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Senate Meeting 2 Bookstore 2 Library Move 3 Ceramics Room 3

J ~KAssassination 4 Magnum Force 5 Purchase Dancers 5 Dylan 6 Films 6

VOL. II No. 8 SUNY COLLEGEAT PURCHASE 'I'UESDAYl/22/7 4 GPC · BEORGAN:IZED BY ADAM NAGOURNEY financial limitations . John ~ ided that the GPC 'is simply res­ berg responded that this was no ponsible for approving the event The recent hearings of the Student Senate Financial ·committee became excuse for the shortcomings. and assigning it a time and piace. the site for discussion and re-evaluation of the general campus program~ Cathy Seldin :then made anoth­ It was stressed that the GPC is a ming situation. At the long and well-attended l!'l2eting of the comnittee er suggestion. A steering co~ sub- committee of the Senate and is on Thursday, the Financial Committee established the General Programming ittee would be set up consisting responsible to the Senate - it is Committee as a subcommittee of the Student Senate, reorganized the stru­ of 4 interested students and l not responsible for production of cture of. the committee, and gave the committee more power towards org­ senator. If any special interest campus events. anizing and co-ordinating campus events. The committee also voted organization wanted to hold an ev­ The GPC will coordinate and fun­ to implement a culture card allowing students; to attend a li~ ent, they would have to go through nel money to different organiza..: ited number of campus events free of charge. the committee. The committee woulc tions - in a sense, it will be a While sifting through the more • schedule_.gnd decide on speakers, take care of scheduling and would second financial committee. The than $80,000 worth of requests to movies, etc. The second proposal halt time and place conflicts. GPC will be responsible for 4 be drawn from the $35,000 in Stud­ main types of events: l)Lectures, ent Senate funds, Fredrick Wilson, 2)Concerts, 3)Films and 4)Large Cathy Seldin, and John Ramberg, all events such as parties. It was members of the committee, as well tentatively decided that for this as Kenny Gurge, at that time Stu-­ ~ semester money requested by Stu­ ent Senate bookeeper, noticed dup­ dent Interest groups will be aw­ licate group requests for films, arded to the GPC which will raise concerts, speakers, and large ev­ the GPC budget to as high as ents. $20,000. However, new procedures A number of the groups, includ­ will have to be worked out for ing the Women's Union and the Gay coming budgets if the GPC concept Awareness Group, as well as Curt­ proves sucessful. ice Taylor's own Continuing Educ­ ation budget for film, requested CULTURECARDS IN money for cinematic events on camp­ The group then discussed the us. There would be no coordination proposal ·for "The Card!' 'Ihi..s between these film events, and ov­ idea was originally suggested by erlapping and even duplicate pro­ Curtice Taylor at Continuing Ed­ gramming would be a strong poss­ ucation. The card would be given l..rs ''~$;;."""':> ibility. to a student at no charge and woul d Continuing Education requested entitle a student to attend eith ­ $7000 from the Student Senate to er $5 or $10 worth of campus ev­ supplement their o\'m $41,600 bud­ ents free of charge (depending on get. This money would go to non­ the decision of the committee). - A Dance/Lecture It credit courses, was hoped that this card would in­ series, 4 theatre, 4 musical, and " crease student interest and there­ l dance event, and the film series. fore student attendance at camp- If the money is granted, Purchase us events and show students what students would be allowed to attend FINANCIAL Cof'IMITIEE (L ..:R): JoHN Rflri£ERGJCATHY SELDI NJ FRill \•II LSONJ the Student Activity fee goes to. Continuing Education movies for 75¢ KENGURGE, PHOTO_by Judy Pzsenica Discussion then largely centered and other events, such as dance and simply called for a stronger cent.­ This suggestion met with a gen­ music, for a considerable around how the card could be used, $1.00- ral corrmittee. erally favorable reception but somE and ideas such as using the card discount from prices off-campus Bob Kahan , a member of the GPC, questions were raised including to get free candy at the informa­ peoplEO_pay for the sam~events . claimed that the reason the GPC whether the GPC was responsibLe tion booth were proposed. 'Ihe When Continuing Education present­ did not satisfy the needs of the for producing a requested event or idea of a culture card was ultimat­ ed its' budget to the Committee, student community was because of simply approving it. It was dec- ely accepted by the committee. Michael Baird, Director of Contin­ uing Education, pointed out that even with the Student Senate sup­ plement, Continuing Education would just break even on most events. SNOWREMOVAL= WHATHAPP ENSN EXT? The General Programming Commit­ BY MIKE FELD;!';AN tirst, Don Davis, Director of Buil­ better shape. Snow and ice remain­ tee submitted a budget for $16,400. dings and Grounds, considered the ed in the parking spaces, but the This money would go to lectures, In a telephone interview Tuesday, snow-removal problem a result of roadway and intersection was salted concerts and performances, and Jan . 15, sixdaysafter the last inexperience and a lack of communi­ and free of ice. large events such as parties. snowfall and ten days since the cation. Because these were the riJ:r. Davis felt he was out of Names of guests,artists and speak­ first major snowstorms that the touch with the situation because of ers listed on the budget request school has ever had, the grounds a heavy workload and did not rea­ sheet included Dick Gregory, Kurt crew was caught unprepared. lize. the extent of the problem. He Vonnegut, Ellen Frankfort, Allen On Tuesday it was warmer than called the situation "unfortunate." Ginsberg, David Bromberg, Tom Pax­ previous days, yet the snow and ice Four vehicles with plows, in addit­ ton, and Taj Mahal. remained in the parking lots and ion to several snow blowers are GPC BROUGHTCLOSE TO SENATE walkways throughout the campus. available for snow-removal. It is, Twenty-seven spaces in the student however, impossible to do a perfect Because of the lar ge number of parking lot had beeri plowed, yet job with ·parked cars in the way. different programming requests, the The grounds· crew is limited in Financial Committee decided to · the rest of the parking spaces had obviously not been plowed. The its use of heavy equipment on some hold a marathon meeting to discuss of the walkways, so they have tried the purpose, and func­ plowed spaces, located at the far structure, south end of the lot , had been cov-· to remedy the situation by covering tion of the GPC. The meeting was ered with a hard layer of packed the ice with sand. held last Thlirsday in Campus Cent­ 2- 4 inches On According to a spokesman for er South. The meeting was ice thick. the attend­ and campus security, the only help se­ ed by such notables as Michael streets intersections within th~oar~ing curity can provide a car is Baird, Curtice Taylor, and David lot similar patches of if ice made cars sKid cJften. In ·stuck, is in the way of manpower 'o!' ·sarokin, Chairman of the GPC. The referal. Security does not have meeting started off with a disc­ unplowed spaces there was often enough snuw to reach the vhassi8 of the equiplll2nt to move cars. ussion of ways of avoiding duplic-­ Within a half-hour after the ation and overlapping of campus the car. A Load survey found that, on the average, a would get conversation with Davis, a snowplow events . Two proposals were made car stuck every 30 minutes. One stu­ was seen in the student parking lot to Sarolctn - - the first was that and some walkways were being re­ funds normally allocated to Spe­ dent said his car had been stuck earlier in the day. It took him covered with sanq. A good deal of cial Interest groups (such as the the snow has melted and the ice is Homen's Union, the Gay Activists 15 minutes to park his car and , as Alliance) would be given to the a result, he was late for class. not longer dangerous. Thevsame student described the con­ Will take another phone caJ l GPC. A steering committee would it ditions in t.hp narkinp; lot as "de­ from The Load or a serious accident be set up with representatives of ]),--- ·---~ plorable." each of the major special interest to get the snow removed next time ONE OF SEVERALTREACHEROUS PARKING Ironically, the administration it snows? groups on campus - they would LOTS, PHOTO by Judy Pzsenica parking lot was in considerably lAST IHTINB BY ANDREWHUGOS SEE *Teacher evaluations now exist at the request the Senate. Five Student Senators remaining from the 33 of elected last February held their last meeting *The Student Senate's Financial Committee has Tuesday in the Rat.; it was a toasting party . allocated funds fairly and without causing clubs Though 'ineffectual' is the word most often ap­ applying for funds to register serious corr~. plied to the senate, it had, in reality, a sig ­ plaints. The Senate has been able to work with nificant list of accomplishments to toast. the Business Office to keep these funds easily *Due to the urging of the Senate, the College accessible to those whom they were allocated. put in a line of its budget request for a full ­ *The Student. Senate worked out plans for and time nurse and a part - time doctor. These per­ now offers a check-cashing service to students. sonnel are now on campus. There were no defi ­ Funds for the check cashing service·were suppli ­ ed by the Senate . nite plans to hire them until the Senate made lEFTTO RIGHT: IbNALDBERTNERJ FORMER STUDENT *And, yes, thanks to the Student Senate and its feelings known. LIFE Corv'MITTEEPERSONJCATHY SEl..DINJ FfNANCIAL Student Activities , you can buy candy and The *Also due to Senate urging, a woman counselor Coi"MITTEECl:!t\IRPERSO[)I; FRED HILSON,~-VASENATOR; New York Times on campus. is on campus. The Womens' Union also helped in KEN GuRGEJIREASURER; ~IDY HuGOsJ ~. SciENCE; this regard . Needless to say, toasting Senators drank ·STEVE KusHNERATHEATRE SENATOR (siTTING); BoB themselves under the table . The meeting *Students now have the right to place two of KAHANFORMER ~TUDENT LIFE CHAIRPERSON. their peers on every faculty review committee. adjourned at l a .m., and five Senators stumbled PHOTO by Scott Fischman · back to the dorms. An almost year-l ong battle was waged by the Sen­ ate to secure this right. The new Senate convenes, probably with less joke, you're going to really fuck it *Largely due to Senate policy and action, innocent optimism and enthusiasm than the last, up- it will never function." today. students can now participate in search commit­ -Errmett rl!cGu:i.re 2/14/73 tees for new administrators , deans and faculty, Candidate for Student Senate though there are often not students to take ad­ -" The Student Governme nt MUST BE TAKEN Elected Chairman Student Senate SERIOUSLY. you look upon as a vanta~ of this opportunity . If it Academic Committee 2/9/73 Bookstore rJ~£Iillill~ID£1!1]00 LaJ By Pat Neale it is questionable food quality and To a tendency to sbow a deficit. There are many different ways to One heavily contested part of run auxiliary services, and many FSA programs on most campuses is Open different problems confront the the subsidization of Resident As­ ·FSA' s running them. Most FSA' s sistant meals. Fourteen SUNY BY ANDRE.'WHUGOS (New Paltz and Cobleskill being the FSA's provide subsidization, of only exceptions) hold a liquor li­ which eleven provide full room and The College is on the verge of cense . This usually means cheap board as compensation for services. finalizing a contract with College ·beer in the campus Rat , but it also The total outlay for those fourteen Services Corporation to provide a means that membership on the FSA FSA's is about half a million dol­ permanent campus bookstore to be Board would be limited to those lars. The opposition to the subsi­ opened next year in the buil ding students 21 and over, due to a New dization of RA meals comes from between the new Library Building York corporation l aw forbidding those who feel that this is a proper and Theatre D. According to Lisa those younger from 'tr afficking in function of the state. The argument Tate, Special Assistant to the Pre­ alcohol ' . So only seniors and is that RA' s are employees of the sident , the new bookservice should graduate students would be able to state and therefore the state should solve mGny current problems involv­ participate , a representation that provide the funding. Even though ed with ordering books, but some is even less significant due to the provisions for RA subsidizations will remain because of the impossi­ resulting high turnover. Though are set down in the state guide­ bility of predicting class sizes in the State Liquor Authority indi ­ lines, the trend now is away from advance completely accurately. cates the stricture "cannot be cir ­ subsidization . Paperback Forum , the company LISA TATEJ' BooKSTORECooRDINATOR cumvented", there are groups on Another questionable provision PHOTO by Judy Pzsenica which is presently handling the the New Paltz campus trying to get of the state guidelines on FSA's is temporary bookstores will sell bled in - some short term course a liquor license. the allocation of funds for extra ­ books for the Spring semester, Feb­ lists missed. the deadline by as Of all FSA operations , food ser ­ ordinary administrative expenses. ruary 4 - rl!arch 3. The store will much as twenty- four days . vice is the most universal, but no For example, such funds are usually be open weekdays 10 a.m. - 4 p .m. The bookstore contractor will other operation has as many differ­ used for receptions of faculty me~ 3nd G fc>·J nig.l-::ts fer the benefit of provide a manager to oversee the ences from campus to campus . The bers and students . But for the Continuing Ed students . ordering process in the future. He price for a full (20- or 21-meal) five schools that budget this type Ms. Tate has served a bookstore will have to content with the high meal plan ranges from $525 .60 at of expense , three of them budget it coordinate in the past , in what she course turnover which makes it dif ­ Geneseo "to $672.18 at Cortland (as only for the President, and the called "an improvise situation . " ficult to keep books which do not opposed to $784.00 a year here) . other two include other college of­ Though the job that she has done in sel l out, since they may never be 'There are about just as many ways ficials . However, all college conjunction with Paperback Forum used again . Purchase ' s flexible to figure the number of meals pe­ presidents receive compensation for has had its shortcomings, she registration procedures and courses ople will eat as there are meals, unreimbursable expenses as well as pointed out that because of the will always make book ordering dif~s o ri~orouscomparison is aL-os t a $3000 expense fund , and this has srrBli volume of books that the ficult, but, as Ms. Tate mentioned, inpossible . If ther~are univers ­ made the FSA's all ocations quite bookstore has dealt with , Paperback "that is the price we pay. " -al c~·neacteristics of food service controversial Forum "has never made any kind of a killing" and did the college " a real favor" in handling the book orders . For books to be here on time, -orders must be placed at least two SALARIESFORDORM EMPLOYEES ? months before the bookstore opens . When facul ty book lists come in, The major issue brought up at stated that much time and effort the meeting. 1here was a mis­ the book titles are sorted and the Dorm GovciTiment meeting of Jan would be _involved in these programs understanding on the part of the grouped according to publisher; 15 concerned the question of paying and that the standards involved are writer that Dee Molinari is del­ this takes weeks. Two weeks must salaries to people who would be professiona l. Certainly they would egating the responsibilities of be allowed for the order to reach leading activity groups in the dorm. not be paid the professional fee roo~drawand RA selection to the the publisher and begin to be acted The people in question would be (which can be as high as $15/hour) Dorm Government that might have upon. The pub lisher may take up to teaching Dance and Theatre classes . but rather on the normal wage scale been implied in the article . Dee six weeks to fill the order , since When the Dorm Financial Committ­ on campus - $2/hour. From this per­ is asking the Dorm Government to warehouses are all over the coun­ ee originally met to discuss the spective , the Dorm Government would asstst in finding students who try. budget requests from all the activ ­ be getting a good deal. Also wages would be interested in working with The fact that, for instance , 60 ity groups, it was decided that would offer a higher incentive for her in setting up guidelin es for students have not registered for such~anallocation of money would teachers. However, other activ ­ these procedures, so that students ' Spring I will make it impossible to not be appropriate. However, when ites planned, such as silk-screen­ needs and suggestions are taKen exactly predict class size and to Henry Gruen, who as a Resident Dir­ ing; ceramics, weaving, life skills, into account. jetermine how many books are needed ector has taken a major role in the and a discussion group on Human Dorm Government meets every Tues­ for each class. Continuing Ed reg­ organizing and co- ordinating of Sexuality, are also being lead by day night at 6:00. If you do not istration for Spring is just begin­ these activities, had a meeting people who will give time and ef­ have a curridor representative, ning and this presents further com­ with people involved in the groups, fort. These people could also be olease notify Maria Bortoluzzi or plication to making accurate pre- · he realized that without paying sal ­ considered professional. These Ilana Snyder. dictions for orders which had to be aries, it was highly unlikely that people, and for that matter, of­ sent to publishers last week . the classes would take place . Gruen ficers on the Dorm Government could Snags in the ordering process therefore suggested that the Dorm also be paid for their efforts. -are hard to detect until they mani­ Government request the money from The question, however, is a moot fest themselves. When an order is the Student Senate to offset the one; the Financial Committe of the unsucessful progr­ Student Senate has already stat- lost in the mail it is almost i~ possibility of ams . ed that it would not allocate money possi ble to know it is missing un­ for student sal aries with few ex­ l the college does not receive '!.'his ~:mggestiondrew a wide var­ ti ceptions . However, the classes the order. An order for three iety of responses at the meeting. if books for a short term course plac­ Those against paying salaries felt discussed ~to take place, some~ ed with Oxford University Press was that the people concerned should thing will have to be worked out. lost; when the order was placed volunteer their services in the in­ 'Ihere were several objections again, it took until Thursday, Jan­ terest of· the community, and for raised at the meeting concerning the uary 10 for the books to come in . the sake of their own experience . last article in The Load about the The bookstore cl osed on Friday . Many !'elt that u ·· thier interest Dorm Government by Adam Nagourney Ms. Tate thought that orders for included making money, they should (See The Load, Vol.II , No.7). Con­ Spring I will, with few exceptions, set up services independent of trary to the article, there was a be filled .on time. In the past the Dorm Government . Social Committee formed, but this fLAI::JASNYDER AND MARIA BoRTOLUZZI course book l ists have always drib - In resp onse to this point , some was done after the termination df !'.T DoRMGOVERNMENT MEET! NG 2 LIBRABY MOVE VASTUDENTS NEEDS STUDENTS TO LIBRARY BY ANDREWHUGOS ninr, of the semester, st udents BY JOANNE.WASS:E:Rri!A}; should not be so involved in course Robert Evruns, Director of the work that they will be unable to When the Neuberger Museum offic­ Library, has cal l ed for hundreds participate in the move. ially opens this Spring, the Visual of student volunteers to give Presently , Sy Zachar, is pullin g Arts Students will have to move their aid in the tremendous job of toget her a committee to organize their shop, studios and classes to moving the l ibrary .. Dean of Stu- the festive aspects of the move; he a new location in the New Library dents, Ed Redkey, Dlrector of Stu- has alr eady enlisted the help of Building . In July a temporary dent Activities, Sy Zachar , andRe - the GPC. Plans now call for a col- structure , called a Butler Build­ sident Director, Paul Brown, are lege-wide party at the end of a day ing , will begin to go up and will now putting together plans to make of work . Interested students should be ready for use in September 1974. the move a gal a occassion · When . ,contact Za.char at CCS 0012, ex . . The Butler building, containing 24 specific plans concerning the utll - 5187. thousand square feet of space, will ization of st udents are f ormalized, Also, students vd.ll be needed to be located north of CCN, near the they will be passed on to the Com- jo Heavy manual labor 4 hours a day intersection of Cottage and Lincoln munity . over the semester break , Jan 29 - RoBERTEvANs; DIR. OF LIBRARY Avenues . There is also the possi ­ Evans issued the plea in hopes Feb 9 ; the pay is $2 per hour. In - . . bi li ty that practice rooms will be . that students could make it possi - terested students should contact gestlons . located in this building. bl e to move the library in a day Kathle en Witten in the li brar y . Some 25~of the budget is al- Until the Butler building is and prevent extens i ve interuption rea~y?ommltted to the purchase of erected , Visual Art students will of the library ' s use . Books will THIS ARTICLEATTE.fi1PTS TO CLEAR UP penodlcals and abstracts. In old- be using the basement of the new be moved, shelf by shel f , through A SLIGHTMISUNDERSTANDING THAT er , more established libraries, library for drawing, painting, an underground t unnel, to t he new CAUSEDTHE LOAD TO PRINTLAST ISSUE this takes up 40-80% of the budget . sculptir1g, and shop classes . A building. The move i s now set for THATTHE LIBPARY WOULD ACQUIRE NO Each of the 8- 10 members of the wall is now being builj;~Jnthe qa,s­ February 6. NEWBOOKS THIS YEAR. library staff has a particular area ement of the library to section off Sy Zachar, Redkey and Brown see Each month the library acquires of interest and must keep up with, these classes from the other activ­ . the move as a chance to get incom- some 900- 1500 volumes in the form and put in orders for books in , ities in the library . ing students quickly involved in of bound periodicals , gifts and that field . In some cases l ibrari - John Straus ..., Vice- President for the Purchase Corrrnunity , a way of purchases . At present requests 'ans actually have two degrees : Judy the Arts , explained that there is pulling present Community members from faculty and suggestions by the Koopman holds a masters in Library still more work to be done in this together and a f i ne way to begin library staff determines what is ·Science and Biology; Ann Fitz Simon section of the library in the way the Spring Semester. Since the purchased , though Robert Evans , Di- hold ~egrees_inLibrary Science and of heat, lights, and the finishing of the dividing wall. However, tentative pl ans for the moving of equipment have begun. Strauss ex­ rove ~llt~fENURE PiiJCEDUiiE BEGiNNING . pects the move to take place around BY MIKE FEWMAN ate Chairperson , statea :::iaturday . The guidelines require that the the same time the library' s does. that guidelines in every division "majority of faculty members be Campus trucks and workers will be Now that the battle over the have been drawn up for at least a peers ... the majority of faculty be utilized in movj_ng drafting tables procedures for faculty review is week. These guidelines must be ap- ·from the division ... at least one and other heavy shop equipment. The over , wheels are turning to work proved by the Personnel Policies member from the Board of Study . . . move will take place through the out methods by which each division Corrmittee, Which will be officially at least two faculty from another underground tui-mel that runs from will select members for faculty re­ formed \.Vednesday. division ." The fourth and last the basement of the museum to the vew corrmittees . Dean Howard (Social Science) part of the guidelines details the new library . It is Straus ' hope The Natural Scinces Division has said that membership in his divi - minumum amount of information avai- that the move can take place over written a preliminary document con­ sions's review committee will be lable to the committee which in- a weekend and take "a day or two" cerning divisional review commit­ determined by the eligible faculty eludes the candidate ' s academic em­ so classes are disturbed as little tees , an outline in four parts , and dean. The Humanities Division ployment record . as possible . entitled , "Procedure (1973- 74) for is setting up similar guidelines Dean Williams has written a let ­ Straus does not forsee students Forming and Charging Division Re­ though Dean Resek has excluded him- ter to the Student Senate informing participating in the move except view Committees . " No other di visi ­ self from faculty meetings deter - it of the number of students needed in cases where they wanted to move ons have been able to offer The mining the structure of the review for review committees in hopes that their own pieces of work He also Load any similar type of document , committees . the Senate will choose resopnsible, explained that some of the materi ­ though Robert Neville , Faculty Sen- In the Natural Science guide- mature students for the job. No als presently ..used in the shops be­ lines , the first step calls for the other di vis:i!on has officially noti - longed to the muse'um and will have dean, with advice , to propose the fied the Senate of the need for to be left behind when the move is composition of the committee . Next Student committee membP.rs. Accord- made. Because of this , these mat­ the eligible . facultv review goals ing to Neville , the FPC will have erials will have to be "duplicated ~a act on the dean's proposal . to oversee the selecting of students . by the college." The new trailers, referred to as "Temporary II" are being prepared for use as darkrooms. The founda­ Crafts Room Ready must be put , as well CHAPI C CONCERTSPRESOOS tions still in as necessary darkroom equipment. SAT, JAN,26TH, BY JOE McGEE would indeed be a pleasant suprise if students would volunteer to the place aown. lVIaterials will (as Climax Blties Hallelujar. ! The age of miracles teach (without a salary of course) . far as we know now) be bought whole­ is not yet over , even in Purchase )ther students not acually taking sale with Student Senate funds and Band the impossible can happen (just a crafts course will be able to sold back to people using the ANDSPECIAL GUEST STARS look around) . If you weren't read­ use the room on their own if they crafts room at just slightly above can proove Sy know THE_CH.LIMBERS BROTHERS ing it in The Load would you really to that they cost . So once it is opened get on believe that many thousands of dol­ what they are doing and won' t bUL~ down to ic; and be p·eative, FEB, 2 lars worth of heavy crafts equip­ ment ordered by Sy Zachar in Aug- Blufl O!ster Cult ust is now sitting in a room in CCS TOM&M.I\GGIEPLAY RAT, TALENT NITE that until very recently belonged & to the Women' s Union . Nonetheless , it is the duty of this·reporter to Iggy& the Stooges inform you, the Purchase public , 8 MID li P,M, that four potters wheels , a drill press meltin g pots , buffers ,tumblers , FEB, 9 SAT, hafues·s_,looms, and all sorts of other paraphenalia needed for jew­ Badfinger lry making , weaving, glass blowing, pottery making, and leather work SPECIALGUEST ST ARS have arrived. TO BE ANNOUNCED But before you start dancing in 8 ANDJl P.r1. the streets let me first tell you that there are a few problems(of EVEOF LINCOLNSBIRTHDAY course) . A lot of the stuff is fEB, li here, but not all , particulary smal­ ' ler· j ewlery t ools . It is exppr:t .. Docter John ed that it will not be until Feb . WITHSPECIAL GUEST STARS 4, at the earliest when Sy and oth­ ers have unpacked it all and open ToMAND MAGGIE IN THERAT THURSDAY NIGHT. PHOTO by Laura Lesser Canned Heat the crafts room . Proble~sof safe ­ and security have also arisen , Tom Pappell and f-1aggie Holtz­ a night club act at the Tal ent 8 1\t-IDli P.~1. ty Jerry Barry, Director of Security , berg , on tour , played the Rat Thur­ Show. He was accompanied by a j az­ FEB, ZZ has been working on making sure sday and the Talent Show Saturday zy piano and did three tunes that certain things slich as aspes­ night - both to standing - room-only ranging from Sarah Vaughn to Fank ZZTop tos goes up on the walls to pro­ audiences . Scott Morrow, Jeff Sal­ Sinatra (The Lady is A Tramp). The tect against the acetylene torches, kin and a host of others also did audience received Mr. Morrow's in­ 143 Wes tch es ter Ave . 212 -541- 6190 as well as seeing to it that there Talent Show nuwbers . terpretations well and acknowleged Por t ches te r , N.Y . is adequate ventilation and so on . Tom and Maggie walked into an that his act gave a new and excit ­ Tickets: Available at Box Of He and Sy are working on the room empty Rat Thursday at 7p .m. and ing dimension to coffee house- style fice and ALL TICKETRON Ou tl e ts •to make a high security area com­ closed to a full house, as Maggie shows that had, until then, been 212-6 44-4 400, Penn Central New pJ:ete with new locks, :1larms , and had predicted . They played a vari ­ the rule . Haven R . R. across th e street . bolting down whatever they can . ety of folk and bluegrass "numbers - Jeff Salkin turned in a memora­ Route 1- 95 or Merrit Parkway · As for actua l ly running the Tom on guitar and Maggie on fiddle . ble set of folk tunes, including to Port chester . joint , the first thing ·to mentior1 On Saturday , they helped Jeff Salkin John Stewart 's Daydream Believer . is that Michael Baird will be spon­ close his set with I Shall Be Re ­ Several of Salkin 's tunes were fine sor ing a non- credit course in tie ­ lease d . original compositions . dying that will meet three .. times Scott Morrow showed polishea Things are livening up. a week . Sy informed us that it orofessional poise and style in 3 EDITOR - Andrew Htigos ASSOCIATEEDI'IDR - Nina Rubin ~! WJlilll] 0®ill]) LP!Y!JITgtakeJ NEWS EDI'IDR - Adam Nagourney STAff FEA'l.'URFBEDI'IDR - Jeff Salkin BY MIKE McGUIRE extent , and a bad one in that this PHOIOGRAPHYEDI'IDR - Doug Mill er In two previous lette r s, Load was all they knew. Another bad ef ­ Am' EDI'IDR - Laura Lesser readers have seen that Purchase is fect was that the st udents te nded tt CULTURALCRITIC - Scott Douglas Morrow largely based on Alfred N?rth forget all they had "l earned " the PRODUcriON - Rachael fu:i:.ro;s1, Judy Pszenica, Arey Eisenberg Whitehead ' s The Aims of Education day after the Regents . PHOTOGRAPHY~ Judy Pszeni ca and have read a defense of this ' - The assumption behind fie l d ex­ REPORI'ERS - Mike McGuire , J oel Bennett, Joe McGee , Chri s Kadison,Pat "Whitehead Conspiracy" by D:r. ams is that the Board of Study Neal e , Joe Bergstein,.. Tim Russel, Emet t McGuire, Webb Srredley, Rach­ Isaak , a· visiting professor :. knows more about -the discip l ine ael Burrowp. Allen Belkin- M1t.r.h Br>n7.i n skv . Viyie n Chen, Sue Dibbl e, Having read Whitehead's book, than you do. Whi~his probabl y Donna Sacks, Susan Sol omon, JoAnne Wasserman; Mike ,Feldman . which is in our library, I 'd like t~1e,but in a sense total l y irre l­ LITERARY EDI'IDR - Mitch Oscar to make a few observations. First evant . Discipl i nes aren ' t mono­ Am' - Charles Alexander Pl unkett of all, a short reply to Dr. Isaak : lit hic; people wi thin them argue While I agree with your enthusiasm with each other . What is vital to f or Whitehead' s setup , I don't ·a behavioralist in psychology may Letters To The Editor think that peopl e would suddenly be a waste to a Freudian . What embr ace the second freshman cluster , Professor A may think is essential servile servants of seno unite! automatically upon reading Aims . I may not draw the concurrence of A vicious and brutal form of sex Greenwich Village types . 'l'nese don't think that many people op­ Professor B. discrimination is being perpetrated dull - witted dilettantes stupidly pose the theory of clusters; the The corollary of this assump­ on the Purchase community by the imagine that the world is a stage reason why some object to the sec­ tion i s that th e Board of Study Servomation Corporation of Cam­ and they are the stars in play that ond cluster has a lot more to do knows more about what ' s best for bridge, Massachusetts , the peopl e tries to show who can be the most with them not king the f i rst one. you t han you do. This is one of entrusted with the job of "feeding" . annoying and obnoxious. li back case If we base a school on Aims, the most dangerous assumptions us . The women who are empl oyed by Getting to this cruel freshman clusters and senior pro­ her e , one whi ch could defeat the the aforementioned company, who you of blatant discrimination , we call jects (as opposed to senior theses) original purpose of this school . see every night daintily serving upon those in the Purchase commun­ are easily justified by the book. Supposedl y , Purchase is based dinner or hard at work watching the ­ ity interested in human justice , l argely on the bel our comrades the Wo­ However, and this is my main beef , ief that st u­ salads , have rarely known the joys , especially in junior field exams can only be jus ­ dents must take a significant part del ights , and general uplifting men' s Uni on, to join us in our tified by a badl y tortured rendi ­ of the initiative in educatio n. experience of working in the dish ­ fight to abolish tokenism and to Having no how . tion of the book' s ideas. White­ other people, matter room. We, the men in the dishroom, achieve true equality of misery head says, ''I suggest that no sys­ distinguished their academic cre­ wish to share th i s wonderful place We furthermore ask that interested tem of external tests which aims dentials , decide what you must of work with our sisters on the people complain immediately to Mr. primarily at examining individual know vio l ates this credo badly . ·serving lines , so that they too can Bruce "Let Them Eat J ello" Corn­ scholars can result in anything but Field exams , in teaching stu ­ know what real hell , stench, and well and Mr. Bob "The :Phantom" educational waste . .. Primarily it is dents to consider themsel ves polit ­ degradation at $1.90 an hour is . Rhodes so that this i nhuman situa­ the schools and not the scholars ical scientists or historians or It ' s true that working on the serv ­ tion can be cleaned up immediately. th at should be inspected. " Al­ psychologists first and Purchase ing , li,ne is no bed of roses either , though Whitehead does speak of a students second, are perpetuating especially l istening to the assort ­ Yours In The Revolution , the cliqueishness which already The Dishroom Six ed ravings ~f the - styled "sta ge of precision ", he nowhere permeates the school . There is al ­ self advocates an exam to keep everybody so a tendency for the students to in line . He speaks of putt i ng your betterwait.than newr t hi nk of themsel ves as an elite Since Pat face and Pat technical knowledge to work , but whose purpose f ­ Tilson's urgency . I have this very discon­ is to receive in or Tilson ' s name are two uncon­ the thrust of that concept is to ­ mation from an even higher el ite . still certing feeling that a very impor­ images me, I have chosen ward projects and/or field work and · I had wanted go Harva.rrl I nected to tant letter that I am presently a­ If to to him know how I not toward tests. would have gone to Harvard. to "let feel" wait i ng has been put in somebody Purchase, being an enlightened 1 have no objection to this col­ through this l etter . else's mailbox or has been acciden­ and progressive school , doesn' t lege trying to teach people compe­ My main compl aint is that the tal l y filed under garbage. have things as backward as required tence in a field . I have no ob­ majori ty of my mail has arrived One girl told me today that when courses . However , questions are jection to a senior project which th ree weeks late . Notices carrying she went down to pick up her pack­ asked on the field exam which man­ will pull t he strands of that com-­ news of upcoming concerts arrive age , the room was .Open ,wide open, date that you either take specific petence together . What J o):Jject to after they have taken place . Let­ with no one there . Packages com­ courses or else learn their content ~s a system which says that the ters that must be returned with an­ taining books not avai l able in the on your own. judgment of a student and his ad­ swers and money by a certain date campus books tore , or grandma' s In this respect the field exams visor can ' t be trusted because the get to my mailbox after that cer­ chocol ate cake were anxiously wait­ remind this observor of the Regents advisee is "onl_y_2 «tudent" . tain date has come and gone . Some­ ing for anyone to grab . Exams most of us took in high · I-' d ·like to get' some feedback thing tells me that the foulup has All along , I have had an uneasy school . The State never quite told on th.Ls ar·tic l e , to see if the taken place at this end of the feeling that has recently turned the t eachers what to teach, but students want to keep field transaction. . into an easy anger concerning the t here were things that the st udents exams or if a campaign should be · I don ' t really understand why _handl ing of mail at this school. had to know to pass the exam given mounted to amend or abolish them . this school has hired someone to I don' t rea l ly know what to do a­ at t he end of the course . Respond- ' It seems to me that one of the sort and distribute personal mail bout changing the si tuation, be­ i ng in a pragmatic manner, teachers ·more valid questions at Purchase who has classes all day for five sides sorting the mail myself , which taught for the test -. This had the . isn ' t receiving a public air i ng. days of the week . It seems to me I mig.'1t consider . · good result in that students knew a Write the Load, c/o Mike McGuire , that mail is something that should Yours truly , prescribed _body of knowledge to somt ~ox302, and we'll print it . ·~e h~dledwith priority and more Maggie Holtzberg The publ ic was fed an assassination story , and having nothing.eise to back of the President ' s head, while entrance wounds are ALWAYS"clean" . believe, we bought it : John Kennedy was killed by a single bullet ... in the another bullet must have complete­ Kennedy ' s head wound was also from back of the neck and a bullet in the back of the head . He was ki ll ed by ly missed . The proof . against this the front. The motorcycle police ­ one ass asin, Lee Harvey Oswald , a disturbed malcontent who fired from the happening is rather ip·vressi ve· . man who was riding behind the Ken­ sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository. A close examination re ­ The Zapruder assassination ' film nedy limousine testified that he veals the fallacy of this information. shows Connally reacting to his had been sprayed by brain and skull - The rifle that was found by the wound some time after the President particles when Kennedy ' s head was Dallas police in th e Book Deposit- t• did. Connally has said that he was bl own apart by the last bullet . An Th D t eyewitness reports that the Pres­ ~rywas ~Mannlicher - Carcano Ital - e es.rue IOn hit by another bullet. He believes l an carblne . It was alleged to be Of that the first bullet couldn ' t have ident ' s ear flew towards the side­ Oswald's on the basis that he owned c hit him because he heard the sound walk to the rear of the car . This a rifle . He did -- a Mauser, which ame1ot, of the first shot before he felt gruesome description is given be­ Mann cause the material hit by a bullet is nothing at al l similar to a ­ an~rthing.Since any bullet trav ­ licher - Carcan. The Mannlicher­ els faster than the speed of sound, follows the direction in which the Carcano is a terrible rifle -­ the bullet would have already been projectile is going . Such evidence inaccurate and unreliable . This through the President ' s body and was almost practically ignored by is exactly what Mark Lane report - through Connall y's before he react ­ the Commission . ed in his excellent work RUSH TO ed. Also, it is quite impossible The doctors who examined the JUDGEMENT . . 'rhe tel ­ for a bullet that did so much dam-­ President knew that he was shot escopic sight on the rifle that vms age to two men to be completely in­ fr o;;; the fronL The nation might found in Dallas was misaligned . IT tact and unfl attened . Besides, have ~own that als o , but it is COULDNOT HAVE FIRED AS ACCURATELY there were fragments of metal found inte.r:'~stingto note tnat Kennedy's AS THE JOB REQUIRED. Neither could in the Govenor ' s wrist , while the body was hardly cold when it was Oswald. Marine records show that 0 flown out of Dall as and back to ~ bullet found on the stretcher was he was a terrib l e marksman. He - completely intact . Both Mark Lane Washington . As Jim Garrison re­ scored very poorl y on Marine mark­ ported, this was in complete vio­ and Jim Garrison among o~herscon ­ smanship tests . At that time he lation of Texas law . The victim cluded the bul was - was using the M-1, which has been that let rath of an unusual death must have an described as one of the sturdiest , er naively planted by someone on autopsy performed right after the stretcher . A more probable ac­ most accurate ever develop­ No rifles count of what might have happened · death . autopsy was performed ed . he-was poor on gun, on President Kennedy's body If this would be one bul l for each wound - until how could he have done any better et i t was back Washington. There Kennedy ' s neck, Connall y, and Ken­ in on the Mannl icher? The Kennedy was examined Bethesda nedy ' s head. Total three shots . it at the shooting was a very cl ean job . A -- Medical Center and an autopsy was poor_shot with a poor could John Connally has reported that at rifle RevisitedTI time shooting seemed prepared. It stated that Kennedy not have pu ed off . Alsc, ·par­ the of the it was shot from the back despite ll it BY JEFF SALKIN probable that there were about _· -- showed that Oswald what doctors Parkland Hos­ affin tests three people invol ved, or · the at had not f ired a r ifle on Nov. 22, '-One of the most controversia l that pital saw . 1963 . . aspects of the Kennedy assassination someone was firing with an auto­ matic rifle. Lastly, there is pr'a­ NEXT ISSUE: The case for i nter­ Numerous witn esses testified is t he subject of the number of governmental conspiracy against and The \1/arren Com-­ ctically i ncontrovertible evidence that they heard shots coming from shots bullets. Johr] Kennedy . Who is Lee Harvey mission reported that there were that Kennedy was shot from the · a grassy knoll in front of Ken­ front rather than from the Depos­ Oswald and why. was everyone say­ three shots . One bullet hit the ing such nasty things about him? nedy ' s route . These reports were itory , which was above and behind . practica l ly ighored by the Warren President in the back of the neck, How did the assassination of .passed through his body, entered The doctors that examined the Pres- John Kennedy change this nation Commission . The Presi dent ' s neck -ident noted that he must have been wound was made at a 450 angl e; a G<;Jven9;r.Conna l lY 's back, smashed into what it is today?_=- -=--,--....,.. rlb,~ shot from the front. Here ' s why: shot fired from t he 6th floor of hls fractured his wrist and Bookkeeper Needed for Student entered his thigh . This bull et was The hole near his Adam' s apple was Senate . work hours for the Depository woul d have entered small and round, but the wound Fifteen at an 18° angl e . l ate r found undeformed on his stre ­ in thirty dollars a week . Respon­ tcher . Another bullet entered the the back of his neck was jagged - sible , Reliable and Interested ! 4 rwilleffi3UJWJ~ ®m@rn8

ill1fLPL1illTI D~1f ill~1J)]]L1~ ®lJ1fill~ illlill&ill® BYLARRY ROBL'JSON broken up by a machine gun attack , if Eastwood has saved Rome from the a piJ!ll blasted five times in the Huns . The Harry character in this MAGNUMF ORCE 1974's example of the Hollywood Macho-male­ is definitive face with a .357 magnum. All this film is a super stud, with a Chinese ness ethic . Last year is was HIGH PLAI NS DRI FTER and the year before ·in sixty feet high technicolor God girl hanging all over him, -~troking that we had our choice of S TRAW DOGS or SHAFT. It's a siJ!llle formula Bless America big screen. Hand me his contour shoulder holster as for simple-minded movie producer s to eJ!llloy to make a lot of money, and rey vomit bag, Martha June:, they sink back into his bed. This perpetuate some heavy reyths in the process. I 'm teJ!llted to blame the man is no better than· those he pur­ The Hollywood Macho Epic usually extremely violent milleu of the film's ambiguous moral philosophy sues in the name of justice. He's consists of a hero who. is very film . Siegel never hit me over the more on writer Milius than director just handsomer than they are, bet­ cool, very quiet, and very deadly· head with is message. He stuck to Post. Milius, who made DILLINGER a ter in the sack than they are, and He talks with his gun or his fists, making a suspense film, rather than self-directed success, apparently can land on his feet li ke a cat and and rarely shows any emotion except a tract . feels obligated to make all the blow their heads off. He's a hero! wonder that it took him more than Director had no such Hemingway gossip about him come MAGNUM FORCE is a low point in one bullet to kill that l ast vil- ideas about MAGNUM FORCE . In this true. His film is a virtual cata ­ the American . I cringe lain . With the possible exception film there are only two kinds of logue of how to deal death to other when I think of all the great di­ of the Dustin Hoffman character in characters; policemen and victims. unsuspecting human beings. Nobody rectors such as Ford, Hawks, Boett­ STAW DOGS, all the films I mention- The policement are all young, is ever shot with anything as mun­ chier, Siegel, and how they were ed above have such a hero. A more handsome CREEP types . They are us­ dane as a .38. .44 Magnums are humanists as .well as men of sus­ recent exampl y would be Jim Brown's ually seen in poses of macho comra- used, machine guns, shotguns, .357 pense and excitement . For each man invincible S LAUGHTER, who carries derie, admiring Tricia Nixon types magnums, high powered rifles, a killed by John Wayne in a Ford film .around an arsenal that must need a clinging to their arms . We are in- girl even has a can of Drano force you never saw a single moment of truck so it can follow him from formed that several of them served fed down her deep throat. Milius the malicious , bitter carnage town to town . with honor in Vietnam and that con- probably took a cold shower after that decorates every frame of MAG­ MAGNUM FORCE is a sequel to DI R- flict served to teach them to shoot writing every one of these neato NUM FORCE . Ford and Hawks fleshed TY HARRY . and, while that film had (the word ' kill ' is carefully avoid exciting action scenes. Yessir, I out their heros, gave them a strong a truly brutal hero , he was not a avoided), and they came home to can see him sitting at the type­ code with which to operate. Har­ true Macho figure . In serve the forces of truth, justice, writer in his hunting shirt , wonder­ ry ' s code is merely shoot first, director Don Siegal ignored women and the Southern California Way. ing if this victim should be black, then don't ask any questions be­ completely , l eaving feelings . about Every other line in MAGNUM FORCE female, homosexual, or is there a - cause you're too busy beating off howhis character related to the represents a cop from police re- way to combine all three? horny girls. · opposite sex up to us. Siegal made cruiting posters. The victims are MAGNUM FORCE supposedly wants US In a country dominated by Water-­ DIRTY HARRY a brilliantly edited pilllJS, hookers, gangsters , bi-sexu- to root for hero be­ gate, Agnew, the energy crisis, and ode to· the iJ!llortance of the police als, "loose" women, old cops, any­ cause he is killing'only the right Albert Shanker, peDhaps MAGNUM in a modern While I do body who does not and society. fit Post's ·. guys.' Yet the fact that he uncov­ FORCE had to be made. If it i s a not COJ!llletely share his concern • writer John Nilius ' image as total­ ers and destroys a Police-sanction ­ mirror image of these times, maybe over the boys in Blue, I could not ly aryan and necessary to the good ed Death Squad (a l a Chile) does I will build that cabin in Canada fail to be caught up in the tense, of society. A swirrrning party is not make us care one tinker's damn after all!

'l'~o~e.l)\e.~s: ·

~urc.\\a.se.'Jla.uc.e.~e.\)e.t \Ot\le.om.\)G.\\\l ror tonight, so 1 suppose I will tell you what I ~~allythought of the Purchase Dance Repertory Co~ \)\e.~ pany' s performance Wednesday night . o.a.e.'le. Throughout the dances I had the tendency to start up on another row BY SUE SOIDMON of rey sweater, but any theatrical performance has it's lulls. In January 16. was the opening per­ particular, a moment of slight ....o.....j formance of the Ptu~chaseDance Re­ frustration was the beginning of pertory Company . The program was AnnaSokolow's The Question. I am sponsored by the Dance Division , sorry to find that the majorit y of Continuing Education and the Stu­ dancers showing fear, hatred, lif e dent Senate. in hell, or pain in their faces The first piece performed was were beyond the point of being con­ Mudai ("Unt it led") by Kazuko Hira­ vincing. I saw many ridiculous ex­ bayashi . She created a very un­ pressions that were merely overdra­ ique universe out of small move- matizations . The choreography 11ents contained within , or break­ needs the honesty in expression ing through , a large pattern of that professional actors or, in IDverrents . Thousands of little this case, dancers, may have. The :roves occured,like eruptions, out choreography and dramatic theme )f stillness; I'd barely' catch them were somewhat destroyed , and at :md they 'd disappear back into the times, caused chuckfes'. throughout :5eneral pattern , having assumed a the audience siJ!lllY because the nysterious significance. She co~ performers went too far. posed a microcosm of seemingly in­ In Michael Uthoff 's Cantata, :inite, startling detail, locked grief and anguish were the emoti~ illto a timeless lar ger structure ons throughout; the movement was through these short movements . also tinged with human anger , and The dance was storyless and ab­ RALPHF ARRINGTON, ToMAS SPANSKI, GLENNFERRUGIARE AND JANE ETRA here the dancers performed the stract with one woman and three mer Photo by Laura Lesser technical part quite nicely , but dancing. The woman was times at they did Wednesday during the ways right with . After the the facial expression was over­ the center , around which the men first it few sectio ns of the dance - ner- dance was over , I sat still for a done. Maybe they were,as ked for mjved, and at times floated betwee~ vously, uncomfortably, .unwi ing to few minutes , shaken . The Question such qualities as "give ' em your or moved w h them. In the begin- ll it acknowledge the pain they were see- blew me into some sort of void. guts ," but I would rather see the ning I was reminded of an intri cate ing. The dance charted the tor- 1·1s. Sok<¥ow makes visual poetry : guts and not masks . sexual machine- a wheel with hub , tures of living; the laughter stop- profound and exquisitely composed. As far as the dancing itself spqkes and interlocking cogs, but ped. As for Micheal Uthoff ' s piece - went , I was iJ!llressed. There were that image broke. At one point her The choreography was a fascinat - ,the least said . It was showy, emp­ 'some who's dramatic qualities were choreography floated wj_th the music ing and filled with strong, unusual ty , boring. The music was unplea- accurate and conv.incing. In Kazuko (which was very interesting) , and shapes . One part had six or seven sant, the womens' costumes ugly. I Hirabayashi ' s Mudai the dancers everything was suddenly under wat­ dancers rushing across the stage in lik ed the piece better last spring showed precision and moved with her er. Another sect i on had each danc­ jagged capes like devils out of before it was added to. It was a clean patterns , putting together er on stage alone, for the most hell. Another section consisted of real tear-jerker then too, but at the neat quilt she planned . Each part, and everything was beautiful, a few men sliding very sl owly to th least had some visual excitement. phrase was attatched by a COJ!llli­ particularly the second solo with the flo or, then rising into twisted Maybe Mr. Uthoff could restore the mentary one. Glenn Ferrugiari . arcs over and over, arms tentative- excitement and Cantatas next time All in all, I can't be too cri ­ The whole dance was possibly ly r eaching upwards, but always around by cutting out the tears. tical. I was iJ!llressed with how concerned with the interactions of fa l ling back down: hopeless, leth- I hope Continuing Ed makes some some of rey fellow students have ~ men and women, and, if so, was argic, beaten. I was hit by strong money from the performances so that proved and realize that there are pretty sexist. But, like I said, visual images: men in a desert, more can be sponsored next semester. some very coJ!lletent perf ormers in the whole thing was abstract , and I parched, gasping for water and wri- Michael Baird: Thank you for the this school. I was not as upset choose to see the dance as a co~ thing in relentles s , deadly heat or good things you've given this cam­ with The Question as I may sound - menton life, not sexual relation ­ bodies sinking slowly into quick- pus. The red roses you handed out on the whole it was .performed beau­ ships. (Dare I separate the two?) sand , rising like bubbles, . but in- tonite were beautiful . tifully, especially the mens ' sec­ Anna Sokolow is a genius. Her evitably going under. The Purchase dancers have come tion, the sections with couples , choreography plunged into me - I the all-women section, the trio and Al~the elements that go into a' long way since last year. felt my insides shattering with . _ creatlng t ota l performance were the quartet. · the impact. The dance was aptly well done. The costumes were lat- In Michael's piece I was especi­ and simply called The Question. n .l n n a ... ~ Hope It ticed stripes and holes app~arin~.... ~~1111~11 ally pleased to watch Beal, is a long series of questions that whose grace and lightnes s , and half - torn, half - dead, questlons ln C.Omman i S NO had no happy replies, often re­ themselves. The lighting by Joseph .~1l1l clean performance inNocturno y plies - I was sometimes terrified Maceda was excellent with those carno de_ }!.mot.· and Canto de Ago~iay watching. The Question reverberat ­ eerie fade- outs fadin g out cons­ BY SUSANDIBBLE Desolacion was most refreshing. ed inside like the primal screams tantly. "Eh, so what did ! ·think? What

I heard in the library year. . I my I last ~MS Sokolow ' s choice of music I am advised to be critical this can say? They're friends, And people laughed then the way was wonderful, her choreography al- time in reviewing the dance concert can't judge it professionally."

~ 24 12:35 PLAY: STRIP TEASE, by Mort Clark with students from Westchester Comm. Col.; Grace Church, 33Church St., ~ Plal.ns. 7:00 BUDGET HEARINGS; 2nd Floor Conference Room, CCS . I [AlEDDAR ) 7:00 INTRAMURALS : Volleyball & deadline for all squash and JANUARY 22 12:35 ... FILMS:----- WINGS-- -- TO VENEZUELA,-- WINGS-- TO JAPAN, DOWN UNDER; paddleball matches to be played and scores reported. Grace Church, 33 Chruch St., Wh. Plains. Free. 25 7:00 BUDGET APPEALS HEARING: 2nd Floor Conference Rm.,CCS. 6:00 DORM GOVERNMENT MEETING; Dining Hall. 10:00 VIDEO CLUB MEETING; 2nd Floor Lounge, CCS. 7:00 INTRAMURALS: Volleyball. 8:00 BASKETBALL: vs. Manhattanville; away. 7:00 RADIO STATION MEETING. 9:00 COFFEE HOUSE: watch for announcements. 7:30 GENERAL PROGRAMMING COMMITTEE MEETING; 2nd Floor Lounge, 26 9:00 Pool and Pizza Party (we assume it's in the Gym, man., ccs. 27 Yup, you guessed it, FORGET IT!!! 7:30 STUDENT SENATE MEETING; 2nd Floor Conference Room,CCS. 28 6:00 COFFEE HOUSE; Dining Hall. Stu. 75 ¢. 23 12:00 FILMS: THE MYSTERY OF THE LEAPING FISH, THE TEMPEST, 4:30 CONCERT: Music Division Recital; Museum 1001. BETTY BOOP ,CARTOONS , and more! 2nd Street & 8th Av. Bldg. 29 6:00 DORM GOVERNMENT MEETING; Dining Hall. Rm. 25, Co-op College, Mt. Vernon. 7:00 RADIO STATION MEETING. 12:35 CONCERT: Womens' Barbershop Quartet - The Shoreline C 7:00 INTRAMURALS: Final Volleyball of Fall Semester, Chapter of Sweet Adelines; Gra.ce Church, 33 Church St., 7:30 STUDENT SENATE MEETING; 2nd Floor Conference Rm., CCS~ Wh. Plains. Free. 7:30 GENERAL PROGRAMMING COMMITTEE MEETING; 2nd Floor Loung 1:30 CONCERT: Music Division Student Recital; Museum 1001 . ccs. 7:30 SWIM MEET: vs Concordia College & innertube Water Polo 8:00 BASKETBALL vs. Mercy College; away. Game. SHORT TERM ENDS. AND DON' t FORGET, THOSE SPRING I & I I INCOMPLETES ARE NOW "NO CREDITS." Dylan in Montreal FILMS BY FEISTY Jm · _ ___ and more mature instrument - it's (MONTREALCORRESPONDENT). definitely neither "Masters of War" BY CURTICETA YLOR For those of you who have uvv or "Peggy Day." We can only re~rem- received a "request denied" fo~. ber an old Dylan and it is a mis- Off to a good start last week, I Bob Dylan tickets, stop complal~ngtake to assume that his voice and informed the salivating Purchase about the " millionaire whose rlp - mind should still be pre-1966 in Corrmunity that on Thursday night we ping us off ," and start droolir:g 1973. Still , there was the old an- would be showing "Bogey and Cagney over a concert that's ~orthtw~ce ger against White House bozo's who together " in the Raoul Walsh film, the price. OK- the tlcket prl:es, play checkers with our lives ... THE ROARING TWENTIES. Well, if you are ludicrous, and maybe Dylan lsn still the handkerchiefs came out went that night you would have in­ isn't a Revolutionary Drug Brother for "Nobody feels any pain ... (JUST stead been salivating along with an anymore. We're paying the pr ice LIKE A WOMAN). audience watching our much improved for having a_ part of a life_we've Dylan performed solo and accom- Purchase Dance Company. Like Scott observed and been part of glven panied . In between, The Band gave I · to have expanded IT\Y cultural . back to us in the best of all pos- their own mini-c oncert. The Band's horizons. Actually , the film has · sible ways. We'r e paying for arrangements were much the same as been rescheduled for this week, ~- ~~in~&~In~ January 24 at 8:00 , and this will It •s not just because we'r e get- tion to the mucho performed numbers be the really true last film of the ting our rocks off seeing ourselves they added one new song and finalzy se!Tl2ster. We will not be showing again as pimpl e-f aced ju.r:uor ~igh-got around to pl aying I Shall Be our Spring fare until the second ers cruising into Greenwlch Vlll~e Released. week in February. THEFIRST PERSONWHO CAN NAME EVER­ to buy narcotics and _listen to PlS- There was levon Helm bopping, Rick YONEIN THIS PICTU~EWILL WIN A Enough of the Film Seri es , now a sed- off folksingers - it'~just as Danko shilllt1Ving, and Garth Hudson SEASONPASS TO THESPRING FILM SER­ bit of socia l commentary. Of late much because of great mus~cand no- rolli ng back and forth a la very there has been much, for l ack of a IES, THEFIRST CORRECTENTRY RE­ thing more than great muslc · Dylan 'mellow Ray Charles. Above and be­ better non-sexist word, "bitching " CEIVEDBY CaNT, ED,, THEGATEHOUSE, wrote songs t hat no one , save len- · yond their appearance was the in- about the Film Series, and how SHALLBE DECLAREDTHE WINNER , No non- McCartney , could hold a candle credib l e individual talent combin- elitist it truiy is. I am an elit­ FACULTYARE ELIGIBLE BECAUSE YOU'VE to . Oh yes , it also just happens ing to form a musical whole greater ist - not even I would deny that , BEENAROUND LONG ENOUGH TO KNOWWHO that his back-up group these days than the sum of its parts. but from the plethorat of film ser­ EVERYBODYIS, ALSONO ~ERS OR . is also the tightest and most en- Whether The Band is THE best CaNT, ED,STAFFERS ARE ELIGIBLE, ies budgets submitted to the Finan­ j oyable group around (Uriah ~eap group around is like asking whether cial Committee, one would think SENDENTRIES ATT. CURTICETAYLOR, and the New York Dolls not Wlth - Tammy Wynette is better than Loret- that I never listened to anyone, NEXTWEEK, ANOTHER PHOTO, standing. ta Lynn - when you reach a certain - when, in fact, I occasionally do . of the gay group is somewhat diffi ­ Dylan and The Band tore the Mon- point it doesn't matter any more. To be defensive , I shall give an cult . However , let it be known treal Forum apart with a 2 1/2 hour Howev~ryou've got to hear this example . Last year, because I felt that , while last year MONA THE VIR­ concert. Sparklers , tearful eyes, group b~hindDylan to believe how it important - not because I was GIN NYMPH was the only X-rat ed film bezerko brains - it just doesn't good they are. They are so tight badgered into it, I showed four on campus, this year the only films happen to the normally placid Mon- and so knowledgeable of all Dylan's feature films directed by women. that depicted 'the sexual act ' were treal crowd. The hockey Canadiens material that they make all of his That may not sound l ike many , but gay films which we programmed . You don't do it. The Dead didn 't do it studio h~lpinstantly obsolete. there have only been about twenty see , I am truly a liberal catering either . Not even David Bowie could The last scheduled nUmber was such films during the last forty to all concerns (which, of course, bring out the pure , undrugged ~mo-Like a Rolling Stone, and even Bill years . I also showed an additional is an untruth) . Next year we hope tion that touched French- Canadiens , Graham was caught up in the bedlam. number of films very much rel ated to offer only one film series and English- Canadians, and mericans (And this was his eighth concert! ) to the rol es wo!Tl2nare forced to ·· leave the other to the planning of alike. This left both me and my wallet play in Western culture . The audi­ a student committee, andwe will At about 8:30 P.m., Bill ?raham spent. I could complain abo~tthe ence liked the films very much, but, hopefully bring a few more films on went into his sweaty heav:(Welght price and the ten- degrees- below- interestingly enough , to IT\Y know­ campus in conjunction with specific act in English and hysterlcally zero temperature in Montreal, but I l edge, none of the sisters in the campus groups even this semester . poor French; by 8:32 everyone had forgot once the magic began. For \-.To!Tl2ns' Union attended these films. In closing, one more defensive forgotten Bil l's language problem. those of you who get to see Dylan, Now I am told that I never li sten. jab: fully half of the films in the pylan stepped out in. a b la:k Jack- you • ll find out fast that the magic In the upcoming film series, al ­ Sunday Night Series for the Spring -et . high collared whl te shlrt' is prett y strong stuff. though there are no films directed Semester are there because students )cans and harmonica holder . Rick-« -=-=------..------l by women (there is only one good requested them. Surely if you look ~anko'spoiled the drabness of the l THE lOAP _QUESTION: · 1 .that I have not shown here) at the very mixed bag of films of­ Band's appearance by wearing a I WHE~~EACH WAS IN HIS RESPE~~~~I filr1JS de8.l there are again that di­ fered next semester, you could not white, satin shirt. Darnn, what a I PRIME,WHO WA~I~~~y~~~E OR : r ectly with womens' problems, possibly imagine that one mind drag - no glitter. . BALLPLAYER~ I plights and alternatives. As for could have thought up such a di­ " ... When you go your way and I I WILLIEMAYS. . I the Gay Corrmunity, the number of We verse list. have included a I'll go mine ... '" the voice ·which I MANTLE__ d_ MAnsYwSers to mailbox 3431 good films on the subject can, par­ stroke for every kind of folk. d t · th 1 Please sen a . 1 so many are accustome o as el el I THEANSWER TO LASTWEEKS QUESTION: I don the expression, be counted on There's even a film about a real a nasal croaking or _an easy croon- HENDRIX-I CLAPTON-Q . one hand, so satisfYing the wishes virgin ! ing, has developed lnto a stronger L----'--' ------J

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UP TO30 STUDENTSWILL BE NEEDEDTO SERVEAS COMMITTEEMEMBERS ON DI VI­ SIONALCOMMITTEES WHICH WILL REVIEW LETTERS & SCIENCE FACULTY UP FOR. Name ______TENURE,PROMOTION AND/OR REAPPOINTMENT IN THE HUMANITIES, SOCIAL SCIENCE, ANDNATURAL SCIENCES. COMMITTEE\-JORK WILL INVOLVE EXAMINING EACH PROFES., Mailbox Tel. ______SOR'S'CONFIDENTIALFILE, STUDENTEVALUATIONS, SCHOLARLY WORK 1\ND CONTRI­ BUTIONSTO THECOMMUNITY; ATTENDING EVERY COMMITTEE MEETING; AND MAKING . CAREFUL,THOUGHTFUL RECOMMENDATIONS CONCERNING THE PROFESSOR. Address ______STUDENTPARTICIPATION IN THIS YEAR'S FACULTYREVIEW PROCEDURES WILL DE­ Year Major _ TERMINEMUCH OF HOWSTUDENTS WILL BE INCLUDEDIN COLLEGE-WIDEGOVERNANCF ___ FORYEARS TO COME. RESPONSIBLESTUDENT PARTICIPATION IN THESEPROCED­ URESWILL BE A NECESSARYFIRST STEP IN CREATINGA HEALTHYCOLLEGE THAT comments: ______CANSUCCESSFULLY BE OPERATED IN A COOPERATIVEMANNER BY STUDENTS,FACULTY ANDADMINISTRATORS. IF THIS GOALIS IMPORTANTTO YOU.PLEASE FILL OUT THIS FORMAND RETURN IT TO: THESTUDENT SENATE OFFICE (0035. CCS). THE STUDENTACTIVITIES OFFICE (0013. CCS), MAILBOX207; ORSEE ANDYHUGOS (RMC335. 253-8048,

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