAZA .0ALOIIh inch 171L SETAUKET Students will speak of their »-i u w - - o m *__ experiences. ------ April 9,1975 STATESMAN D-g 9 I N~~~~~A I SPRTI CAR I||CETE C 1> VJR Y'SMALL | I~~~~559 I AST JERICHO TURNPIKE SMITHTOWN, N.Y. ' SMITH HAVEN MALL-| 'Jericho Turnpik* (Rt.2S)* *,~~~~~~~~~~-,. I CC -7»>iA-n>nn SERV/ICE - 724-0500 I ;>AtL-C.3-~-U«w ~ ~ ~~~F%FN , C--.,,%9«0. p„„w lsl»WMJ~~~~~~~~fEW " 75 HONDA CIVIC 6ACADEMY AWARD BIICJSU AUSTIN [j 6NOMINATIONS BRAND NEW 1l-i (. _ _ 1 RI -- I$r- -~ - ^ BEST PICTURE* 2oDr.& std. Fact. Equpt. $295| -BEST ACTOP- ARINA |$2499_ EUSTIN HOFFMAN - . --- - I ---q -BEFST AC TRESS- VALERIE PERRINE -BEST DIRECTOR- LeimF ofdWON rf AV WEEKDAYS 7:25 & 9:30 nad^ ~are 1 f SM~rHTOWnpav v I- SMITHTSW SMITHTOWN WEEKENDI 1:25, 3:30. 5:40, 7:45 & ALWVAYS A SE-LECTION OF IMPORTED USED CARS 9:55 * - - 0 - --- 'A 0 'IS I I Z3 VILLAGESETAUKI -A1 - - I - t 92 mp sa flook. I ROCK a&ROLL Every M~~n~~innrFOSfl Sunday Night AWAD-»i With BONNIE PARKER 3 VILLAGE PLAZA ACDEYs SETAUKET "BESTpukl (Showing at 7:00 It 9:30 Students with I.D. sm ADULTS - $2.50 RAUN MACKINNON and JAYNE OLDERMAN Wed., April 9 le - -o,-- -.- 8:00 p.m. Union Aud. 11 »yA e -.OagrgIi A- Students Free Public $1.00 .- rHE C I---- -bMOK " JOHN McLAUGHLIN and J a e---* ^SPONSORED BY THE CED STUDENT GOVERNMENT^ PRESENTS * MAHAVISH.NU : ~~~Short:-- ORCHESTRA Sun., April 13 8:00 p.m. Gym Color, 91 Minutes by Renee Taylor Friday & Saturday, April 11 & 12 at 7:00 & 1 1:00 PM Students 1.50 Public 5.00 Features:- Marlon Brando in. "syl"~~ MARIA MULDAUR ' j Black & White, 135 Minutes. 1963. by Fellini "Lat an o in Pris" Starring: Marcello Mastroianni, Anouk Aimee, Sun., April 20 Claudia Cardinale 8:00 p.m. Gym Thursday, April 10 i Sunday, April 13 at 8:00 PM ISWORD OF DOOM" Students 2.00 Public 5.00 Lecture Hall 100 8:30 PM t I TICKETS QIEQUIRED FRIDAY AND S.'TURDAY - COCA No Admission Charge CARD OR I.D. ON SUNDAY. TICKETS AVAILABLE MON-FRI, 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM IN THE TICKET OFFIrCE OR THE NIGHT DOUG KERSHAW OF THE MOVIE AT THE MAIN DESK. Fri., April 25 - I 9:00 p.m. Gym ,1PI a ' - I I a 1My. **.*'- p"Oving AtVUr Feworito &T VfT^f^-^SMSSSX bL. I &L-i UNITED ARtTIaST THEATRMs S~tuden ts 1.00 Public 2.50 .:q WIIA I L F Me~ I ^^^y ^^ ^1 ^ Ta.AOS IO11PT*~l APLIj..K ' ------., - - I I I 0 ;S(CONSET & HALLOCK RD.I I NOW SHOWING I M "A WOMAN UNDER ARTIE TRAUM and JEFF GOLDSTEIN Owraown THE INFLUENCE"If Academy A ward Nominee - Best Actor Sun., April 27 MR 3 3435 John Cassavetes - Best Director 2:00 p.m. ( STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL II1th Outdoors H-Quad "THE STING" -PLUS- "FOUR Free Admission __"AM ERIC AN GRAFFITI" _ MUSKETEERS"I IR~UffI 1ACADEMY ALL TICKETS Pf. xmmSO SU * AWARD I 5 I HR 31200 .NOMINEE I ON SALE NOW i I I Page 10 STATESMAN April 9. 1975 Calendar of Events * ------***-***^*»«B«™«««™ *--*----**--*^*.*i«»™™«™«™^^^«B««^« _B^^^^,|^^^_|^^^^ l ,^^^,^^^, ^^^^^^^^ r Wed, Apr. 9 MOUNT R.A.: Applications are available now and must RECITAL: Nancy Reed will present a master of musi be returned in the college office by noon, April 14. recital at 8:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 105. BAHA'I: The Baha'i community at Stony Brook Applicants must be on Mount College housing list for cordially invites the University community to attend an 1975-76 academic year. informal discussion in SBU 229 at 8 p.m. CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM :Prof. Ronald Cape of ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB: An important meeting for the University of Minnesota at Duluth dhiscusse "An JEWISH MEDITATION: Anyone interested in learning graduating seniors will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Graduate Account of a Russian Sojourn: Obsrvtion of an Jewish meditation should meet at 4 p.m. in SBU 229. Chemistry 456 featuring Prof. David Hicks discussing I ntramolecular 1, 5 - Hydride Shift in a Vinly Cation "Death Among the Tetum of Timor." Intermediate" at 4:30 p.m. in Chemistry 116. HOCKEY: Stony Brook and New York Tech compete at 10:30 p.m. at Racquet and Rink in Farmingdale. BLACK FORUM: Canute Parris discusses "The Myth of D A N C E : T h e U G B is spooking a mood th SBU Upward Mobility Via Athletics" at noon in SBU 223. Ballroom at 9:30 p.m. featuring oston Chwty" a rod HEALTH PROFESSIONS SOCIETY: The topic of this band, and beer at 25 cents per glass meeting is "Medical School Interviews" at 8 p.m. in CHE UGB: The Program Development Committee of the 116. Students will speak of their experiences. Union Governing Board meets at 5 p.m. in SBU 272. FILMS: COCA presents "Last Tango in Paris" tonigt and tomorrow at 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. in Lecture Ceter LECTURE/DEMONSTRATION: Jean Boyer, conductor THEORETICAL SOCIETY: All prer-med students are 100. and musical director of the New Musical Ensemble of urged to attend this important meeting of the Society at New York, will discuss and interpret a Claude Debussy 7 p.m. in Graduate Biology B24. - Science Fiction Forum screens "Journey to the opera in Lecture Center 105 at 8 p.m. Seventh Planet," as well as "Art," "*A Trip to the SLIDE SHOW: The Red Balloon will present "The Moon," *Cosmos," and two Road Runmr cartoons FORUM: There will be speakers and a discussion about History of Stony Brook," prepared by Robert F. Cohen between 8 and 10 p.m. and 'Voyage to the End of td the Committee Against Racism's Boston Freedom and Bob Weisenfeld, former Statesman editors, at 7:30 Universe," as well as "A Movie,"' ecrology," Summer Project, the fight against racism, school p.m. and 9 p.m. in SBU 236. "Dangerous Years," and the cartoons between 11 p. integration, and busing at 7:30 p.m. in SBU 237. and 1:30 a.m. Weather permitting, the films at 8 pnm. DAILY PRAYER: The Fellowship meets every weekday will be shown on a wallI of the Lectur Centr. BROWN BAG RAPPERS: Mrs. Adrienne Lind will in SSA 367 at noon. Otherwise, they will be presented in Rotb Cafetera discuss the entire field of herbs, entering into the tonight and tomorrow. - customary uses of them and the preservation and MASS: Catholic Mass is held every Monday, Tuesday, cultivation of them at noon in SBU 236. Bring your Thursday, and Friday at 12:15 p.m., SBU 229; THEATRE: The Kuku Ryku Theatre Labortory will lunch. Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Roth Cafeteria followed by a present an improvisational perfomaorn at 8 pm.in t light buffet; and Sunday at 11 a.m. in Roth Cafeteria. SBU Auditorium. Tomorrow afternoon th Labortory UFW: All old and new supporters of the United Farm will conduct an improvisational workshop in the SBU Workers Support Committee meet at 7:30 p.m. in SBU SELF-HELP WORKSHOP: Any woman who would like Ballroom. Call 246-7107 for further information. 214. to either form an ongoing self-help group or go through an introductory session should contact Gene at Sat, Apr. 12 LECTURE: Margaret Phelan, an authority on Ireland, 751-4434 or Stephanie at 862-8780. will speak on "The Irish Scene-All Illustrated Lecture" FILM: The Rainy Night House will have a movie at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 110. Thu, Apr. 10 marathon from 8:15 p.m. to 4 a.m. featurIng '"IT Andromeda Strain," 'The List of Adrian;Ms " at CONCERT: Raun McKinnen and Jayne Olderman will ISRAELI DANCING: Israeli dancing will be held in SBU 10:30 p.m., '"Sometimes a Great Notion" at 12:15 .nL, perform in the SBU Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tickets are lounge at 8 p.m. Beginners are welcome. and '"TheGroundstar Conspiracy" at 2:15 am. $2. SATSANG: An informal discussion on the Knowledge as ENTERTAINMENT: Robin Water and Moonstone will BASEBALL: The Patriots travel to Pace University to revealed by Guru Maharaj Ji will be held at 8 p.m. in perform in the Other Side Coffee House (Mount Coleg) play at 3 p.m. SBU 216. at 10:30 p.m. FSA COMPLAINT LINE: Call 246-3672, 24 hours a FILMS: The Cinema presents "2," a color short, and 1 MEDIEVAL STUDIES CONFERENCE: The cultural day, if you have complaints about laundry machines, Fellini's "8h" at 8:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 100. legacy and history of the Mkkiddle Ages will be the topk main desk, food service, bookstore, post office, etc. For of this forum. Registration is 10 atm. in Humanities 248 refunds or complaints in person, come to SBU 266, COLLOQUIUM: The Higher Education Colloquium and is free. Lunch will be available in the Senior Monday through Friday, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. continues at noon in SBU 213. Commons Room for $3. For additional information co 246-6500. FIRST AID SEMINAR: A first aid course, directed OPERATION GREEN THUMB: Refreshments and live toward wilderness and emergency needs, will be given in entertainment will be provided by ENACT during spring HOCKEY: Stony Brook's Hockey Club clashes with SBU 216 at 7 p.m. planting in front of SBU beginning at 12:30 p.m. Come New York Tech at 10:30 p.m. in Racquet 1 Rink join the fun. (Farmingdale). HILLEL ELECTIONS: All interested in being a candidate for a Hillel office for next year should contact LECTURE: Stony Brook's Jewish Student Association BASEBALL: The Patriots play a double-heder against Danny Cohen at 246-7209 before April 18. presents Ella Tamshe discussing "A Soviet Jew Reveals Queens at 11 a.m. on the athletic field. the Kremlin's Worst Kept Secret" and the movie "Out of CAREER COUNSELING: Information and counseling Bondage" at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 102. TENNIS: The team travels to Fairleigh Dickinson for a I will be available for juniors and seniors from 12 to 1 p.m. match. p.m. in SBU 214. COMMUTER COLLEGE: A general meeting will be held at 12:30 p.m. in Gray College Basement Lounge. CREW: The Patriots travel to Fordham for a threeay meet with St. John's. DAY CARE: Benedict Day Care Center is now accepting ESS SOCIETY: The Society meets at 12:15 p.m. to applications from students wishing to work during either discuss the Underground Undergrad Guide and "A TRACK: The team competes with New York Tech and the summer or fall semesters. Applications are available Stellar High With John Y." Don't forget course Baruch at 1 p.m. on the athletic field. between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. evaluation sheets. RECITAL: Rebbecca Flannery will perform on the harp EXHIBITS: The genius of Leonardo da Vinci can be SOFTBALL: The women battle C.W. Post at 4 p.m. on at 8:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 105. viewed in the Library Gallery in this special exhibition the athletic field. of models, built according to da Vinci's drawings from CONCERTS: Richard Moredock, pianist, will perform at 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday through April DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST: The Club and the 3 p.m. in Lecture Center 105. 18. organizing committee meet at 8 p.m. in SBU 223 to discuss the March On Boston For Integrated Schools, the - A jazz group. "LookoutFarm," will present a - A one-woman art exhibition of works in different upcoming Socialist Weekend, and more. All are concert at 9 p.m. in the SBU Ballroom. Tickets are media by Robin Epstein will be on display in the Library welcome. $2.50. (old periodicals room) through April 11. FREEDOM FOODS CO-OP: All members of the Co-op Sun, Apr. 13 - An exhibit of paintings and prints by Mavis Pusey are requested to attend this general membership SOLIDARITY SUNDAY: Stony Brook's continues in SBU Art Gallery through April 30, 11 a.m. meeting. Please bring an item for a potluck dinner to Jewish Student Association will to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Stage XII Cafeteria at 7 p.m. provide a bus to Manhattan for Soviet Solidarity Sunday. For additional information contact Shira Silvers at 246-4596. NOTICES: James College announces its Fifth Annual ENACT RECYCLING: The committee will meet to Photography Contest. The categories are Black and discuss and plan recycling projects at 12:30 p.m. in SBU CONCERT: John Graham, White: People, figures and Forms, Nature/Places, ENACT/PIRG office. a volist, will highlight the Friends of Sunwood Concert at 5 p.m. at Sunwood. Miscellaneous; and Color: People/Places, Nature, Admission is $5. Miscellaneous. Photos must be received in James CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: The Fellowship meets at 8 Mailroom by April 23 at 5 p.m. Photos must have name, p.m. in SBU 213 to study Bible, share and pray. RIDING CLUB: The Sixth Annual address, phone number, and category on reverse side. Intercolleiate Horse Show begins at 8:30 a.m. at Smoke Run Farm (Stony Fri, Apr. 11 Brook). - The deadline for Summer Session and Fall 1975 PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM: Prof. Charles Parson of Independent Study proposals for undergraduates is April Columbia will read his paper entitled "Possibility and FILM: COCA presents "Sword of Doom" at 8 p.m. in Lecture Center 100. 17. Possible Individuals" at 4 p.m. in Physics 249. H o o o r m t 3 - On-campus student employment applications will BASEBALL: The Patriots combat Oswego at 3 p.m. on R E C IT A L S : S o pr a n o M ar io n ver perf s a p.1. be issued to undergraduates April 7 through April 11 in the ath letic field.~~~~~theathlet~~cf~~eld.n Lecture Center 105. the Financial Aid Office (Administration 250). Applications for Summer '75 are available between 10 CRIMINAL JUSTICE CONFERENCE: A two-day - George Cohen will perform on the flute at 5 p.m.in Lecture Center a.m. and 12 p.m. and for Fall '75 between 2 and 4 p.m. conference, sponsored by over twenty Suffolk County 105. For summer employment, students must be registered organizations, will be held in the SBU. For further Coordinator:Beth Lowhin; BStf: u8wTorok and Miom for Summer '75 or pre-registered full time for Fall '75. information call 665-1173. Maueri. April 9, 1975 STATESMAN Pull HUNTINGTON STORE OPEN SUNDAY tattling Barry's1 Speclal Deals for Sunday Custormers HOUSE of AU DIO Professional Quality ss~~wsmm^. STEREO PACKAGES- -A- ^^clO-.^* ^MARANTZ 2015 ^^-^ RECEIVER SYSTEM 1 IMAGINE! | 1 eoe eoeb. * 15 WATTS RMS Oeoe A COMPLET E" per CHANNEL 9Q.Q 0 0 i.| MARANTZ GYRO TOUCH TUNING 4-CHANNEL m 3 YEAR PART-S- :: Q INCLUDES: - WITH - WHICH INCLUDES: 4 3-WAY EV-50 SPEAKERS 2 DELUXE 3 WAY STUDIO MONITOR (FOAM FRONTS 7 YR. WARRANTY) SPEAKERS IN WALNUT CABINETS GARRARD AUTO RECORD 2 EV-40 SPEAKERS CHANGER, FREE EMPIRE $50 CARTRIDGE With Foam Fronts - 7 Year Guarantee JVC MANUAL TURNTABLE WITH FULL SIZE GARRARD RECORD CHANGER WOOD BASE AND DUST COVER REG. PRICE $84b With Free $50 Cartrid e FREE $60 CARTRIDGE FRED'S BEST BUY PRICE _- > ,5- -A. " f,- ^^ W^^~~~~~~~~~~.. $449V0 |k- LIMITED QUANTITES! if Marantz 2220B Receiver is purchased If Marantz 201 Revr^purchased alone - alone - $299.95 fairtrade If Marantz 4220 Receiver is purchased alone 249.95 Fairtrade - $299.95 Fairtraded. .i i BENJ~~AlIN * ONS WITH PURCHASE CONCORD CD-1000 MIRACOI OF ANY PACKAGE SHOWN STEREO CASSETTE K IN THIS AD - A FREE $30.00 MOEIPO ENCLOSURE FOR YOUR MARANTZ. $119° * FRONT LOAMING * 30 to 16,000 PROFESIONAL QUALITY HEADPHONES H2 RESOS *ODOLBY NOISE REDUCTION * 3 POSITION TAPE SELECTOR * MEMORY REWIND '\^HOWDOES 1SLEOIOPERATION ^27.95 HIT YA! ONLY9O PAIRS IN S1 COMPARE AT $400.00 SALE $229°0 AT EACH STORE! LIMIT ONE I CUSTOMER. - - - 0 1 - - - -W C~o~coc~or-PROFESSIONAL 8-TRACK PIONEER -W^E^ ~RECORDER/PLAYER $145°°0 ^ t3FAST FOWARD 2 SEPARATE VU CLEARANCE I 6161 W^S^ REPEAT METERS REGA289.95 St^ AUTO SHUTOFFKtaow FRONT LOADING ONLY 12 AVAILABLE AT EACH STORE! NO DEAXLERS PLEASE! CASSETTE _DECK TAPE BIAS & ELIECTRO-VOICE I DEES < EQUALIZATION EV16A - 12" 3 WAY SWITCHING ,TRY TO BEAT SPEAKERS EV15A - 10" 3 WAY CUEING IN FAST 5 YEAR GUARANTEE THESE PRICESI FOWARD & REWIND CALL BATTLING BARRY FOR FREE PRICE QUOTES ON HIS XiLEA $299.95 STEREO HOTLINE AT 421-3070! i a I I BTI DUAL BATTLING BARRY'S PLEDGE WE CARRY THE COMPLETE BATTLING BARRY'S PRICE RIOT "I cannot and will not be undersold on any LINE OF: DUAL 1225 *76 DUAL 1228 1165 stereo system. To prove this, call me per- REG. $139.95 REG. $199.95 sonally at 241-3070 and I will beat any do- CERWIN-VEGA SPEAKERS DUAL 1229 *96 DUAL1229Q014649 cumented price on any steeo omponent." JOHNZER SPEAKERS REG. $169.9S. REG. $269.95 STUDIO MONITORS UNBEATABLE PRICES ON ALL MAKES BIC VENTURI SPEAKER OF CAR STEREOS 5 HUNTINGTON STORE OPEN SUNDAY w *CRAIG * SANYO * MUNTZ * PIONEER* < | , Special Deals for Sunday Customers _.f SYSTEMS * AUDIOVOX * TENNA * 11i* LYNBROOK .HUNTINGTON RD. 453 SUNRISE HIGHWAY 2384 MIDDLE COUNTRY 273 WALT WHITMAN RO. Nx To Pintchik Rts. 25, 1 Mile East of Smithhaven Mall Rt. 1 10 ODDosits Wait Whitman Across From WhM Castle 588-9421 Shopping Center HOURS: MON.-FRI. 10-10, SAT. 10-6, HUNTINGTON OPEN SUN. 10-b 421-3070 Pap 12 STATESMAN - April 9, 1975 VA. Concert Reyiew 1 Billy~~~~~TyoTr:Grea tiMsic ad Al That Jazz By PETER DORFMAN those who feel such distinctions are necessary), and, Last Sunday, while jazz listeners all over campus although Taylor often plays electric piano and other were busy talking about the upcoming weekend, electronic keyboards, the music was entirely acoustic which will boast concerts by Davie Liebman's here. This latest concert was the most enjoyable of Lookout Farm and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, a IAJ's winter series at Stony Brook. smaller, generally older crowd gathered in the Union The show was hosted by Candy Ross, a musician Auditorium, to enjoy another fine afternoon of music and friend of IAJ. A very informal atmosphere, presented by the International Art of Jazz, Inc. (IAJ). typical of IAJ concerts, was foreshadowed by Ross' The concert, which starred the Billy Taylor Trio, was announcement that the music would begin 20 a welcome departure from the usual Stony Brook minutes late so that the bar could move its quota of weekend fare. Taylor's group plays an extremely $50 worth of drinks. Then, as promised, Taylor tight, polished. mainstream jazz ("straight jazz," for launched into his first number, a light, airy blues number called "It's a Grand Night for Swinging," and I4 it became obvious that the waiting had been worthwhile. Taylor's first piano solo set the pace for the afternoon. It was sophisticated, crystal-dear and technically brilliant. Taylor, who teaches music and has been a spokesman for the art of jazz for some time, commented briefly between numbers. He announced that the next was one he had written as a "'walk-on tune" for the David Fost Show when he had sered as music director for that television program. It was a ballad entitled "I'm a Lover," with what Taylor Sunday. called "a contemporary feeling." major Does work Caod "So0t Si8terWR1dt's win Upcoming Album on "'Sister' wasl dick and man (a hime _100; be' The next song, another ballad, was an is actulry a wvry _M SMewOh- but ood ftm1 improvisation on the notes C-A-G, the initials of the Then the tempo picked up. on a T~y lor t National Council for Arts and Government, for whom Wish I Knew How It Woul Feel ToBe Fle the piece was commissioned. Bassist Larry Ridley shone throughout the work, with his cool, lucid Next was a piece wht-b 1 nd oy, a at his wont. 4roud a jOakn, By SUSAN SCHWARTZ McCowen, although less well known Jauntily pasing There is a beautiful lady gracing the to American audiences than Rigg, is a The supporting actors do very well engng in a cthing rparteO WI _py smi eo4 New York stage, an actress who is highly accomplished actor who plays with their roles, too. Robert Eddison her pious rival, or with mery man d knows A remembered by most Americans as Alceste as a frustrated man who would as Philinte, Alceste's friend who begs flirting is a wonder to match and how, and the Emma Peel in the television series prefer to sulk quietly by himself but is him to temper the truth he tells to his spres with her _reene. , 'The Avengers." 'Me actress is, of giaded into uncontrollable rage by the friends, is nicely subdued and course, Diana Rigg, who is currently hypocrisies of his friends. Poor Alceste patiently flustered. Oronte, a pompous The po ha to be appearing at the St. James Theatre in hating everyone, is at a loss to explain man who has friends with influence, sure. At times I am not sr If all tese New York City, with Alec McCowen why he loves the flirtatious Celimene, played by Gawn Grainger, is also quite quarrels and d on Won finthe in the National Theater of Great the least "sincere" of the women who good, and received the loudest 20th Century at all, lot sleo In 1966. ' Britain's production of 'The desire him, and McCowen handles laughter for his reading of his awful Perhaps the two maquis who on to Misanthrope." Rigg's performance as admirably and amusingly Alceste's poem which he wants Alceste Celimene are too - y, too6 Celimene shines out in a production own unique form of despair in having approve. Nicholas Clay, as one of exagerated. Perbaps at points the new that is, for the most part, charming to "grovel" for the woman he loves. Alceste's rivals for Celimene's rhymes, by Tony H , b and delightful. The role of Alceste is a very affections, has a wonderful wene too trite and obviou. And peft" i Moliere's comedy about the man difficult one to play; the social outcast where he loudly extols his own virtues, is stretching owe's aa a Nt t who detests society's pretensions and who abuses society, insults his friends, Gillian Barge is marvelously bitchy as picture Rigg as 20 yoar dd, but I, for insists on telling people what he really thinks he is always right, and has fits the pious old maid, and Louie Ramsey one, Wu pe tly to hae my thinks of them is timeless. Director of childish rage is distasteful, and one is acceptable as EliXnte, another Mend imaination sizted or ho' U _ anme kb w's John Dexter underlines this by moving is eager to see Alceste topped. But of Alceste's, although her one the action from 1666 to 1966, from something in this stance is also important speech on how faults beldeaionst te wdxe a n the France of Louis XIV to the France admirable, especially when dealing become virtues in a lover's eyes Is loat stylish charm of the whoe of Charles DeGaulle. This is a clever with the two-faced people he knows, because she speaks much too loudlty. If you we out fr a pl ow and worthwhile variation; the chrome and Alceste's entanglement In love I am saving mCAst of my accolades with funny-awtful poety and aos tables, vinyl couches, and modem evokes our sympathy. McCowen for Rigg, beautiful and beautifully who don't ea nom to ta clothes make us all much closer to the doesn't dwell too heavily on either the attired, who is excellent as the young themselves too serousy, thn Nations action and situations, and the good or bad side , of Alceste's Celimene, a vivacious flirt with a Theatre production is just the ticEt I hypocrites and fools that Alceste, the character, but, for the most part, his knowledge of men far beyond her The play rumns through May 31 and misanthrope, loathes, are types we all Alceste is likeable; one can laugh with years. Whether pouting at the prospect ticket information may b ad b him as well as at him, even when he's of another moral lecture by Alceste, calling 212-0X5-5858. know and hate. <. i .MNMOOVI April 9, 1975 STATESMAN Page 13 |oSETAUKET | NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT Foreign Motor Sales j, I IL T Aw I Tt fa -T-s' A I X vl' V -r A^ d-%A ma1L-J *SAAB* * 1 Long Island's only Macrobiotic Restaurant ': Br re . lj 3Jt^ COUPON y^'=>^ i,,,:> ; U: A he at| ; > 2;^.-. .Y } -WEDNESDAY & IHURSDAY I,- i..' -.0 . MOMMEMEMEW;PF.CIAL e a 'a'a'''"'"'S, X: i,.' ' 9^9 ~~~~~RICE VEGETABLE' ko SALES -SERVICE - PARTS CGUARANTEED USED CARS o 1'^ PLATE y Sauteed Vegetables, Brown Rice, $ '75 ^ MAIN ST. (RT. 25A) o |Beans de jour, Hiziki Seaweed, a cup of 94; 4l-S4V0 BASTSETAUKFT Miso and Homemade -Bread. OFFER VALID ONLY WITH COUPO W, N.Y., 11733 o MOST MAKES OF FOREIGN CARS S aT ATCH FOR WEEKLY COUPON SPECIALS -- EXPERTLY REPAIRF.D BY o FACTORY TRAINED TECHNICIANS ° OPEN TO 4 AM FR1DAY & SATUKRDAI . ^ _ . ^ ^ ^ ^ * « t« A f ^ XA X X aeeX o6o o o oo . MLAooppgqiiiimiv2iAifvyKx MAxx m xi 1 tooC E -nngsi3Car«HggTC^^ - y" I The Stony Brook Would you like to i HILLEL Jewish Student Association have the glorious, in 3 presents: ELECTIONS! prestigious position a Ella Tanishe, a Soviet Jew reveals of HILLEL President? Well, you can! If the glory of the Kremlin's worst kept secret and xX being 'The President" is too much for you, there are s the movie "Out of Bondage" 14S00REWERSI | smaller shares for other of ficers (However, they're all i glorious). These include: Secretary Treasurer Thurs., April 10 Coiriae: X § Committee Chairpersons All you have to do to cash Lee. Hall 102 3 in on you share of glory and prestige is call Danny at 7:30 PM Jim wyebl Z I Rich at 751-7924 before April 18.. ] FREE ADMISSIO1 6-7209.or FR- - -ADMISSIB af 24-3690 X - I _j s spr^ "™ 1 *3 ninn'OR [3C=OoiabBOOP zs I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a I 0 | I l == STEREO LAFAYETTE 500TA TYPING TERM PAPERS, resumes, Male actors still needed for the video Volunteers needed to help with the PERSONAL Receiver and BSR turn-table. etc. Accurate fast. reliable, play "Psychic -Express." Must be Student Blood Drive, April 17. Please Excellent condition. Call Dave reasonable. Call available week of April 14-19. Call call Maddy 6-7899. DO MOUSE TWO 0 588-2608. or Stephan at uontl IIons. t 246-4540. Must sellI Steve at 751-7867 4%ard 862-9743 or come to South Campus Hey we need Hay help us Help 16 PING4PONG TABLE - *25. Call LOST & FOUND **B*1 Bldg. any night this week for starving horses right here on L.I. If after 6, 473-7986. - rehearsal In green room. these horses don't get feed soon they DEAR BLOOD AND GUTS LOST at lrving-ONellf Dance Sat. will die. Come to our benefit drive Gluckman. Have a happy birthday, '68 PONTIAC LEMANS, conv. night, room key attached to red Green thumbs needed to volunteer to April 14 p.m. at Tuey's. Acoustic love, the Bronx boys and girls. needs engine work, otherwise good Kaluha key chain. Any Info please help run a gardening program at the Music will be played. Suggestions, condition. Michelin Radials, $250. contact main desk. Thank you I Suffolk County ChIldrens Shelter. fend donations accepted. 751-3737. MOW OLD ARE YOU REALLY Mr. Call Steve 6-4440 Time commitment a must. If Gluckman? Many yars more In LOST Leica M2 In leather case Interested please stop by room 248, Rugby comes to the Stony Brook Graduate Biology. Love your REFRIGERATOR KING - used Nikkormat with 135mm lens will buy SBU, or call 246-6814 afternoons. campus! The Pleiades Rugby DresopaUa._____-__ Refrigerators and Freezers - bought back. Maggie Football Club will be playing a home and sold delivered on campus. Call Day 6-7174. Tabler Sprlngfe.. re... .o and 19 - match on northeast corner of athletic WILL PAY GOOD M04ONEY If you 928-9391 anytime. FOUND yours for the asking. Two admission by ticket only, for SUSB field on April 12 at 1:30 p.m. Several take me out Ict"n for road test. super friendly, wonderful, pretty students. Pick up tickets at Union students from undergraduate and Cad Lee 6-453 Used Books bought and sold and FREE housebroken kitteno Call ticket window starting Aprl 14 to medical colleges will be playing. (used books sold at %price) Carrie or BJ at 6-5834 or 6-5885. 1& Bring your SAO and l.0. cards. Come on out and support them Beads and other M me Supploes Music, food and Lowenbrau. Saturday. Dow Willy-Your roomie didnt THE GOOD TIMES FOUND one 8&W 19" TV In Kelly foreta Happy Birthday, Mule. 150 East Main St., Port Jefferson E. Come to Kelly E., 104 B, after Cardozo College R.A. applications All black brothers and sisters help me Open Mon-Sat. 11-6 928-2664 4:30 p.m., Fall '75 available April 7-18 In out. I only have five more weeks, but to Identify. College office 12-5 p.m. For Info call I can't do It without you. Please help FOR SALE 1967 SUNBEAM MINX blue, clean; LOST yellow and black slipover 6-7116. me out. Black girl auditions. Give a Inside and out. Excellent running sweater last Mon. In Phys. Plaza Bdg1 sister a chance. Call Kathy 6-4895 PANASONIC STEREO automatic condition, good mileage, standard nveryone% Invited to the Stony day or night. Thanks a lot. Good Call 64532 or A258 Whitman ask tunhme BSR310 changer, $125. trans. $385, 473-8238. for Rich. Brook Student Blood Drive on condition, two speakers. Drew Thursday, April 17. The drive will be The Anthropology Club presents Or. 6-3445, Move number. 1963 FORD GALAXIE 500 run from 1-6 p.m. In the Gym. David Hicks speaking on- "Death automatic power steering, now tires, NOTICES Refreshments will be served. For Info Among the Tatum of Timor" on 1972 FORD PINTO standard rej. $250. Call Glida at 6-4822. call Maddy 6-7899. April 9 at 7:30 In room 456 of the Not perfect, but good, 92816884, Mount College R.A. applications Graduate Chemistry Bldg. Prior to keep tryn._ available starting Monday noon, Af-ll Day Care work for credit. I NT the speaker there will be a meeting HOUSING 7, 1975 In the college office. (Se 280-281 (6 credits) - Students for all graduating seniors In DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS sign on door If office Is closed.) Only interested for summer and fall call Anthropology. All welcome. % carat $199; 3/4 carat 395; 1 carat RENT 2 ROOMS In Sound Beach those on housing list for Mount 751-9761 or come to Roth Cafeteria $595. Buy direct from manufacturer House then take over yr. lease In College 75-76 can apply. for application. Senior Psychology Majors! Help plan and SAVE! For catalog send $1 to June, $112.50 for rooms, $225 for Applications to be returned by your graduation Tuesday, April 15 In SMA Diamond Importes Box 216, house. No fee, no security, 744-1056. Monday, April 14. noon. Gray College Is now accepting Humanities 238 at 7:30 p.m. Fanwood, N.J. 07023 (Indlcate name applicatiors for R.A. positions for of school). Or, to see rings call HOUSE SITTING POSITION All Chess Players are Invited to Sept. 1975. For Information call Women's Intramurals sponsors 212-682-3390 for location of WANTED- Teaching couple desires attend Chess Club and team meetings 6-4093 between 1:30-4:30 M-F. "fitness Swim." All undergraduate showroom nearest you. summer house, apartment. Call Jim on every Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. women students are Invited to swim In room Benedict Day Care Center Is now for fitness from 6-7:30 p.m. on Mon», 757-2574 after 4 p.m. _ 226, SBU. SHERWOOD AMP and tuner. Amp accepting applications from students Wed. and Fri. Swimming distance needs some work and tuner Is In ROOM AVAILABLE In house with P-AHAneutw support NORML. wishing to work with us during the should be kept by each swimmer. excellent condition. Will sell for located directly on LI summer or fall semesters. 6 credits The goal of the program Is to reach other students, seminar. reasonable offer, call nights after 10. Sound, In Mt. Sinai with private Ammann College Is sponsoring an Include practicum plus an Individual fitness level thru a HaIt phone 6-3445, ask for Doug. beach, $85/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. Call economy theatre trip to the New Applications can be picked up at the planned swim program. The fitness Casey 928-2410. National Lampoon show Sunday, center between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. swim starts Wed., April 9 at 6 p.m. STEREO complete AM-FM April 13 for only $10.45. You get dally. Students may join the program at eight-track unit with BSR turn-table Room for rent, walking distance show tickets, dinner (Including entre, any time. Any questions casi 6-6792. and two large air-suspenslon speakers. from P Lot $75/month plus utilities. dessert, coffee, tip and tax) and i he deadline tor bummer Session and Hardly used, $125, 7444883. I M M E DIATE OCCUPANCY. round trip ticket on LIRR. For Info Fall 1975 Independent Study The Stony Brook Riding Club holds 751-7556. and reserv. call HowIe 5137 or Proposals for undergraduates Is April Its 6th Annual Intercollegiate Horse KENWOOC AM-FM STEREO Jeanne 5743 17. Proposals must fof!ok the Show Sun., April 13, 8:30 a.m. at Receiver, 55 watts/ rms/ channel; by April 4. Guidelines, which are available In the Smoke Run Farm on Hollow Road Advent Loud Speakers, excellent HELP-WANTED On Friday night. April 11, at 9:30 Undergraduate Studies office, LIBR within walking distance. Call 6-6409 condition, best offer. 724-8385 p.m., the UGB Is sponsoring a Mood E-3320. Students should consult Ms. or 6-4909 for Information. evenings. TEACH ME RUSSIAN OR ARABIC Fnthe Ballroom. A rock band, Boston Selvin of that office before writing 589-4633. Charly. will provide dance music and their proposals. NEW TENNIS WARM-UP JACKET there will be lots of cheap beer (25 all sizes, small, medium large, cents per glass). Admission Is free, so Health Professions Society meeting HELP! x-large; red, white, blue; with stripes SERVICES come down and join In the fun. Wed., A,- 9, 8 p.m., room CHE 116. Statesman needs production running down sleeves. 50% off retail 1 -pic: V, Jlcal School Interviews. price, limited supply. Call as soon as MOVING & STORAGE local and There will be a performance In l1ert: ,ill speak of their help in our Advertisements possible between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. long distance. Crating, packing, free Improvisational theatre techniques by * alrier . Pete 246-4613. estimates, call County Movers the Kuku Ryku Theatre Laboratory Department. Hours flexible. 928-9391 anytime. on Friday, April 11 at 8 p.m. In the S- 1 - D Page 14 STATESMAN April 9, 1975 Pouring Money and Lives Down the Asian Drain By AL LYNCH atheistic communist aggression, succeeded in laying of Nguyen Van Thieu and Los NoL.Why do't tMay "There are revolutions sweeping the world and the seeds for the most tgc foreign undertaking in listen to Douglas: "'Witha11 the uvalth of Americ-, we in America have been in a position of trying to its history. The words are eerily prophetic, yet the with all of the miUtay .0t a m stop them. With all the wealth of America, with all events which followed were not inevitable. revolutions cannot be pdAnd t is td am of the military strength of America, those Each administration, from Eisenhower to who Gerald Ford, as mi l br of th Hamm revolutions cannot be stopped. Johnson, had countless opportunities to cleanse our of ReH entathes, songt to mm i a i "Why aren't we in America standing in the hands of Southeast Asia. Eisenhower took the h Supr villages of the Middle East and Asia and saying we advice of General Matthew Ridgeway that American AU that Ame has doe by pourng be are for economic justice and social justice and we involvement in Vietnam was militarily unfeasible, military and UWcm int o Sduta -a are going to help you, the peasants, achieve your yet he never followed through completely on his has only postponed inevitabe. A-e-ica has revolution? decision against a 'nmassive air strike to help the bought 20 yean of tm at a gtl ost of hbmw "What do we do instead? We have been French avoid defeat in Vietnam." (Wiiams) life. The sad part in, of con, that or poicy thek supporting corrupt reactionary regimes, putting At Mercy of Advisors has ans y sbvI rtoedbdea h money behind governments that are vicious There is evidence to suggest that John Kennedy supo 1dl fo fi^if na AtdfNica»- I governments, reactionary governments, wasting the was considering a total withdrawal of American fervetly b1ie-. ^ wealth of America, trying to underwrite the status forces from Vietnam at the time of his assassination. The element of tragedy is heights A' by quo, trying to stabilize the situation, as our officials The succession of Lyndon Johnson, of course, Dating historical "Ir. Grow Tuly, who was * sometimes say. placed a man in the presidencey who, as far as Franklin RooeveU's priate -. wrtes in "Unless we hitch our few dollars to ideas, unless foreign policy was concerned, was at the mercy of 1944 Roosevelt was adviae NW Via Prsident we are forthright in our dealings in the Middle East his advisors. By this time, it was too late. Henry Wallace was not a eto and in Asia, we are going to go down in history as The entire history of our involvement in Democratic Conventow nn Ro o identified with the worst reactionary imperialist Southeast Asia is reminiscent of a Greek txagedy, again. Rooavelt _eseQ < ( I forces, apart from Soviet Russia, that the world has with the exception that then does not seem to have William 0. D Us *a a -cJ4a^ known." been the neinay cathsis i esidential Roosevelt was ad d that might Those are the words of Supreme Court Justice leadership. Inceblyy, Predident Ford has conand "fetWsta William 0. Douglas, written in The Nation, in 1952! resurrected the domino theory In a last ditch effort The a of the Dmoat at Douglas's observations preceded the New Left to pour more death into a devastated land, and kiU,'no H _ _ S >1 historian William Appleman Williams' call for an General George Brown, the Chairman of the Joint Hary S. TntD_*ifto I sam it a PW tpedwt I "open door for revolutions" by nine years. Within Chiefs of Staff, suggests that it is Congress' as chaigma of th *seca Com CIesDgtig mt the space of those nine years, the United States, unwillingness to supply the necessary war m i wr _ bentaead coIta.s RoiR a under the guise of stopping the spread of evil, that is leading to the impending doom of the forces agxeed to; p Sa t o #tWa -# Wan Huu pnne's eqe w a lette toam eflst In mhe letter, which wusad~ to a yn Romcevt named Douglas or Tba,IIe as accep btabe. - ,F}