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The thI acan, 1967-68 The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70

1-26-1968 The thI acan, 1968-01-26 Ithaca College

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Vol. 40-:-No. 14 Ithaca, New York Friday, January 26, 1968 Block Named Therapy Conference Karam Asks Re-evaluait:n.onn Plian:rrned For Student Student Begins at IC Today IF o :ir

Donohue-Halverson CLOVER CLUB lFILETCHER'S Inc. 356 Elmira Rd. DANCING PLUMBING AND HEATING SINCE 1898 Every Evening

Estimates Cheerfully Given <> exotic Oriental Dancers Handcraft Gifts 3 Shows - 10, 11- & 12 602 W. Seneca St. Handwrought Jewelry DRY CLEANING AND LAUNDRY <> 273-3393 Sundays - Rock & Roll Shirts As You Like Them --- Ronnie Dio & The Prophest 8-Cou5e of (g~i11a Folded or on Hangers SAME DAY SERVICE ON REQUEST Bety Millard 128 E. Seneca St. Ithaca, N.Y. 11 11 It Takes Time for Quality ·- Your Drugstore Away from Home 272-8641 KLINES PHARMACY- 112-114 N. AURORA ST. Ithaca College Cleaning Center AR 3-3033 THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 3 6 Student as Nigger9 Four Seasons In Concert Tonight Stirs Trouble Up North

WINDSOR (CP) - More than tion was not interfering with free­ 100 students at the University of dom of the press but was merely Windsor marched yesterday on trying to curb obscenity in The the university's administration Lance, he said. building and burned an effigy of Mr. Lalor said Tuesday that he the administration to protest had no choice but to resign or be against the resignations of two expelled, and for the sake of :Miss editors of the student newspaper Johnstone and himself, he re­ Tuesday. signed. She followed suit. John Lalor and Marian John­ The resignations came after stone resigned from the weekly Mr. Lalor refused to give the paper The Lance after the senate senate committee assurances that committee on student conduct articles containing squalid vul­ and discipline threatened them garities would not be printed in with expulsion by dismissal un­ the paper in the future. less they agreed to stop printing The article spurring the senate articles which university presi­ committee action was entitled dent J. Francis Leddy termed "The Student As Nigger" and "squalid vulgarity." compared students and Negroes The students chanted "down as second-class citizens. with tower power" and carried Moves were afoot among stu­ signs reading "Hands Off Our dent leaders to persuade Mr. Paper" and "Our Money, Our Lalor to withdraw his resigna­ Paper." tion. The student board of publica­ The effigy they burned was in tions suggested "we place our , the form of a straw-filled pup­ heads on the block together," in pet stuck on a stick. an effort to get :Mr. Lalor rein­ George McMahon, dean of stu­ stated. dents, said he ·was upset by the The board is asking the senate demonstration. The administra- committee to meet again and con­ sider independent arbitration in the form of a Canadian Univer­ War Affects continued sity Press investigation team. The Students' Administrative tar attack on the Empire ·State Council said that the committee Building. In fact my country isn't had reacted to "outside presures even at war. from sources inside and outside The Four Seasons will highlight the Winter Weekend Program with a concert tonight at 8:00 p.m. in the gym. Like I said, if some cats want the university." to put the uniform on and run by Linda Struble most modern equipment but also Then, when the hour of four: of magic will have appeared and Reprinted from Toronto Globe I I around the jungles of southeast and Mall If you cannot tolerate the ex· the latest ski fashions will be' strikes, Winter 1Veekend will be· disappeared from the campus. , 1Asia shooting people and being citing sound of the Four Seasons shown. A fashion hint about what I over for another year and I The minds and hearts of I.C. ' shot at, let them. But I like it or can't bear the thought of at- will be "in" for this Spring will thoughts will again return to the I students will have been refreshed where I am, and I like my free- tending the Rose Ball, you defi- aso be revealed. Along with the I world of term papers and eight ' and enriched by new and everlast­ dom and my warm bed. Some peo­ Safe School continued nitely should stay away from visual entertainment for which I o'clock classes. Briefly, some sort ing memories. ple may prefer a tent or like we merely have to think sweet Winter. Weekend '67. However, if the ~inter Weekend Committee I others to prefer it for them. How­ thoughts in order to achieve in- the swmging around of. the Elec- provided are "Shades of the ever, I like to sleep where I want tellectual nirvana. But there are tric Elves is still pulsating Alps," the Royal Bavarian Group and wake up to the sound of an certain measures we can effect through your body from last who will play for your _listening \ STEW UNDERWOOD alarm and not a grenade. which will help us on the way. night's "Snow Soul" at the Pub, pleasure at the Lodge. invites you I am neither for nor against First of all we have to make you may look forward to an un- Do you think that your elation :I war; right now I have no opinion forgetable weekend. will be at its peak at the concert to dine in the Crew Room of it. I know I would fight if I freshman orientation an educa- Friday night at 8:00 P.M. you tonight? Throughout the past few I felt threatened-or I would run, tional experience instead of a shall immediately recall from a months five girls have been I Extensive Menu junior prom. We must support few summers ago, "Sherry" and chosen as the Rose Candidates whichever I thought best. I Private Rooms for Banquets ~/~ight think war unnecessary but the student government's at- other popular hits of the famous and one will be chosen tomorrow I it it were the only way to save foursome. But, regardless of how night by the Delta Sigma Pi I Reasonably Priced my loved ones I would willingly tempt to involve ourselves in the excited you become about see- brothers. This moment has been go to war. But my mother is not decision-making process at Ithaca ing the Four Seasons in person eagerly anticipated not only by I Cocktails baking pies in Da Nang, and my College, and we must involve the gals, remember-Big Girls Don't the candidates but by the en~ire father isn't serdcing airplanes faculty in student activities. By Cry. student body. After a relaxing in Saigon, and my sister isn't doing this we automatically blend At 10:30, after the performance afternoon at the Lodge the Rose ' which promises to be especially Ball will be a welcome event. The studying music on hill 875-so an academic opinion into any be why should I ~gbt? worth attending, The Electric guys-decked out in their str- Now to the draft or involuntary undertaking. Elves a local group who have and the girls-looking radiant- SUNNYSIDE servitude. Every college male has Intellectualism will come. But recently performed at Carnegie will dance to the smooth sound IRE~T~UR..A.NT the spect_re of big daddy draft it must begin with us. Do you ex- Hall will swing once more-this of Frank Fenell and his orchestra. board hanging over him. Sup­ pect the administration to sug- time in the Rec. Room where Where? The Terrace of course, Rte. 13 S. at Corner Elmira Rd. and S. Meadow St., Ithaca posedly this is a free country, beer will be served. Then, at 1:00 where you will again enjoy "Quiet gest that the_ drama department A.M. when the wintertime magi~ Hours." However, since curfews Open 11:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. daily, except Mondays yet other than voting and "pay­ produce an adaption of the movie produces a tranquil effect on the are extended 'til 4:00 A.M. for ing taxes" where are you free? ''Ulysses?" Do you expect the .world, you can ignore the fact Weekend ticker-holders, you'll You don't go to college and you Phone AR 3-1200 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 1go into the army. What if you faculty to overhaul the marking that mother nature's immaculate have an extra hour to hear the wish to do neither?-and you system? Get with it! But if you blanket of white has become quite suave Ted Yudain Trio. do not want to become a Quaker! do not get with it you have no soiled and melted. Relax for a couple of hours at the Terrace Where is. your freedom to right to complain about· this col- where the peace of the season choose? lege. If you think the forces of will be maintained during "Quiet I know everytime I hear the intellectualism are too thin, they Hours." Soft music will drift by word draft I no longer think of are getting stronger. And if you in the background. Happiness and beer but some old lady picking like things just the way they are, security will abound with the out my number or name from lights romantically low and your Some years ago, the some impersonal file and imper­ the line to pre-registration starts favorite gal or guy close beside sonally sending me "greetings at the pool. you. from the President of the United In order to make the weekend Student Senate ontroduced IJ:iJates." Some democracy that is. 1 complete, Fall View Ski Shop and lt seems to me that I'm being Greek Peak have provided us with forced to partake in activities in Winter Weekend is ample ski fashions and instruc­ a reso~ution recommerodln111g which I may not wish at all to tors to transform the Rec. Room partake. romantic -_ - if you go into a ski lodge on Saturday after­ America, as I believe America noon at 1:00 P.M. Whether you tthat the only ~nqundl irefireshmelnlt to be, is worth fighting for (if with a date! be a ski enthusiast or strictly threatened), but no one should a spectator you will enjoy a be forced to fight a war they do visit to the Lodge. Not only the on campus !be Ge111esee !Beer. not believe in. And if people feel America isn't worth fighting for ,!here is no sense or justification in forcing them. For perhaps America isn't worth it. Perhaps COTTON'S CAR.ID SHOIP lhe studelnlts have lbee1111 'the home of the brave and land 304 E. State St. of the free has become the home of the fat and laiid of the forced. pLI1ttn1111g ot down:-n ever solnlce. it has, it is not worth fighting, Has a good selection of Uch less dying, for. Thoreau said "I was not born HALLMARK and GIBSON to be forced." I say, "Neither VALENTINE DAY CARDS as L" What do you say? (Ad­ dress comments to Frank Sco- lete, Dorm 18A). 01!'.N Dni:::w cc ROCH NY THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 4 Must Parents Pay and Pay? U.IP.I. In recent years there has been some feel­ for money, the increased cost m~st be met C.l?.S. ing that college education should not be re­ its students. The other expensive schools Published weektv by and for the students of Ithaca College. MEMBER stricted to children of the wealthy. The gen­ offer prestigious names, world famous facul­ eral idea seems to be that money-or the lack ties, automatic wealth for their graduates and Editor-in-Chief ...... Alan F. Hyman of it-should not be the criterion by which other desirable goodies for the money-plus, Managing Editor .. Kevin Connors to judge a person's ability to learn beyond again, the fact that they pay from 30% to Business Manager ...... Dick Cohen high school. 60% of the education cost. . Ithaca College has always been a major A logical analysis of the future for IC indi­ News -Don Tannenbaum Sports-Ben Reese Advertising-Rick Biggs cates some rather unpleasant alternatives: Terry Clark Jack Gedney Cheri Bleck opponent of this philosophy. Where !!lost co!­ Georgianna Glace Joy Malchodi Jayne Koch leges and universities sometimes remind their A. Become a super-expensive school for the Ellen Gold Gene Slater Serena Woolrich students to be grateful for small favors be­ children of the very rich and let the State Laura Katz Rich Stcyminski cause they arc asked to pay for only a part schools have all the poor and bright kids; Jeanne Murray Rick Wright Don Berman of their education, at IC the stude!lts are B. Join the State University system, as Buf­ Barbara Stein Make-up-Jayne Gallo sometimes so ill-mannered as to remmd the Bill Stoller Jim Sanmarco Debbie Addis falo University did; Alexis White Mike Hinkleman Maggie Allan authorities that their salaries and other bene­ C. Become the South Hill Campus of Cor­ Toni Seger fits come almost exclusively from the pockets· Feature-Cheryl Gelb nell University; Karen Allaben Cathy Lee Baker of the students' parents. . l\Iary Burdick D. Go out of business; George Budin Photography-Eric Shepard On occasion some of the college authori­ Diane Golub ties try to hit back yvith the observation that E. Raise very large sums every year from Literary-Susan Longaker Donald Green Bill Yerkes Richard Gerdau Jess Nadelman Dave Brownstein the student may consider themselves lucky to alumni, trustees, the community, corporations Alex Block Peter Wilkins have been admitted to IC. The answer to that and foundations. Copy-Chris Steele Jeannette Smyth Russ"Desoe is the obvious fact that admissions standards Items A, B, C, and D are, presumably, un- Joan Falchetti Frank Scoblete here are not overly demanding as a matter of thinkable to the administration. If Item E Sue Garrett Bob Joe is impractical then there is no other obvious 1 Amy Goldman Linda Struble simple academic survival, not as a favor to Carol Hammond Steve Schwartz any student. In other words, who are you try- solution withm the foreseeable future except ing to kid? . a very radical cost-cutting program, which Society Editor ...... Cheri Haring may be that we have a stand-off. Admis­ would re5ult, probably, in making the college Exchange Editor ...... Andi Iacuzzo It Faculty Advisor ...... P. D. Hanna, Jr. sions standards have gone up in recent years, lPss desirable to wealthy parents. number of applicants have been rising, and the However, we feel that item E is the only quality of the faculty is generally good. In reaJ. solution. An extensive publicity and pub­ The Ithacan office ts· located on the ground floor of Dorm 12, Rm. 103 on the Ithaca College South Hill Campus, Ithaca, N. Y. 14850. fact, everything about the college is going lic relations campaign is sorely needed to gain Advertising: call 274-3147 - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 274-3260 anytime. up, from buildings and trees to costs of opera­ the attention of these corporations and founda­ Editorial views reflect the opinion of the Editorial Board. These views neither tion. tions. This.. year is the 75th anniversary year, reflect the official position of Ithaca College nor necessarly indicate the consensus of And so we are back to the original prob­ what happened to the publicity? There cer­ the student body. tainly are signs around campus to tell us All letters and articles submitted to the Ithacan become tho property of the Ithacan. lem: As costs climb, who is going to pay the The Ithacan reserves the right to correct, edit. or refuse to publish any material sub- ever-higher tab? Students ( their parents) are the next week so and so will' speak as part of mitted for publication. · reputed to pay about 95% of the cost of op­ the 75th anniversary program, but who else Subscription: $5.00 per academic year. erating IC. The balance comes from govern­ knows. ment grants and gifts. For all practical pur­ Three years ago Ithaca College had a full poses IC has no endowment fund, so far as page spread in Time magazine. A lot has hap­ any published figures are concerned. pened since then and all that has been men­ Campus rumors have it that Ithaca Colleg~, tim:1.ed about IC is in articles concerning Cor- like Cornell and many other colle~es and uni­ nell. · Editorials - - versities, is beginning to operate in the red. Rumor has it that a fund raising campaign Cornell's solution may be to mount anotper was held last year., but that the cost of run­ of its huge fund dnves, probably such as ning it took almost the whole amount earned. the $82 million it raised for its hundredth That is what we have heard and it may not be birthday, or another rise in tuition as was true, but we haven't heard any news about The Advisor Story voted on this week. Tuition alone at Cornell the college receiving large sums of money will be $2200 per year as Ithaca College is not through a fund-1 a1smg campaign. far behind that figure, one must realize the The ltkacan will cooperate to give the "Who needs an advisor?" observed one stu­ Jar department and its teachers; courses, elec­ difference between an education and a degree school an image. Several means have already dent. "Sure he signs my class schedule during tives, and activities, when he is from a com­ from Cornell and the same from Ithaca Col­ been suggested to the administration. We have pre-registration and wc discuss my future for pletely different department. And realistically, lege. to find a way to make item. E a reality. The two or three minutes. But he can't take the how many freshmen wold travel to I.C. over This is now one of the most expensive col­ other four choices are not for us. We need to time to really advise when he has 60 other the summer. Many have already been here for leges in the nation. If there is no other source make Ithaca College important. students' schedules to discuss. And many an interview or to visit the campus. Many times he doesn't know course descriptions and live a great distance away, and still others can­ requirements in other departments." not leave important summer jobs to meet Perhaps the above may not be said for all with this counselor. Perhaps one of the most The Great Gap academic advisors at Ithaca College, but many glaring faults with this added "freshmen students could easily state that about their orientation" is that these students usually What is the relation at Ithaca College be­ To help bridge this gap between students advisors. The advisor system, as it now stands, have no electives the first year in college. tween the students and the faculty? There is a and faculty, several student government lead­ is in a very bad way.. The schedule is pretty much planned for them. great gap in these two groups. And really ers have made some proposals and expressed Almost all professors are advisors. Or rather, All that is needed when they arrive on campus whose fault is it? Some of us blame the fac­ ideas. At yesterday's Arts and Sciences fac} all are assigned advisees. Professors already in September is to decide which professor to ulty, others blame the apathetic student body. ulty meeting, these were brought up with the have enough work preparing lectures for their take and at what time. It is the sophomores, Actually are the faculty and students on this hope that they could at least be a start. classes. Clearly it is evident that all are not juniors, and seniors who need assistance in campus different from those at similar col­ Articles and announcements will be made cut out to be advisors, nor are all interested planning electives, jobs, and graduate school leges? very shortly to help provide the students with in being one. There are some excellent fac­ applications. How can a student be made aware that the basics to begin. It's not only up to the stu~ ulty members who enjoy advising and talk­ We suggest this idea be reconsidered. It's there's more to a professor than what he has dents, though. The faculty will have to meet ing with students, but just don't have the a waste of badly needed college funds. to say at a lecture? That he can be of valuable us in some terms. But it will be up to the stu­ time to meet, especially around pre-registra­ In the fall, if we had only those professors help both in and out of the classroom. The dents to show the faculty that their energies tion time, these interested students. In addi­ who are able or interested as the only ad­ students must be made aware that faculty and time would not be wasted. We have asked tion, there are still more professors who may members are usually open to questions and visors, probably one or two members of each the faculty many times to help us out, now be great lecturers and educators but lack department would suffice. discussions in- the dorms, snack bar, their of­ the time and experience to be good counselors. Since the advising conferences usually oc­ fices, after forums on campus, as well as in when we ask again, we must prove, by our sup­ Many professors, because of the lack of cur at peak times of the semester and then the classroom. port, that- their help is needed and desire.cl. time and/or interest, know few of' the pre­ slack off, these professors should have one ------­ requisites or descriptions of courses in other less course to teach. With the responsibilities You Can 'Question departments How many anthropology pro­ of one course taken from their schedules, he fessors, for example, can explain to their ad­ or she would have the needed time to counsel. THE ITHACAN visees which Radio-TV course is appropriate During the rest of the semester he can learn The City of Ithaca for students entering various fields. WANTS- -- or become more familiar with the other de­ by Kwin Connors ,ve would imagine that many suggestions partments in his school, and the other schools have been proposed to improve the system. in the college. . For some time we have been this paper has functioned for tbe One method of promoting student-faculty re­ A course or review of the various curricula an advertising staff curious about the great number last semester and in which tbe lations is scheduled to be put into effect this c~mld also be added for the faculty. This would of studer.ts who devote their editor-in-chief assures us it will summer. With this new idea, several faculty give them a broader understanding of the more writers time, talent, and awareness to continue, we have offered Mayor members will be retained at the college over courses and b.e an aid in advising students. a variety of national and inter­ Jack Kiley the facilities of tbe the summer period to advise freshmen. The ?omeo~e ii;i each depaI'tJ?ent could speak dur­ national social and political evils Ithacan as his voice to the stu· prospective freshmen would then receive a mg this time for a bnef outline and other shorter a!"ficles from the who at the same time have re­ dents of Ithaca College. We would letter to come to Ithaca College during the faculty would speak on how best one could former EiC. signed themselves to being sec­ also like to offer the Ithacan tQ­ summer and meet with one of these "so-called" advise the student. ond class citizens. The very peo­ students who have questions conJJI advisors. Obviously, each department would The academic advisor has to be just that­ ple who so actively strive for cerning the administration of the not be represented. How much can a faculty not a faculty member who initials a class a new print dryer equality under the law for all city of Ithaca or the Mayor him· member inform a student about a particu- schedule. people, live in a city for nine self. months each year with litile or Mr. Kiley spoke of the ·work more pasting and I~ no awareness of its people, its his wife has done with sororities sniffing politics, its spirit, of indeed, its on South Hill and joint efforts effect on them. between them and community The city of Ithaca has a new groups. He further stated that be mayor. This correspondent bad would like to see this activity in· plumbing in the darkroom the opportunity to spreak: with creased. With a few notable exceptions, efforts made We invite you to look at back copies of the him while he was still mayor­ Most of the readers of this to occupy a large public on this campus are Itkacan one, two, or three years back, and elect and was excited by his paper are, if only by virtue of aimed at the student level. The parties in­ compare them to the Ithacan of last semester. good grades for the MUE awareness, his vitality, and his their general socialogical, educa· volved in organizing these efforts are often less The change is due to the talent and drive of and more cuts for the concern. Concern which not only tional and contempory surround· enthusiastic when taken from their environ­ one person and what he drew out of others. EiC included the voting citizenry, ings, concerned with the world ment. We feel that the Ithacan has begun to Unfortunately, staffs must change. People but also the thousands of students about them. Many want to try to grow from a docile chronical of South Hill graduate, new people come in. If you'd like to who live here every year, work change the whole thing. Those social events, to an active, interested, and show what you've got to offer, the office is here and yet never really become of you who are willlng t.o start hopefully, interesting newspaper. So far this on the ground floor of Donn 12. The names Lots of LOVIN' NOW St a part of this city, even on a LATER small. here Is your opportunity.· has been due primarily to the efforts of one of the editors ·are listed on page four. If sou temporary basis (if you consider Address any letters to the Edi· rather tough, occasionally crass, ( occasionally can spare the time from cafeteria and ·snack­ four years temporary). tors or the Mayor c/o the Editors, l wrong) walking work horse named Alex Block. bar complaining, we'd like to hear from you. In the spirit of change in which The Ithacan. ~-.r· THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 5 Frank Scoblete letters i(()) tlhie JEditor I had a dream the other night Focus I dreamt I was in a field, at the edge of a AIJ letters submitted to The lthacar. must be typed and jungle in the dark of night.... my stomach felt pain, &igned. by Jess Nadelman burning pain, and my thighs could feel the warm fluid blood streaming from my bullet torn flesh ... I touched All letters become the property of The Ithacan, and we re­ Everoyne at one time or another has written on a john my army shirt and instead of feeling a hard muscular wall or given a "You don't have to be Jewish ..." poster &erve the right to refuse to publish letters submitted to us. stomach, I could feel the soft mukh of my i'nsides, now Letters must: not exceed 400 words. personality a huge crayoned mustache or carved their initials out on the backside of a wooden Indian. To the proper authorities I was dying these actions can be defined as vandalism; that is, the wanton Your Move? sider the procrastination of cer­ a slow, moaning, painful death tain administrators? destruction of property. The aforementioned acts could be To the Editor: Across from me lay the bodies of three Viet-Cong And what happened to the "shushed" away as signs of immaturity, not•crimcs. guerillas which I'd killed. At first they all looked Professors Ezergailis and Ryan The destruction of a men's room. Breaking a $600 piece of right of a speedy and just trial? alike, all the same, all dead .... then one looked familiar ... have presented familiar views of Respectfully, slass. Releasing carbon dioxide from fire extinguishers. Push­ the without chang­ one looked like mel-and he too was dying; not Fred D. Lasky ing through ceiling tiles. Destruction of screens. Cutting up the yet d~ad, no longer alive; my bullets lodged in his ing one another's mind. upholstery of furmture. mtestmes .... If these two Ithaca College Associate Justice, Student Court These are acts not of eleven year olds at supposed play, but picture yourself dying teachers are not as locked into of "mature," "responsible" college students. Young men and look at your face their own positions as belligerents women of Ithaca College. Most of the offenders are from at in the Vietnam War as they ap­ Suddenly I was in his head, his mind ... he wasn't (Mr. Lasky graduated from least superficially "good" homes. Most of them are probably not thinking of how many yanks he shot, or of his country pear to be, would they please paying a nickel of their own money to this institution; even spell out what it would take to Ithaca College this past Decem­ winning a war. He was thinking of his girl, the same ber. His letter, however, was 1 their spending money comes from Dad. Their grades are aver­ change their own minds. Are girl who lay dead beside him, and his great pain; I received while he was a student age; 'their sex life is probably ... They destroy because they could feel his fear, he feared death; and I could feel there costs you would be un­ don't give a good damn. They destroy because it costs them willing to see paid to maintain but after publication of the last his hatred, he hated me ... he hated me not because I edition of the fall semester. Ed.) nothing to fix the damage, because responsibility is a nebulous had shot him but because he had shot me- the status quo, Professor Ezer­ concept because for a moment they are big men. The epitome of then I was in New York . gailis? Are there costs you would it all is that rumor has it an organization is on campus with Guys around a bar were arguing about Viet-Nam, be unwilling to see paid to alter its sole purpose being the destruction of college property. some old guy, at least forty, was saying that the status quo, Professor Ryan? Karam in Vietnam Who are these peopld You know them. They live near you draft card burners and other creeps should be drafted Yours sincerely, or with you. Or maybe you know them even better than that. and sent to the front lines, and how terrible college Sid Herzig To the Editor: They may be you. If the person who likes to destroy, who is a kids were because they questioned authority, and what When I promised to write from vandal, happens to be you, I challenge you. Show this college, rats professors were, and how education makes most men Vietnam, I did not dream that my your "pals," your parents, and most important, yourself that cowards or commies .... first letter to the Ithacan would you are really a man. Stop this bull. Stop destroying. Stop being then some scrawny, long haired kid tried to tell ask the students of Ithaca College eleven years old. Court Opinion J the man how terrible war was, what a terrible waste for a donation! of life, how wars never solved anything, and that men To the Editor: I should begin at the begin­ ----Spect.ruzn'---- were dying needlessly all over the world ... I think the students of Ithaca ning. On a map of Southeast Asia, the old guy argued but said "that's how it is College should be made aware of draw a line between the words kid, unpleasant but necessary" a development which took place "Gulf of Siam" and "South China Slaol!I 2'ime On the kid then tried to argue about morals in a recent disciplinary case. Sea". Then place your forefinger and was laughed out of the bar; my Viet-Cong opposite The situation involves a stu­ at its exact center. It will rest A£ong:Soad died and I woke up ... dent (who shall remain nameless) on a green spot without a name, The radio newscaster announced that in nineteen who admitted to certain charges deep among the rice paddies of sixty-seven eighty seven percent more Americans were in the Mekong by Alex B. Block that might very well have led killed in Viet-Nam than in nineteen sixty-six. to suspension or expulsion. After Delta, on a town too small to Maybe my dream will come true •.•• the student's confession, it took merit recording. It has a popula­ the Dean of Students approxi­ tion about equal to the college Early evening - Winter 1968 - On a bus somewhere in When a prospective employer smiles and says: "There is a mately four weeks to refer the student population of Ithaca. Its metropoutan New York---you spent the day looking for a job­ place here for you," you think you have arrived; but you'IJ case to the proper judiciary name is Camau (ka-ma-00). The the things you learn ... never really arrive, for if you do, then you know it is time board. provincial primitive h o s p i t a 1 ; Most Americans, being Americans, never realize the c?m- to retire or die. It is a long trip on a short road ... and then there is where I serve. This board, in fact, recommend­ plexity of human beings it takes to satisfy their own desires. the bus ;caches your stop. You get off the bus; but you haven't I am a member of a small They envelop themselves in a narrow world of routine, and really stopped. You're just getting on. ed suspension. The student ap­ pealed the case to Student Court, medical team in an advanced out­ trivia; the kind that makes up daily life. • • • post in An-Kuyen, the southern­ Somewhere along the way they got into a certain _routine; Prologue: A sp~cial note of thanks to the gen_tlemen w~o took which thought that suspension was not warrented and therefore most province in Vietnam. We are having accepted life as detail, and people as the propneters of time out of their busy days to talk to me while I was m New here to assist this local hospital that detail. York. Should you ever want to see me again, you've already recommended a strict, but not as severe, penalty. of 100 beds in the medical care When young America begins their personal search for self, done more for me than I can ever repay. of the civilians in the surround­ C< 0 0 they too must choose the rut that seems best to them. A time I will diverge here to explain ing area. It is common knowledge comes when they must use the early healthy years of ener_gy Dateline: Campus monkey BUSINESS from the Wall Street that although the student judicial that some of the people here are and trial to give momentum to the declining years of matunty Journal . . . . . system only recommends a course secret Vietcong or Vietcong sym­ and error. A rising problem from campus' across ~he ~ountry . 1s of action to the Dean of Students, pathizers (by conviction or For the American college student such a period comes student shoplifting. Cited: Harvard and the Umvers1ty of Wis­ there have been less than ten through duress). A few nights ago during the second half of the last year. The interviews and consin where according to the Journal, "light-fingered scholars minor revisions in recommenda­ Vietcong guerillas carried out a ,,correspondence that U.S. college students carry on with corpor­ are fast bec~ming an enormous problem, spurring _school ad­ tions in the last three years. It night attack three kilometers ate America are introductory letters to life; to a system we take ministrators to tighten discipline policies and forcing 1;olll;ge is also custumary for the Dean from the hospital. People on both for granted until something goes wrong; at which time we stores to take elaborate security measures that make b1g-c1ty to inform the student of the sides were killed or injured criticize. retailers' defenses pale by comparison. Some store operators, board's recommendation, and his (soldiers as well as civilians). 0 0 0 complaining of weak-kneed university discipline, are startin_g decision, the very next day. This And we gave medical help to both The time of ju~ping into the mainstream of American in- to bring criminal charges against the offenders." At the Um­ is not what happened in this case. sides, .for our primary interest is dustry has passed, and with little regret a new mehtod has versity of 'Wisconsin coop, "95 students have. been arrested Dean Brown wanted the student not politics but health - the im­ evolved. since mid-summer· losses from student theft this year are ex- to wait another week so the Dis­ provement of the health of hu­ Once all youth dreamed of being an intepreneur, a char- pected to range b~twecn $45,000 and $5~,qoD,". an official esti­ ciplinary Committee (composed man beings. acter from the pages of Horatio Alger. The reality of s~cc~ss mates. University officials agree shophft)ng 1s done by all of the President, Provost, Dean of Students, Academic Deans, and I have been advised that the was financial security, a matronly mate, and mannered children. ranges of scholars, and all stratas of society; and all agree: sections where I may walk alone Youth lived through recession, deP.ression, war and poverty; "lack of money is rarely a motive." supposedly, Chief Justice of Stu­ dent Court) could decide whether in the daytime without protective and "appreciated" that which they achieved. Dateline: Free long distance calls ... The phone comp~ny re- armed escort is extremely limit­ or not the recommendation of Tomorrow's establishment never faced poverty, and only ports that young people all over the country are sta~mg up ed; at night, nowhere. I sincerely Student Court should be upheld. read about war. There might be police actions, but they_ were nights to beat the phon~ comp_any. The,Y are desc~1bed as hope that before my tour of duty Fortunately, Dr. Dillingham in­ merely messy affairs that could be corrected by electing a being "interested mamly m proving that the_ syst~m can ~e is over, that area, through friend­ tervened and upheld the decision republican president. beaten. The free calls, they say, are merely a mce frmge benefit ship, will be enlarged. of Court. ) They became educated by professional educators, who of their labors." " . But I must get back to the main themselves could not, or would not, fi!}d a nitch in Ame_rica's Accordir1g to the Wall Street Journal: In ~ambndge, Altogether, the student was left on the fe.nce for a period of purpose of this letter. Our health corpora cornica and the new generation learned the evils of Mass., five Harvard and MIT students d~veloped six methods program is not only to treat the· industry witho~t the hysterical glorifications of the dozen for making free phone calls anywhere in the world. T~e~e almost six weeks. And what kind 1 1 of academic atmosphere was pro­ sick, but to help educate the peo­ previous generations. They learned that other systems can ranged from using a musical instrument-a recor_der-t

41ST YEAR Greek Columns IRIIJSHING BEGINS Delta Sigma Pi A E Rho Scampers '68 presents JANUARY 29 Phi Delta Pi by Bob Arenstoln by Ron Kobosko by Sharon T. Wolk This weekend marks the cul- The brothers and sisters of First off, we'd like to welcome SDLENCIE WEEK IS mination of many long months of Alpha Epsilon Rho would ·like to everyone ·back. We hope you all hard work for both Deltasig and welcome everyone back for what had healthful and enjoyable va. L=EBRUARY 18 EUB. All that remains now is the promises to be an exciting semes· cations. hope that everyone attending will ter, especially in Television­ We'd also like to welcome back 1 have a most enjoyable time. Radio, where many new programs An Original Musical Comedy Mary Jo Juliano, Judy Oshinsky · IPD..EDGING STARTS Saturday night will mark Delta- will get underway. Among the Bobbi Goldstein, and Linda Zwah'. · sig's 10th annual Rose Ball, to be new shows this spring will be len, who have just finished prac. FEBRUARY 27 held in the Terrace Cafeteria. Alpha Epsilon Rho's weekly dis­ tice teaching; and we wish Patti wiesday 1r1l-nD'M S1CD~tU1!i'd(t!ly From among the five finalists, cussion program on wroB-TV. Harrison, Lynn Faurie, Babbett u one girl will be crowned Rose of Plans for the show, which will be Biggs, P. K. Gullen, and Zoe Sher. PLEDGING ENDS Deltasig at Midnight by last about campus activities and other man,- who are now out practice year's Rose, Miss Gail Rieman. topics of student interest, are teaching, the best of luck. rFfEISRllJAlRY 6 - 10 12 WEEKS FROM Her picture is then submitted to nearing completion; all of us are the Central Office where she is looking forward to the program's Right now we are all busy mak­ ing plans for this semester's rush 8:15 IP.M. SUNDAY! judged by two Hollywood____stars debut. against the 140 entries of the Plans are also already under- parties. We hope to see all the other chapters. A national winner way for this spring's pledge pro- physical education majors. there· lots of surprises in store. ' Proceeds To Go to Oracle Student Grant .______., and two runners up are then gram. The pledge program is cur- selected. Our chapter has had two rently undergoing considerable Again this semester, after national winners and a second revision, and shoula prove chal­ school on Mondays and Tuesdays Box Office Opens Monday runner-up. lenging to the department stu- Phi Delt girls can be found lead'. The fraternity would like to dents who merit membership in ing an intramural program at the Reserved Seats congratulate Brother Don Wilson a professional fraternity. Our Immaculate Conception School. $1.50 DRIVE-IN upon the birth of a baby boy, rush party dates are being sub­ Besides looking forward to a Donald, Jr. We would also like mitted for approval by LF.C. and busy Winter Weekend, all of us at Box Office Open 9 • 5 to wish much success to our two will be announced soon. This the house· are waxing our skis Phone 274-3224 new officers; Jr. Vice-President spring Alpha Epsilon Rho also waiting for the next snow fall. COURT AT MEADOW Pat Cannon, and Chancellor, Jay expects to schedule more parties See you all on the slopes. Phone 273-1111 Howard. than during previous semesters. Open 7 Days a Week All of us wish everyone a happy Ithaca College Theatre Downtown 11 a.m. 'til l a.m. Winter Weekend. Friday and Saturday 'til 2 a.m. Sigma Alpha Iota Phi Mu Alpha Pi Lambda Chi With the semester only two by Cynthia Monterose The ·brothers of Phi Mu Alpha The sisters of Sigma Alpha are looking ahead and preparing weeks underway, we find the Rushing season ready to begin. Iota are in the process of plan­ PRATT'S for two events which are probably ning Province Day which will the most important activities of This semester's Rush Chairman is Tom Samter. Pi Lam's first Rush be held on Saturday, February Flower Shop the year for our fraternity. The 10. There will be a musicale held first is our annual recital of Party will be next Thursday, PLEASE PATRONIZE in Ford Hall Auditorium at 1:30 205 N. Aurora St. American Music which is to be February 1, iii the Union. Re­ freshments will be served. The P.M. in which each visiting fra. held at Ford Auditorium on Feb­ ternity will participate. This <> ruary 29th.- The second is the an. next Rush Party will be on Feb­ OUR ADVERTISERS! event will ·be open to the pubic. nual Province Concert which will ruary 6th. All Rushees can meet at the house (Dorm 22A) for an More details will coine at a later FLOWERS FOR ALL take place this year at the East­ informal meeting with the Bro­ date. man School of Music in Roches­ 1 ·occASIONS ter. thers, and from there we'll drive The sisters had the honor of a Again this semester we will be down to The Villa for some beer visit by our Province President, and Pizza. '!'his semester's Pledge. = presenting a number of Sunday Miss Ruth Pinnell. MisS---Pinnell afternoon house recitals. These master is Jim Updyke who re­ spent Sunday, Monday, and Tues­ recitals are our chance to carry cently returned after a semester's day, meeting the, sisters and at­ absence. STEREO out one of the main functions of tending a formal meeting and Phi Mu which is to bring music to The Brothers would like to con­ recital held on Monday evening. those around us. gratulate the Pi Lam basketball The sisters are planning many HIGH FIDELITY team for their victory over the interesting activities for this . Association which now puts Pi semester. Keep your eyes open! Lam into first place in the intra­ a mural league. We would also like to congratulate Russ (Rose) Mar­ ron for scoring 24 points in last 11.IKE week's -Roberts Wesleyan game. Pi Theta Phi Cong.-atulations are also on by Diane Golub CURLEY'S hand to Keeb Dyer and his new Pi Theta Phi held its annual bride, Gretchen. We· would also 215 South Tioga Ithaca, N.Y. registration dance last Monday CHICKEN like to welcome our new nephew evening in the Union Rec. room. into the world, the son of Mr. It was a great way of welcoming Now the time to add the -v and Mrs. Robert Schumacher everyone back from his vaca­ os Robert Hunt Schumacher m'. tion and a nic.e way of beginning (Another Hercules). All the chicken you the second semester. Beer, the excitement of Sony stereo can eat every sounds of the Gross National Wednesday night Product, and plenty of people all frape •.. the new Sony Model 255 BARNETT'S made for a highly successful for only dance. . Pledging begins soon and al· S1l'ell'eo Tape Deck Recordeir Y $1.85 ready our plans are well under­ way. Our first rush parcy will be A. a cocktail party on February 2, CURLEY'S in the lounge of Dorm 16B. we sincerely hope that any prospec· CHICKEN HOUSE STATE & CORN STS. tive pledge will make a point of 367 Elmira Rd. Ithaca, N.Y. AR 2-9881 coming and meeting us and let­ ting us meet him also. See you i______p then!

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... THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 7

Greek Columns LETIERS Continued want to give much more. But, Continued SEANY Art Course Offered Abroad disease. The lessons we teach the pease, for now this gift will do us Vietnamese children and their fine. Your reward-in addition to Something new and dynamic times through the contemporary our profound gratitude - will be Phi Epsilon Kappa will be added to the field of period, will be offered. parents are simple ones - the Reorganizes danger of flies having access to that you can feel certain it shall congratul~tions the new of- foreign study for American stu- to The Ithaca College Chapter of dents this summer. All courses will be taught in food; the harm which comes from be put to excellent use. , ficers who were elected at our the Student Education Associa- The Arcos School of Art in English. However, a special drinking contaminated water; the Sincerely, last meeting. Officers for the tion of New York is being reor- Segovia, Spain, is the location of course in conversational Spanish manner in which parasites are A. H. Karam, M.D. year of 1968 arc: President-­ . ed th1·s semester Th f" t will be made available for those ganlZ , c irs a unique and intensive art course. spread; the ways a new mother Frank Annis, Vice President - meeting will be held Wednesday, It is aimed at the serious student interested in learning, or improv­ can improve her breast milk by ~.S. I know you will permit me to Tom Rochester, Secretary-Dick eating the proper kinds of sim- m~lude a personal note to say I January 31 , 7·30 · PM · · m· B-101 . interested· in developing his ing their knowledge of the Baker, Treasurer-Bob Krenzer, ple foods and things like that. I (mTiss yoku aDll veKry m~ch. t Social Chairman--Gary "Lance" The membership is open to any- artistic skills, and increasing his language. . o ma e r. aram s reques a one on campus. knowledge of Spanish history and The tours, seminars, lectures Carney, Historian - Dave Casey, These lessons are graphically reality the Ithaca College Student Guide - Bun]cy Bowers, Sergeant The Student Education Associa- art. The six-week course will run and concerts planned are im­ presented in the _form of . ani- and Faculty Committee Against at Arms - Gary Meierdiercks, tion of New York (SEANY) was from June 14 to July 31, 1968. portant supplements to the con­ mated cartoon ~ov1es effech~cly the War in Vietnam will have a and House President - Bob first organized in the fall of '66 Courses offered include oil centrated daily studio work for prepared by Disney Pr~du~tions table in the Union next Monday Bluett. under advisor Dr. Charles · Tes: painting, watercolor, drawing in the school's students. (someone asked us of we d like to through Friday to receive your coni. In its first year it bad one a variety of media and sculpture The cost for the student, apart have them, and we s~id, "Sure!"). donations to this cause. The desk A new. football league (NFL­ of the largest memberships in with techniques to include work: from incidental expenses and Now we have the films, but we will be manned all next week PQB) bas been formed on the New York State. Members of the ing directly in clay, plaster, iron, cost of travel to and from the d~n't have a ~ovie projector. An from 10:00 3:00. ED.) second floor and SRO is expected to organization received the litera- mosaic, stained glass, and wood. United States, will run approxi­ Air Force officer said he'd bet for every game. "Little John" ture and all the fringe benefits All courses will include work matcly $110 per week. that a Rotary Club or other serv- finally came out of his ivory ice club back home would be glad ~ tower after three years of isola­ of the National Education Assa- from landscape, live models and Ithaca College students inter­ ciation (NEA). The members at- imagination with emphasis on in- csted in applying for this pro­ to donate one. I asked them if MAIL PROBLEMS tion. If you didn't get to meet they'd let me first try a source him and shake_ his hand don't tended conferences and SEANY dividual projects in the area of gram may receive further infor­ sponsored several programs in- the student's choice or need. A mation and application blanks in I knew - the students of Ithaca Dear Mr. Block: worry, we're expecting an instant College. I was given permission. Thanks for mailing the latest- replay anytime now! Chic found eluding the faculty forum on history of Spanish art and Span- the Office of the Dean, Arts & Vietnam is a strange place. I November 17th issue of THE an unexpected surprise when he "The Teacher's Responsibility to ish civilization, featuring the de- Sciences, Bldg. 206. The deadline the Student" with Mrs. Gill, Dr. velopment of painting, sculpture for applications is February 15, expected my first letter to you ITHACAN to me first class. returned to his room on Saturday would be an exciting one, full of night, right L. S.! The brothers Richards, Dr. Emery, and Coach and architecture from pre-historic 1968. Lyons. ------drama, suspense and adventure, It still took a week for me to are hoping for revenge and may­ and things like that. But all it receive it. be that long trip when the This year SEANY, under its new advisor, Dr. Martin Laforse, is - it's a begging kind of letter, I think you'll agree that it Bombers tangle with Hartwick The New Morality asking for a donation of a 16 this weekend. Look for Brothers would like to bring in well-known doesn't do much good, as far as speakers, increase its member­ mm movie projector so that we Albano, Modliewski. Burr, and New York (NAPS) - Thirty years ago the Surgeon Gen­ can show animated cartoons in speeding the news is concerned, ship, continue some of the pro­ ';., Shields to pull it out. Watch for ~~a,I, of the Unite? States was forbidden to use the word "syph­ an unpainted frame shed to a to mail the November 17th issue grams of the past, and _possibly ilis over the radio. Coach! bunch of poor (but lovable) peo­ on November 22nd. (Sec mailing Be prepared - Coming soon· lay out a new format. Depending . l_n the la~t year or s_o radio and television programs deal­ ple who wear cone-shaped straw · - upon the size of the membership, wrapper enclosed.) SWEETHEART'S BALL. mg w1~h abort10n, premarital pregnancy, venereal disease, hom0- hats against the hot sun and who some meetings may be held in the scxuahty, college sex behavior, and sex education in the schools wonder what it would be like to Maybe you ought to suggest to homes of professors. have been broadcast-some nationwide-without causing even be healthier than they are. your Business Manager that the Any students who are inter­ a ripple of public protest. It's a silly thing to do, of paper go out the day it is pub­ .~oes this new frankness herald-as some fear-the end of Sigma Alpha Nu ested in SEANY, especially those course, but I am enclosing a Viet­ lished. Thanks again. by MEB and DAG under the teaching option, are in­ trad~t1onal sexual _morality? Are virginity before marriage and namese penny (called a "dong") Sincerely yours, vited to come to the first meeting, chas1ty after marriage obsolete? Is sexual promiscuity the wave toward the fund you may be able Well, it's good to be back and Wednesday, January 31, 7:30 p.m., of the future? Is the family breaking up? to raise for the machine. This was Howard W. Young Most thoughtful observers of the marriage and family scene starting a new year. The brother­ in B-101. donated by a little Vietnamese Continued on page 8 hood is looking ahead towards say no. Instead they see a number of different moralities deve). child on our ward at the hospital. ,------, another succes_sful semester of oping in the years to come. Side by side with the traditional The thought occurs to me that a parties and a big turnout at our sexual moralitJ:-the morality of the vast majority of the Ameri­ dong from each LC. student upcoming rush .parties, Jan. 29, Seminar Offered c,_m people-w11l be a "!ew tolerance for those who see things should be more than enough to MUZZY'S J in Union Room I, and Feb. 5, at differently. But conventional sexual morality will not disappear. buy and mail the projector. the fraternity lounge. On Tuesday, January 30, Dr. . "W~at is likely to harpen," thinks Dr. David Mace, an Knowing how generous our stu­ We would again like to express lloberf Ouellette, Chemistry Pro­ mtemat10nally known marriage counselor and president of the dents are, I can guess they will i'jt~'~ ~ 11 our thanks to brother Steve Kug­ fessor at Ohio State University, Sex Information and Education Council of the United States \/!'J ler for making this New Year's will present a seminar titled "is that our dem_ocratic culture, ?pen as it is today, will becom; ·~(- Eve an enjoyable one for every­ "Hydrogen Bonding - NMR t~lcrant of a vancty of patterns m sexual behavior. Some people ITHACA'S RECREATION one. We hope The Hook enjoyed Studies". Dr. Ouellette received will undoubtedly choose to be promiscuous. We will have to CENTER Tune Up and Brake Work his early morning walk and his B.S. in 1959 from the Uni- tolerate this. Wheel Alignment and shower. versity of Vermont, and his Ph.D. Please turn to page 12 36 Lanes to Serve You California,in 1962 from Berkeley. the University At Berkeley, of ,------, ~,• ..,,.,,.,.,1>,_,,...,-,..,,..,,,,..,,,..,,....,r., .. ,...,,,..,.,,.,..,#,..,r., .. ,...,,..,,.,,,,,,:. Balancing Aft_er waiting since September, ALWAYS OPEN BOWLING we fmally got our jackets, and he worked with Dr. Frederick Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. they add a little color to the When your hands and N.Y. Inspection Station campus. Jensen, an organic chemist who ASIATIC GARDEN specializes in nuclear magnetic lde's Bowling . Arty's new family seems to be nose are cold, go to ... S & H Green Stamps resonance spectroscopy and con­ Chinese-American Food & Billiards ,> starting a trend. Hope the addi­ formational analysis. Among Dr. Seneca at Meadow tions aren't too fast in coming. Judd Falls Road Ouelletee's interests outside VASTENO'S 114 W. State St. - Phone 272 - 9559 The brotherhood is looking for­ chemistry, and photography and AR 3-4111 ward to a rousing Winter Week­ camping. LIQUOR STORE AR 2-7350 end, with a cocktail party after The seminar will be held at the concert and a rock dance on 4:30 in room S-111, Science Hall, 206 N. Tioga St. CARRY OUT, ALSO Saturday night. Hope to see and the public is invited. Coffee everyone there. will be available at 4:15.

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LETTERS Continued plore the various, ways of getting Alex Retaliates project goes to a worthy scholar- finitely, after reading the drug out of this world by taking a trip ship fund for needy students. edition of the Ithacan, say: "I !Please work for us - Bobby Gentry !Fan Editor: to cloud nine. However, may we Above are letters from two par­ I can only suggest that your son hope my son or daughter can go Dear Editor: ask whether it is your policy or daughter, Mr. Young, contact to Ithaca College." Of course it's a fulfilling ents who have found fault with After reading your November merely to record the passing col­ the Ithacan; and since their griev­ Daniel Crichton at 277-3474 and there are other considerations I issue on drugs, wondered how lege scene, or whether it is also iences came under my editor­ offer to help do the weekly mail- but since you didn't conside; experience! many other parents would say, your policy to take a stand on an ship I would appreciate being ing in order to expediate it. I'm them, neither shall L "I hope my son or daughter can issue? allowed to answer their com­ sure he or she has every Friday I am glad to hear you arc re. go to Ithaca College." (Since It has been suggested that a plaints. afternoon free to immediately lieved that "the views expressed then, I was relieved to hear that person who is very broadminded The first letter, from Mr. mail out lthacans after publlca- were not necessarily those of the the views expressed were not may also lack depth. Could that Young, represents a common tion and before the post office majority of students", for we necessarily those of the majority also apply to a newspaper? mistake regarding the subscrip­ closes for the afternoon. never claimed they were. Ithacan of students.) If so, would you consider giv­ tion mailings of the Ithacan to As to the letter from Mrs. editorials are merely a reflection One cannot question, however, ing equal space to those who pre­ parents. This mailing is not done Anne (George) Maloy, may I say of the views of the Ithacan Edi. your freedom of the press to ex- fer to gain satisfactions in life by the Ithacan, nor has the first a word of praise to her for torial Board. However, in voting in other ways - satisfactions Ithacan, in any way, responsibil­ ·being such a fine parent and by a third of the student body, which come from great self-dis­ ity for when it is done. The swinging member of the pepsi in the Ithacan opinion poll, better The lOetrby cipline and the setting up of Ithacan receives the bare printing generation as to enjoy "Bobby than 55% of the student body ideals and ~oals? cost of its editions from the five Gentry, the Young Rascals, and were in favor of legalization of Cocktail Loungo As a starter, how about the dollar fee and makes arrange­ Bill Cosby" . . . personally I marijuana, which is the only script from the popular record, ments to deliver the subscription can't stand Bobby Gentry, but view the Ithacan was expressing Come with your dates and "Letters to a Teenage Son" !>Y issues to an office on· campus the that is not the issue at band. in that issue. If I were an intelligent par- It was also kind of you to bless dance to a smooth band Victor Lundberg, same afternoon it comes out. ent, which it is conceivable I the Ithacan with the same consti- • EUROPE BY CAR, INC. Lest you write me off as stuffy After that, it is entirely the re­ every Saturday night. sponsibility of the Campus Chest might some day be, I would hope tutional privileges you yourself Tel. 273-2097 and dull, I might add that I too enjoy fun, games and even music org~nization as to when the paper that my son or daughter would go enjoy daily. Burt Natkins to a college that inspires thought However we are not exploring ITHACA SHOPPING PLAZA by such people as Bobby Gentry, is mailed out. The Ithacan bas no 37-D Hasbrouck Apts. and dialogue on every and any .the various means, but only a Elmira Rd. - 272-9715 the Young Rascals and Bill Cosby, control and no direct afiiliation issue. For down through history, limited mean, namely the use of Ithaca, N.Y. 14850 along with Beethoven and Boro­ with Campus Chest outside of providing an interesting and it has been those schools that marijuana contrasted with non. din. fostered singular thought that · use and the use of liquor. Since But the best fun and games readable newspaper regularly. are those which, in my belief, This is not to say Campus Chest have also fostered bigotry and yo~ condemn the use of anything insigbted wars of bate. If we can which helps us escape tempo­ WRNTIEIR C:LEAIRANCIE hurt no one, including oneself. is not deserving of praise, for like Sincerely, many jobs on campus the mailing, educate the mind to be open to rarily from reality.. I ass_ume you Anne Maloy and distribution of these papers any possibility, then we can al- yourself do not drink liquor, or (Mrs. George) is done by students in their spare low the mind to sort and choose smoke cigarettes. You also do not time, at no pay. As a matter of that course which is •best for the use sleeping pills or barbituates , 0 Sweaters 0 Wool Dresses fact, the money derived from this body to follow. Thus I would de- to ease daily tensions, except for 0 0 ,------purely medical (health) reasons. Slacks Suits Pizza & Subs More power to you, ~d I ask 0 Skirts 0 Sport Coats your forgiveness for those of us Spaghetti & Meatballs who are weak. 0 0 Suede Jackets Dress Coats Steaks, Hot Dogs Hearts Are Wild As to the purpose of the Itha­ 0 0 Leather Coats Sausageburgers can, it is to serve a dual role on 2-pc. Suede Suit TAME ONE WITH A VALENTINE CARD French Fries & Onion Rings the Ithaca College campus (or was under my editorship). It rec­ Drastically Reduced The Foods That Make from ords the passing college scene, a job requiring at least one column PIRRO'S CHARJAN 1 S in every issue, and more import­ FAMOUS antly explores in depth the func­ State and Tioga tions and operations of life, par­ Speedy Delivery ticularly college life through fea­ To ·vour Door tures and editorials. The ltha-· can's prime responsibility as I , saw it was to promote and stimu­ From 11 a.m. 'til 2 a.m. late dialogue by any means avail­ Corner State and Aurora 404 W. State AR 2-1950 able. If the mere written word is enough to influence your son I SAlrE ! or daughter to try nonaddictive . drugs, even though they are il· I legal, then there is a fault in their character that the Ithacan NAVY BLUE did not op.en but only stimulated. No more than whether God's name in the schools can make a for a WOOL C.P.O. child religious; it is his or her home training which is the prim~ SHIRTS factor. It was definitely the policy WBITE WINTER WEEKEND of the Ithacan to take a stand on Sizes S - M - l every issue while I was editor, and you are the first person to ever insinuate I was doing any­ $5.99 thing else. Perhaps a rereading of the issue is in order. I would like to thank you for saying I am broadminded, but as Cornell Laundry f~ as lacking depth goes, that bnngs me to your next point: SIX r'OOTER the publication of one of the most BLUE & GOLD superficial and ridiculous songs ever written: "Letters to a Teen' SCARVES Plea~ tum to page 12 $2.88 Quality Custom Framing FAST .SERVICE ~Ju, ~e Sl,,op ARMY Dry mounting - Picture HAROLD'S NAVY Rentals - Mcits - Arts ALWAYS Supplies - Non-glare glau­ Print Catalogues Available 106 N. Cayuga St. 414 W. Buffalo St. BACK BY 4:@@ - 272-1350

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CollegeV'own !Branch Dryden Rd. next io ll'he L')alms 272-5961 THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 10 Parkhurst Ha_s Marines IArnrn Marie Ohressa /New JBook.s One Man Show To Holdl lo Re On Campus IF or Placement highly posed studio subjects to There are many people in this Ann Marie Obressa, lyric­ catching people involved in the Auditions Audit10ns and encouraged by the Service Added world who take photographs, and coloratura soprano, will appear in by Terry Clarie act of living. This was effected Metropolitan to pursue an opera­ then there are a few people who Marine Captain E. M. Litz, Of­ Ford Hall Auditorium at 8: 15 tic career. by some months spent in VISTA The Services for Career Plans p.m. on Monday, January 29th. By this time she had over twen­ take pictures. Among those who where Mike had the opportunity ficer Selection Officer will visit under the direction of Mr. Charles As the winner of the 1966 Mu ty operatic roles m her reper­ take pictures is a former Ithaca to live in New York's Spanish the sampus on January 29-30, be­ Lowe, has recently purchased Phi Epsilon Sterling Staff Audi­ toire, including Manon in l\las­ college student named Michael Harlem and get some good train­ tween the hours of 10:00 A.1\1. many new publications. These tions, Miss Obressa will tour in­ sevet's Manon, Susanna in J\10- ing in capturing real life subjects. should prove helpful to students Parkhurst. The exhibit in the Eg­ and 2:00 P.1\1. to discuss the Mar­ ternationally for two years, giv­ zart·5 Marriage of Figaro, the who have begun their search for bert Union lounge this past week In St. Mark's Place is an inter­ ine Officer training programs ing concerts at most Mu Phi Epsi­ governess in Britten's The Turn the career or Graduate School is a 1·ery good selection of Mike's esting picture of an omnipresent lon chapters. of the Screw, Liu in Puccini's available to college students and that fits them. New York City subject, a bum Turandot, and Sophie in Strauss's work. Although I have seen some interview those students inter­ She auditioned for the well­ Especially for grad school seek­ sleeping in a doorway. 'Ihis is a Der Rosenkavalier. She had sung of these photographs in past dis­ ested. known Oberlin Conservatory of ers, three interesting books can very common subject among with many of the Northeast's ma­ plays, I am happy that they are l\lus1c, and her promising vocal be found which look helpful to photographers and because of Captain Litz points out that all jor oratorio societies and had now being shown with his latest. work won her a scholarship for students in their areas: Graduate that Mike's photo is rather hack­ Marine training in the under­ appeared as soloist with some of The more recent photos show, in undergraduate work. Encouraged Study in Economics, a Directory neyed. Also lacking in real orig­ graduate programs (Platoon Lead­ the outstanding symphony or­ i>contrast to the old, a greater by her teachers, she soon settled of Graduate Programs in Speech, inality are Spanish Harlem ers Class) is done during the sum­ down to begin the hard work chestras in this country. maturity in the selection of sub­ Church Choir, In a Bronx Bar, mer with no interference during Programs of Graduate .Business jects. The composition of his new necessary for a career in singing. Education. and Greenwich Village Poster. the school year. Other features Her Oberlin undergraduate work work is superior compared with The remainder of Mike's pic­ include possible starting monthly New in the Careers Reference that of his old. His style has laid a firm musical foundation Room are also publications com­ tures range from above average pay u·p to $574.18 for ground of­ and provided her with opportuni­ noticeably changed from using to truly beautiful. _ ficers and $713.18 for pilots; piled by Mademoiselle on "Col­ ties to perform the best in opera, lege and Career Information" for An important part of a photog­ selection of training either as a oratorio, and concert literature women primarily. These reprints rapher's art is being in the right Marine pilot or a Marine ground LEE'S GARAGE under the direction of the finest include such topics as "Leads on place at the right time and see­ officer; and the assurance of a FOR: Repairs on all makes teachers available. A year of Summer Jobs," "Nonperforming ing a photograph as it creates commission with immediate as­ and models, including for­ study and performing at Salz­ Jobs in l\Iusic," "Jobs in Film itself. A little girl looking up and signment to active duty upon eign cars, specializing in burg's famed Mozarteum Acad­ Makin"" and twelve other topics. beaming at an emaciated man graduation. The Platoon Leaders Volkswagen. emy was highly successful, for at Twa°'other pamphlets are Re­ with a cigarette hanging out of Class (Ground) and Platoon Lead­ this time Ann Marie began work­ ports and Papers on Mass Com­ N.Y.S. Inspection his drooped mouth is the subject ers Class (Aviation) programs are ing in the coloratura range of munication. These cover topics of Front End Alignment of Mike's best photo. It shows a available to freshman, sopho­ her voice. Maria Schultz-Dornburg mores artd juniors. "Professional Training for Mass Electrical Tune-up man whom life has passed by, was the Mozarteum teacher who Communication" and "Radio and Brake & Motor Overhaul while his little girl hasn't. Captain Litz also states that for led Ann Marie in the direction Television in the Service of Edu­ the college senior the Marine that was to eventually be her 402 S. CAYUGA ST. The exhibit will probably run cation and Development in Asia." until the end of January; it Corps offers a commission upon forte. All of the above and hundreds AR 3-1821 Rear Entrance shouldn't be missed! successful completion of a ten Recognizing the advantages of of other catalogues and papers week Officers Candidate Course. a well-rounded music education can be reviewed in the Career Again, the option of selecting and the danger of doing too much Reference Room on the second ·COME OUT TO ground or aviation training is singing too soon, Miss Obressa floor of the Faculty Office Build­ provided. worked diligently at her educa­ Ann Marie Obressa ing, between the hours of 8:30 For further information see BIG JIM'S tion. At the same time she re­ She is still teaching a light A.:\f. and 5:00 P.1\1 .. Monday thru Captain Litz when he visits the mained no stranger to the pro­ schedule of promising students Friday. 205 Elmira Rd. campus, or write Officer Selec­ fessional world of music. Even at Friends University, but the Interview Schedule tion Officer, O'Donnell Building, as an Oberlin undergraduate, she position will allow ample time Wednesday, January 31-Sears ITALIAN & AMERICAN DINNERS 321 Erie Boulevard West, Syra­ was chosen as a regional runner­ for concerts. These two years Roebuck. cuse, New York 13202. Open Tuesday thru Sunday - Closed Monday up in the Metropolitan Opera will be a challenge, but if Miss AR 3-5340 Obressa continues on her present path, a highly successful career Study Group ALBANY ST. TO ELMIRA RD. lies ahead. OCS Recruiter On Campus Tickets may be purchased from 1T"o Continue any sister of Mu Phi Epsilon, or I Lt. Kenneth E. Cuneo, the Isuccessful completion of a ten you may buy them at the door. Mrs. Garland, Professor John O.C.S. Selection Officer, will be month training period, the indi­ Prices are $1.00 for general ad­ Ryan, and Dr. Charles Sackery at Ithaca College on Friday, Feb. vidual will be commissioned a mission and 75c for students. have formed a non-credit interses­ 2, to answer questions concern- Second Lieutenant in the United sion study group. Over twen­ ing the United States Army's Col- States Army and will serve two ty-five students took part in the lege Option Program for college years active duty as an officer. Dssues first attempt of this program. The graduates. The individual has a guaran- students read two books over the Under this program a college teed choice of three O.C.S. Committee Christmas holiday and then met graduate serves a two year-ten schools: the Infantry School, the with the professors to discuss month active duty term. Upon Engineer School, _and the Artil­ Orga·nizes their implications. lery School. The first discussion dealt with At its first meeting, the newly the individual's responsibility to Lt. Cuneo stated that there are , ONE OF ITHACA's formed EUB Issues Committee the state. The discussion was openings for junior officers in all has chosen to present the issue based on the student's reading of nicest eating places . .. fields and that the United States \ of Allegiance to the State. A ser- "The Deputy" by Hochuth and where everybody meets Army is looking to the colleges ies of lectures and discussions "The Judgement at Nurenberg". and universities to fill these 0 concerning the various aspects I -'.',nY_ stu~ent inter~sted in par­ vital vacancies. of this issue is planned for the tJc1patmg m the Sprmg program THE COLLEGE SPA He also stated that a college month of February. I may obtain the net!essary infor- 216 East State Street graduate enrolled under the col­ The first of these sess10ns is I mation from any of the p_rofes­ lege option program for two sched uled for Tuesday, February sors mentioned above. 0 years-ten months has a better 13th, at which time several dis- Noted for quality and chance of getting into a particu­ tinguished speakers will present service since 1938 lar field than if he waited to their diverse views on this issue. serve a two year draft term. In view of the many questions Renew Fall Weekend that are being raised concerning Friendships. Enjoy the relationship of the individual SEE WHERE YOU'RIE GOINGi o oo to the state, the Issues Commit­ Winter Weekend tee feels confident that the pro­ with old pals. Enjoy better vision posed topic of allegiance to the --ARROW~ state is timely and relevant to with lenses designed the college community. DECTON for ·each of your specific visual needs. OXFORD Perhaps you need Perma-lron more than one type The shirt that's born of prescription tense at gallery 121, original to adequately satisfy ironed~ .. stays ironedI all the tasks your graphics and oils, and See our collection of these handsome­ eyes are called now a serendipitous shirts in this season's new fashion colors. upon to perform. Here's the classic button-down with collection of indian H. Kaminer the perfect roll. The luxurious fabric brass, guatemalan of 65% Dacron* polyester, 35% cotton Reg. Opt. is completely machine washable jewelry, oriental vases. ... tumble dries to a wrinkle-free finish. "Sanforized-Plus'" fabric, of course. You must see well to work well ! Have your eyes examined regularly ••• "DuPont R.T.M. $7.00 Whatever your profession, you need good vision in order to work properly. See a trained eye specialist at least once a year.

121 E. Buffalo AR 3-9005 Mon. - Fri., 1-5 p.m. Street Floor THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 9 Chamber Concert Scrampers Rehearses Performed Every night for the past two McGraw will design the lights. lIOUR CLOUDED ST*R weeks, about 100 loyal students Sue Mirola is handling the cos. Thursday evening, January 18, gather at the downtown Theatre tumes for the production. the third concert in· the "75th to prepare for the opening of Anniversary Artist Series" was A unique feature of this show A mirthful guide to mystic mishaps SCAMPERS '68: "The Sophisti­ is that students from the entire given at Ford Auditorium. The cated Touch." The musical is college presented the Chamber school participate. For example, by Harry ~ Plate scheduled to open on Tuesday, David Horwitz, a_ principal play .. Symphony of Philadelphia, con­ Feb. 6. ducted by their assistant conduc­ er, is a music student. Jess Nadel. SCAMPERS is the annual stu­ man, who will play the part of . \RIES ().l.11111 :.!I .\p1i\ 1!1) You tor Anshel Brusilow (the regu­ dent produced show for the bene­ ha\t' an .il,uud,1111 ,• of t.il1•nl, h11! ,ll't' lar conductor had the flu and a plumber, is a Radio-TV major. f.1\\111J.,: f.11 ... i.orl o1 11111• pot1•1111.1l 111:­ fit of the Student Grant main­ Others in the cast include David t,l\1',t' 11111!1\:IIIO!l,d 11111•11•,f._ ,1\l' ,ll \,11"1· was unable to participate). The tained by the Oracle Society. .1111p \\1tl1 .11,,a..., or 1t•,d ,i\>1\ity Ti:- 10 program· consisted of a variety of Staples, Gail Goldsman, Anthony ;..:1•1 :- our 111111d off -.111d11• ... Each year many students are as­ Hoty, Lynn · Pheasant, Eleanor works. The evening began with sisted by the grant. For the past T.\l"H.t·s (.\pill '20 ).I.1;- 20) Th,· the overture to "11 Signor Brus­ Thompson and Don Croll. These .,,t,1,..., 1nd11,1tp th.1t _,t111 h,1\p a <'lian11111:.: 41 years · SCAMPERS has been actors are, of course, backed up \\,IY ol h11\d111i,: off 1111•111h1•1..., of tht• 11p­ schino" by Gioacchino Rossini, prodµced at the College, ranging pn..:111• ... ,.,. 111 ,1n 1n, 11111;:: ,,.1:i, Y11111 and the "Serenade No. 1 in D by a chorus and dance ensemble. 1n,1t,1t1011 J1..,I ,J,nu\d h1· "llllH1 \\hat 1n11rp in type from variety shows, re­ -.1·h·tll\t', ho\\t'\t'l. to ,l\oHl ,l ... talllpPdt• major, opus 11" by Johannes views, musicals and comely. This Tickets for._the musical will be Brahms. After intermission, Rich­ year, an original musical comedy available at the box office begin­ arde Yardumian's "Cantus Ani­ (;F'.\JJ:--;[ (;\l.1:- ~1 ,Ju1u• 21) You will be presented. ning Monday at the cost of $1.50. "1\I ~0011 11:l\t' u f11u• oppo1111111t:- to mae et Cordis" for string orches­ As the proceeds go to the Stu. n•,q, a t1d~ f111u111i,d h,11H•-..t 1! ;>on Robert Spear and John Federi­ art• ,, 1ll1n;.: to co111p1 oJl\ht• a few Jll'1 · tra and Franz Schubert's "Sym­ co have written "The ·sophisti­ dent Grant, all persons are re­ .. on.ii , on, Jl'thlll", ,nor,11 p1·1n11plt''- and phony No. 2 in B flat major" quired to pay. 111111 lt'I'" of 1ntt>J:rity cated Touch" which is a delight­ were performed. On the whole the fully witty story about life on During the past 41 years, ensemble gave very enjoyable ('.\~{'ER (,June 2~-July ~~): A trnn- Madison Avenue. Gibby Brand is SCAMPERS has been an Ithaca 1p11\ youn:.: ,:\lnr.., j.., tlri!t1111.: .nimll'!-....,)y performances oI these works. The .1< 10..,, your p\n11C'tary < h.1rt r1g-l1t now directing, and Judith Rondinelli tradition. If rehearsals are any --mdH atm:.: that your t>l(•dr1r lilnnkd only really disturbing feature ha-.. l1t•t>n ''hUJ!J!f'd'' hy !Jr K111~1·y, is choreographer. W. Scott Robin­ indication, this years SCAMPERS \\ 1th d1,appo111t1ng Tl'~ult!-., was that of balance which plagued son is scenic designer, while John should be the best yet.. the ensemble predominantly dur­ LEO (.Jul:,, 2:1-~\u~u..,t 2:1) : Bet·ause ing the first half of the program. the ,tar~ are not permitted to advise> Beginning with the Rossini Over­ HlJUrtou~ or 1lll'J.:,1l activ1t1e:,;,. :,-our best t ourM' o( action dur1n~ com1n:.: Wt..'cks ture the ensemble assumed a l';muot Le re('ord1•d here. very dark and rather muddy sound. The bass sections greatly HEGGIE'S has ... YlRGO (.\uJ!Ust ~4-S(•ptemher 22): overpowered the first violin sec­ The ~tan. irnlicnte thut if )OU groove to .\ndy \\' ,trhol and hl'lie\·c thut ('hpc­ tion, and the brightness usually tah 1~ where 1t'~ really nt, you \\OUld characteristic of Rossini over­ muke n fine 11odintri~t. The stars arc pretty square. tures was often lost. This feeling of muddiness was also carried LIBR.\ (SeptemlJ('r 23-0ctober 2::q: S11turn ii:. 1n lunar trine at 52'-' )Iar:, into the Brahms. However, this ri~ht now - a dt.'ar 1nclH·ation thnt the sound felt a.little better in place ne~t pen.on L1hra. k1~~cs will, rnevitnbly, become u life.Joni..: mn1 l'ia1,:1• 11artncr. here, since the Brahms is of a Don't get in\·olved in family reunions ng:ht now. thicker and · heavier emotional m quality. SCORPIO (Octohcr 2:1 . Xovpmlll'r After intermission, though, the :!1): Pn•,cnt md1c:1tion:-. arc that you coultl at'l11evc financial succe!-.<; a.., n. poor balance suddenly disap­ "IH'l lHlibt in CUOUt\·houc rf'~l'ntch lll bOTIIC part... o! lnt n. generous jewel tine! who \\ 111 make you very huppy. in Ford Hall. ring, Together and with our expert counsel you choose the one wonder­ ful ring. It glows with brilliance and fire. And tells the world the reason PISCES (February 20 . March 20): Good time now for wholebomc, outdoor SUNDAY NIGHT for your radiance. activ1tic!-. nnd helping othl'rs. Plant a little lit•mp in n nei:::hhor's ynrcl, but 7:00 P.M. let otltcrs take the credit. BASEMENT DORM 12 ,..-ALL WELCOME HEGGIE'S JEWELRY TO JOIN MAD 136 E. State St. ITHACAN STAFF Sears Mcilkes $1500 Grranil' A $1,500 grant has been re- the Ithaca community was raising ceived by the college from the funds for the first academic build­ Sears-Roebuck Foundation. ing on our campus." The gift will be used to sup­ He added that "this additional n ''K -· ,, port a primary need, an increased gift is made at a time when the ;ITS scholarship fund. community is contributing to a u-OOD NIG-HT ... "In 1962," recalled Ithaca Col­ 75th Anniversary Fund for schol­ lege President Howard Dilling­ arships at Ithaca College. Thus ~HA~KE.11 TME RASCAls''TANUAI\V ham, "the Sears-Roebuck Founda­ it is especially welcome, and we tion made a similar contribution are deeply grateful to the Sears­ to Ithaca College. At that time, Roebuck Foundation." SALE!

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Meadow Free Parking 272-2831 THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 11 Spotlight on The Arts Eisenhower dl~-P~ Accepts by Susan Longokor MOVIE REVIEW \Veil, here I am, the Horror of the man of copy-I hear WICB he hates to set my column because it is so ... higgledy-piggledy. by Richard Gerdau dleAquero Work I hope all you poets have it in your mind to send-see how The week is an improverished one for films in Ithaca. It Feature§ Ithaca College artist Edward my vocabulary has e x p a n d e d ! Since I have no stuff to would be a waste of time to go over the reasons why Valley of by Ron Kobosko deAguero has again been recog­ d~a"'; on ( consistency in vocabulary is necessary, in case you the Dolls, and The Penthouse, are films to· avoid. I suggest nized by one of the world's most d11n t know, I do tl~e word word, words thing) I shall have to briefly the following. Adventure fans should be pleased with Both WICB AM-FM are set to famous citizens. mix and match: mix all my favorite poets in with mine own Counterpoint. W. C. Fields cultists will be satisfied with a re­ bring you the best in listening Former President Dwight D. works to which I'll add a match ... Oh Miss V. would kill me if vival of tWQ of his films at the Teqiple. Students of the cinema all semester long. As usual, WICB Eisenhower recently accepted one she read this un-A work of a. \Vork is the word for the hour should be enlightened by Fellini's 8½ at Cornell. Fields needs of deAguero's works, "The Eter­ is if not? then. on. what a lovely christmas present dh lawrenc: will bring you all the hOckey makes to continues to, the phoenix ... no qualifications, and 8½ has been dissected before in this and basketball action all season; nal Problem," to hang in the column. lt is then, a week particularly suited to the revealing of Presidential Library and Museum Bat by D. H. Lawrence listen for this Saturday's im­ my_ ch~ices for the t?P ten fi_l~~ of 1967. T~e purpose of this in Abilene, Kansas. General At evening, sitting on this terrace, listmg 1s two-fold. First, a critic s toJ? ten gives -the reader an -portant basketball game with Eisenhower first saw the paint­ \Vhen the sun from the west, beyond Pisa, beyond the example of the critic's tastes. From this one can gage how much Hartwick at 8:05 P.M. live from ing the day before Thanksgiving, mountains of Carrara Departs, and the world is taken by surprise ... expressed in a .reviC:W _may hf; adapte_d to his -own viewing selec­ 1967, when deAguero was his South Hill Gym. When the tired flower of Florence is in gloom beneath the tions. Secondly, a hstmg of films which are supposedly the best WICB-AM's campus features guest at Gettysburg, Pa. of a given year is a starting ground for debate. Since every glowing continue this semester with "Ex­ Other paintings by deAguero, Brown hills surroundin_g ... , filmgoer is in a sensf; a c~itic, ~omparison 'Yith one's owr:i favor­ a Spanish literature and language \Vhen under the arches of the Ponte Vecchio ites breeds worthwhile d1scuss1on of the cmema-a maJor pur­ tension 60," featuring Bill Her­ professor at Ithaca College, were gonson and Ed Tobias, Tuesday A green light enters against the stream, flush from the west pose of film criticism. previously acquired by Mrs. John Against the current of obscure Arno ... Frustration sets in when deciding which of numerous films evenings at 11:30. It's your chance F. Kennedy, and by President Look up, and you see things flying should be number ten. The films that follow are examples of to call "Extension 60" at 3214 Lyndon B. Johnson's two daugh­ Between the day and the night; cinema that eithcer advance or exemplify the medium and its and voice your comments and ters, Luci and Lynda. He also Swallow with spools of wark thread sewing the shadows has paintings on display at the tasks. Stylistically, thematically, sociologically, or pragmatic­ opinions on current topics. Every together. ally, all of the following have made innovations or lasting con­ Historical Museum of Art in Wednesday at 11:00 P.M. :Mike A circle swoop, and a quick parabola under the bridge arches tributions to the expanding art of film. They , are listed in Chile and the National Gallery of Where light pushes through; alphabetical order Schnell discusses the week's de­ Costa Rica. A sudden turning upon itself of a thing in the air. ACCIDENT-screenplay by Harold Pinter, directed by velopments in Student Govern­ "The Eternal Problem" depicts A dip to the water. Joseph Losey. The structure of this truly adult drama is exem­ ment on "Insight." Throughout Man worried about his immortal­ And you think: plary of how to tell a story with film. Experime.nts with sound the semester, :Mike will be talk­ ity, trying to find himself re­ "The swallows are flying so late!" ligiously and especially disturbed · and abbreviated dialogue talk-over are its own innovations. ing with campus leaders and Stu­ Swallows? about his role in today's world. Dark air-life looping Seldom has the screen told such a complete story of the human dent Government representatives weaknesses affecting our existence in such a succinct package. In the painting-which shows Yet missing the pure loop ... about the big issues on South a naked man standing away frOm A twitch, a twitter, an elastic shudder in flight -screenplay and direction Hill. A new feature this ~ear is a cross and facing a rising sun­ Like a glove, a black glove thrown up at the light, by Pierre Schoendorffer. Fact is as much a part of the medium "Campus Showcase '68" with ABC Man emerges as his own God and And falling back. as fantasy. This French documentary on the war in Viet Nam radio and TV personality Ed projects the shadow of his own Never swallows! is surprisingly objective yet compasisonately human. Men at Jordan. Throughout the series, divinity on earth. Bats! war are candidly recorded by daring and creative cameramen. Ed will host interviews with sing­ "The Eternal Problem, has been The swallows are gone. Originally shown on TV, then theatrically released in an un-cut ing stars, sports personalities, and At a wavering_ ii:istant the swallows give way to bats version,. the fil!Il is a lastiag document on the men directly in­ sought after by some of the others. Tune in for "Campus world's foremost private and pub­ By the Ponte Vecchio ••• volved in the irony and terror of an existing war. The film is Showcase '68" at 11:00 P.M. each Changing guard. made to inform and move, and no American should be spared lic collectors. Yet de.Aguero, a Thursday. former student of Pablo Picasso, Bats, and an uneasy creeping in one's scalp the depressing revelations of watching it. It is an example of the WICB-F-M: is expanding "Con. As the bats swoop overhead! practical and artistic use of the documentary. had previously turned down all , full cert Hall" this summer to four offers because of the painting's Flying madly. • BONNIE AND CLYOE-screenplay by Robert Benton nights a week. This show carries personal value to him. Pipistrello! and David Newman, directed by Arthur Penn. The most contro­ the required listening for both Black piper on an infinitesimal pipe. versial film of the year, and the best. The movie uses violence in the Introduction to Music and Little lumps that fly in air and have voices indefinite, wildly a .P!ea for its a~ol_ishment._ A comment on the daily thoughtless History of Music courses. Those _ !New Show vindictive; k11lm~ of the s1Xt1es told m a reflection of a past era, the film in either course will be told by Wings like bits of umbrella. combines humor and terror into an ironic and powerful whole. their instructors the time and "Campus Showcase '68," a new ,Bats! The movie uses its anti-heroes aesthetically, not realistically. It nights the listening for their sec­ half-hour radio show for college Creatures that hang themselves up iike an old rag to sleep; has had an effect on everything from cinema style in Hollywood tion will be aired. Each Wednes­ students, will be heard on WICB And disgustingly upside down. to fashion in Europe and New York. day evening at 8:00 P.M. listen for beginning in January, each Hanging upside down like rows of disgusting old rags "Duet," a new concept in pro­ Thursday at 11:10. And grinning in their sleep. . CLO~~LY WATCHED TRAINS-screenplay and direc­ gramming with Jerry Casbolt The program is hosted by ABC Bats! t10n by Jm Menze!. !}te discovery: of art in_ 1;veryday life is radio and television personality In China bat is a symbol of happiness. becoming characteristic of Czech films. Attammg an intellec­ and Claudia Pelegan. Also new on WICB-FM is an expanded news Ed Jordan and contains music, Not for me! tual rather th_an emotional conclusion ·on the plight of a young format with Mutual News fol­ celebrity interviews, collegiate The next three will finish this off for this week-D.H. man confrontmg personal and nationalistic problems is a diffi­ lowed immeliately by state and features and news from campuses ,c~lt achievement. This whimsical story of a young man's conflict has a way of capturing me and I will leave him pure-and local news. Also added to the across the country. do only him this week. with a cruel world shows a Czech adaptation of some technical Broadway star Angela Lans­ American advances. Kaleidoscope of Sound Pleasure Sick by D. H. Lawrence is "By Request" with Carl Jenks, bury, singer John Davidson, pro I am sick, because I have given myself away. THE GR~DUATE-sc~eenpl_ay by Calder Willingham and every Tuesday at 9 P.M. All re- quarterback John Hadl and tele­ I have given myself to people when they came quests are taken at 3214. "The vision stars Barbara Nichols and B_uck Henry, directed by Mike Nichols. At last Hollywood has so cultured, even bringing little gifts1 given us the correct feeling of youth. The plot is exaggerated yet Anniversary Year" is back - 8 Robert Strauss are. featured on so they pecked a shred of my life, and flew off with a croak truthfulness shi~es through in Dustin Hoffman's performance P.M. Tuesdays and Thursdays. the first broadcast. of sneaking exultance. and the use of Simon and Garfunkel's music. Filled with humor So now I have lost too much, and am sick. and pathos the _generation gap has scarcely been bridged with I am trying now to learn never such sharp wit and perception. The film also. fulfills one of the to give of my life to the dead, medium's first purposes-original and bright entertainment. never, not the tiniest shred. The New Dylan Death is Not Evil, Evil is Mechanical by D. H. Lawrence IN COLD BLOOD-screenplay and direction by Richard by Bob Joe Only the human being, absolved from kissing and strife B~ooks. An example of the proper way to adapt a novel-them­ Bob Dylan's first new LP in 16 months is out and out­ goes on and on and on, without wandering at1c:dly, not word for word. The intricate structure, and stinging fixed upon the hub of the ego realism make the film of worth both artistically and sociologic­ standing it is. And it could very well be his first "folk" album, in ally. the classical sense, for if we are to define folk music as music going, yet never wandering, fixed, yet in motion, of the common man, then John Wesley Harding is it. the kind of hell that is real, grey and awful, I PRIVILEGE-screenplay and direction ·by Peter Watkins. sinless and stainless going round and round Fl!lwe~ _by overstatement, the movie shows the medium's power In his first venture since a serious motorcycle accident a the kind of hell grey Dante never saw to satmze and_ ~arn. Stylistically the film is strong. Watkins year and a half ago, Dylan has eschewed the electronic sound but of which he had a bit inside him. broadens the f1ct10nal documentary style first used in his The and returned to a simpler guitar-harmonica-piano combination. Know thyself, and that thou art mortal. War Game (1%6). This new and useful style has only two This "simple sound" is augmented by the smooth, clean, profes­ But know thyself, denying that thou art mortal. charact~rs ~alkin~ directly to each other. The rest speak to the sional drumming of Kenny Buttrey, sounding rather like some­ a thing of kisses and strife : m~sses in mterv1ews or statements. That in itself says some- thing that might be heard in, let's say, a Buckinghams' record. a lit-up shaft of rain ·Pete Drake, a fine country and western artist, adds his steel ! tmg for the present state of media worship and the breaking a rose tree bronzy with thorns I own of personal relations. · guitar to "Down Along The Cove" and "I'll Be Your Baby a mixture of yea and nay Tonight." a rainbow of love and hate . TWO FOR THE ROAD-screenplay by Fredric Raphael, But, on this album, the music takes second place to the a wind that blows back and forth directe~ b~ Stanley Donnen. Truth speaks again through ex­ lyrics. Always an interesting lyricist, Dylan is now more clever, a creature of conflict, like-a cataract: j\ger~t1on m this pe~etrating and entertaining look at marriage. more subtle, with the most significant change-his coming of know thyself in denial of all these things. e ~dm's stl"!-l~ture 1s a breakthrough for the commercial film. age as a storyteller. Earlier in his career, he was reg~rded as a And thou shalt begin to spin around on the hub of the obscene 1 'lJ1 Juxtaposition of _past, present,_ and future has introduced folk artist in the main part for his style. The protestmg young 01 lywood and American mass audiences to an extension of the man of 1961 has become a mellow philosopher-professor In 1968. a greyego vm "d t h"in~ t h at goes w1'th out wan d enng · art's techniques. _ No longer does he take on the entire world with a two-minute, a machine that m itself is nothing d' ULYSSES-screenplay by Joseph Strick and Fred Haines, thirty second exposition. Instead he tells us about John Doe, a centre of the evil world. irec~ed by Joseph Strick. Necessarily weaker than the book, or in this case John Wesley Harding, and sets out to preach The End, the Beginning by D. H. Lawrence the film fluctuates between an excellent visual transposition of from there. The result makes "Blowing in the Wind" seem as If there were not an utter and absolute dark J?yce and styleless parody. A precedent in film censorship, it has effective as the gutless work of Herman's Hermits. Mr. Dylan of silence and sheer oblivion given a needed frankness to responsible film-makers. has reached the nitty gritty of folk. at the core of everything, .W?rthy o_f special mention as a preservative, not a cine­ Important to note, also, is Dylan's singing. For the first how terrible the sun would be, matic. mnovatlon, is Peter Brook's film of Weiss' Marat/Sade. time it appears that he has made a real attempt to 'sing,' how ghastly it would be to strike a match, ancl make a light. Tf1e film al~o ~ol~s the b_est acting of the year for posterity. A thro~ghout the entire album. This is one Dylan LP where _the But the very sun himself is pivoted Peasant relief m its classical and subtle style was Elvira Madi­ whinning and droning won't make you reach for the reJect upon the core of pure oblivion, ~n. Harbingers of a growing quality in American films were: button by the forth or fifth cut. Note especially his powerful so is a candle, even as a match. 00 vocal performance on "Drifter's Escape" and "The Ballad of And if there were not an absolute, utter forgetting I l Hand !-,uke, /?" the !feat..Pf the Night, and the amateurish [Yet resoundmgly frightening and truthful The Incident. Frankie Lee and Judas Priest" which is certain to become the and a ceasing to know, a perfect ceasing to know most popular cut from John Wesley Harding, and perhaps a and a silent, sheer cessation of all awareness ~ne notices a predominance of unrest, bitterness and vio­ how terrible life would be! 1hnce .m the year's major films. That gives alarming proof that classic in its own right. "If you were expecting _something revolutiona~y, a dis­ how terrible it would be to think and know, to have ']{- C(nema, even in fluffy Hollywood, is reflecting the times. consciousness I th. 1s is, afte~ all, o~e of the major functions of art. One hopes appointment awaits you. But 1f you want some ge!l~me folk to feed on, let me say that the New Dylan was defm1tely worth But dipped, once dipped in dark oblivion :[! is year's films will be more optimistic while still being re- the soul has peace inward and lovely peace. ect1ve. the wait. THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 12

LETTERS Continued And these fun and games some- MORALITY Continued A June wedding is planned by times hurt someone, including Twosomes Miss Sandra Lee Gulick, em. age Son" by Victor Lundberg. myself. "Other people will cho-ose to follow traditional standards, ployed by Associated Transport Mr. Lundberg expresses a belief Sincerely yours, which I think are still good standards. These are chastity before Inc., and Edward John Kowalski that in dissent lies an inherent Alex B. Block marriage and fidelity after marriage. It simply will be that there Jr., a junior at Ithaca College. wrong; that the operation of the will be no compulsion, no pressure on people. That they will not Miss Diane Armstrong, a sopho. government is up to the elected more Physical Education major, official only, and the people have act sexually under the stimulus of fear. They will have freedom A Thank You and Mr. Thomas Rochester, a no other voice than the ballot. of choice." junior also majoring in physical He would disinherit his son for Supporting this theory of a scale of competing values is re­ To the staff education, were married January protesting what he believes to be search on attitudes of adults and college students to sex before The Ithacan 9, in Hackensack, N.J. The couple a deep moral wrong in the coun­ I wish to thank the staff of marriage by Dr. Ira L. Reiss, a University of Iowa sociologist. is living at 140 Grandview Court try he (his son) must also love. The Ithacan for their kindness Dr. Reis sees four major premarital sexual standards at work and bath are continuing thei; For one does not become emo­ and thoughtfulness in presenting in our society: abstinence, which forbids sex to both men and studies at Ithaca College. tional about a place one does not me the beautiful attache case at women before marriage; the traditional double standard, which love. Christmas. It was totally unex­ tolerates sex for boys but not for girls; an acceptance of sexual Miss Judith Ann Young, a Miss Cecilia J. Wojcik, em. intercourse before marriage, where the couple have a loving, As to your final comment, I pected and, I might add, totally senior majoring in music educa­ ployed by the N.Y. Telephone stable relationship; and a casual attitude toward sex. Company, and Mr. Richard A. can only say that I flatter myself appreciated. I shall treasure it as tion here at Ithaca College, is as having passed the stage when a reminder of several years of "This last standard," says Dr. Reiss, "has a quite small engaged to Mr. William B. Rubin, Stryminski (The Hulk), a senior everything I do is classified as fun happy association with The nl!mber of followers but it is most newsworthy and thereby who is studying for his Ph.D. de­ majoring in business administra. and games. When I do indulge in Ithacan and the wonderful peo­ misleads the public as to the size of its following." gree in electrical engineering at tion at Ithaca College, plan to be recreation, which is quite often, I ple who serve and have served on . Prob~bly the most pote?t force at work changing tradi- Syracuse University under a Na­ married September 7, 1968 - a it. t10nal attitudes toward sex is the effective separation of sex tional S c i e n e e Foundation good old-fashioned Polish wed. find I enjoy myself most when I ding! . am with a friend or with some­ It was with real regret that I from reproduction. With the growing use of birth control pills Traineeship. A June wedding is one I love. I can not deal with gave up the advisorship in late and other modern contraceptive methods the fear of pregnancy planned. Miss Cynthia Mary Long, an these people in a detached fall, because of the pressure of is less of a factor in sex, in or out of marriage. Miss Judy Simonson, a senior alumna of Syracuse University at Wilkes College, and Mr. Rob­ enough manner to keep them other business. But I cannot com­ But there is still a long way to go in educating women to and presently on the faculty of ert Arenstei.J;l, a senior Account­ outside what I am doing, and pletely disassociate myself from the contraceptive facts of life before they will be completely St. Rose of !,ima School, and Mr. The Ithacan, nor do I wish to. ing major at Ithaca College, are thus I may unwittingly expose free from the fear of an unwanted pregnancy. There is wide­ John Edward Morissey III, a sen. I look forward every week to planning to be married in June. them to the same frustrations and spread ignorance among mature adults, to say nothing of teen­ ior majoring in history at Ithaca danger I myself face. There are reading the paper. agers, as to the relative effectiveness of various methods of con­ Miss.Carol Jane Desch and Rus-. College, are plruining to be mar­ not many rules in the game of The Ithacan is an outstanding traception. sell R. Desoe, both seniors here ried this July. college publication, far better at LC., will marry in June. Miss life that do not carry penalties "Most American couples practice some form of birth con­ Miss Patricia Martin Brown, a and burdens for winners and than most of its contemporaries. Desch is an honor student major­ trol or family limitation," says Lewis C. Frank, Jr., Director of junior here at LC., is engaged to losers alike. I have passed the It enjoys freedom to an extent ing in mathematics; Mr. Desoe little known on many campuses, the Information Center on Population Problems. "But many of is majoring in business admini­ John Nicholas Walker, a sopho­ stage of playing cowbOys and these . modc_rn young couples go about the business of family and it has used this freedom in stration. more at the University of Buf­ 1 Indians and am looking forward plannmg with the methods and the techniques of our colonial to playing businessman and a generally constructive manner. The former ·Beverly Brown of falo. Again, thanks. past. The vast majority of Americans are still using horse and Attica was recently married to client. I will not be a spectator buggy methods of contraception." Miss Tana Lockwood, a senior in life; I wish to be a participant. John Mason Potter Mr. Edwin J. Crippen of Alpine. Music major at J.C., and Mr. Wil­ Some young people who have not yet experienced an un­ Mrs. Crippen is attending Ithaca liam Cowden, a senior Physical wanted p~egnancy believe that coitus interruptus and douching College and her husband is em­ Education major also at LC., are Dinner at are :ff~cnve methods ?f preventing pregnancy. Yet birth control ployed by the State of N.Y. as a engaged to be married this sum­ stat1st1cs show alarmmg failure rates for these methods. research technician at Cornell. mer. Many people believe that conventional methods such as Miss Eileen McManus, a former THE STATION the diaphragm or the condom, are completely safe in themselves student of Ithaca College and Miss Susan (Shippi) Shapiro, a Barat College, presently employ­ junior majoring in speech patho­ Joe Ciaschi's incomparable new restaurant and are risky only when improperly used. But while effective these methods still have a failure rate higher than that of mor~ ed by Random House, is engaged logy, and Mr. Harvey (Chique) in the old Railroad Passenger Station on modern methods, and by no means do condoms or diaphragms to Mr. Rocco Curinga, Jr., who Older, a junior Biology major, Taughannock Boulevard at West Buffalo Street. fail only because of improper use. will graduate next June from the plan to be married the summer Penn. College of Optometry. A after their graduation from Ithaca 0 0 The new intrauterine devices - the loops, coils, and bows College. ompresseve - have many ad:vantages. They arc relatively permanent and July wedding is planned. they do not reqmrc thought and preparation - as do condoms Miss Marjorie L Marcus, a sen­ Congratulations to Joan and For reservations 272-2609 ior at Ithaca College, is engaged Bob Schumacher on the birth of' Please tum to page 13 to Donald G. Cohen, an alumnus their son, Robert Hunt Schu­ of Cornell University and pres­ macher, Jr., born January 8, ently attending I.Y.U. Law 1968. School. George Loveless wed Phyllis Miss Lorraine Olsefski, a sen­ Gusthe Jan. 6, George is a Phys. ior at Ithaca College, and Mrs. Ed. senior from Pheonicia, N.Y. George P. Lorson, a senior at and Phyllis is a beautician from I Cornell University, are engaged. Syracuse, N. Y. i

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BE WISE MORALITY Continued Bombers Go For A §econ~ a_nd diaphragms - when thought and preparation arc least /Please Patronize likely. But these IUD's are not generally recommended for wo­ Our Advertisers by Pam Davis men ~,ho have not yet had babies. And even when properly in On Wednesday the 31st, the third in the parallel bars. place in '"'.omen who have previously been pregnant, these IUD's have a failure rate of from 2 to 7 percent. Ithaca College Gymnastics team By beating the Bombers, Slip­ A will make its third appearance of pery Rock capped off a success­ Oral ~ontr~ceptives are virtually 100 percent effective; but the season against Cornell Uni­ ful trip to Ithaca as they beat they require faithful a

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272-6171 Open Fri. 'til 9:00 p.m. Student Charge Accounts Invited! CLOSED SUNDAYS Frank Hammer THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 14 Words! Words! Words! by Susan Longaker 0/PIEN BOWLING Every year around this time, minute they stay out past cur­ the girls of Ithaca College par- few up to 60 minutes. For this In order to know these, you will have to tax . . · . if you NIEW ticipate in what has traditionally occassion, the Snack Bar, busses, have read any of the prominent poets you should have no been called "Penny Night." This and Dating Lounge have con. trouble, and if you are the kind that glosses over a word ·you Leo OTHACA IBOWl year, W.G.B. is sponsoring "Pen- sented to remain open the full don't know, I challenge you here . . . · by C. ny Night" on January 28th. What 60 minutes. Girls that have Key I. serrated (from D. H. Lawrence) A. divided or separate Have you beard . . . that late is "Penny Night?" Well ... on this Privileges are asked to contri­ B. edged or notched C. liquid in form registrations were plentiful . . . night, girls can pay a penny to bute to this fund to maintain 2. pother (used by Johnson) A. to put together, carefully that the Florida non-tans have W.G.B.'s Antigony fund for each a child overseas. B. to fall into a hole or query C. stir or fuss returned . . . that over vacation 3. bate (in Dryden) A. to deduct B. to draw into a trap some skiing IC students met Dean C. to catch by lessening pressure and Mrs. Noun at Mt:-Snow ... 24 LANES 4. tome (from Pope's Rape of the Lock. A. secret or hidden that Sanny's N.Y.E. party was 1 though B. a part or segment C. a feeling hardly remembered . . . that 20 BILLIARD TABLES MOIE S· 5. mell ( used expertly by G. Hopkins) A. the ringing or Deltasig was the first to score COCKTAIL LOUNGE pealing sound B. to wander directionless against the Dark Horses in Volley. !BAIR.BER SHOIP C. to mix or mingle ball, also the first to play them SNACK BAR ,.- •• --.••.,.,,.,:,-,,-as- _...,. .. .---~~~ - - --~ now on the ground floor of Dorm 12 ... that congrats go to the Don I. serrated: B. edged or notched, as this poet describes the best Wilson's and the Bob Schumach- , 2 BARBERS IN AT ALL TIMES bat of a wing, er's who acquired new baby boys I 2. pother: Cl stir or fuss (bother). CALL AR 2-1922 TlreS .• Fri. 8 • 5:30 Sat. 8-4:00 over vacation . . • that the : 3. bate: A. Although not like bated breath, it means to deduct average of the 3rd floor, dorm,, Lou Barnard - Gen. Mgr. or lessen. 20A is on Dean's list . . . that Downtown: 4. tome: B. a part of se_g_ment-perhaps from that famous hairdo Christmas vacation was flower 118 N. Aurora St. Mose Norman, Prop. 5. mell: C. to mix-as Hopkins uses it in "Ashboughs," time for some, de-flowering for i "May mells blue and snow" - others . . . that the Ithacan I delivery was completed in the dorms at 4:30 a.m. Sat. of vaca- I THE UNl;RRINGLY FACTUAL tion . . . that lots of students WEATHER FORECAST FOR showed up at both Rochester and , IMPORTANT OCCASIONS Lock Haven for B Ball . • . that chances are one in five that by Mortmer Sneerd you've guessed the winner of the Moro than likely the weather will Rose contest ... that Bob Harvey bo unusually poor this weekend is back again . . . that a certain 1 due to the fact that people will peach turned out to be a lemon~ want to use the SK! SLOPE. W~rnlng 1111 The Infirmary Is . . . that the new color TV's in I going to refuse to treat FROST­ the dorms are drawing full i BITE this weekend that appears houses . . . that Rosenblatt and Sears on the place of the seat. Mike both are back . . . that Pi Lam has an intensive study wing ! (Dean's -- list) . . . that over i Down in vacation our teams were in train­ ing at Someplace Else . . . that SEARS ROEBUCK and CO. moustaches are plentiful among The music students trying to look older for teaching jobs ... that Va BI ey rushing starts soon ... that lodge parties for tiie weekend are con­ flicting . . . that everyone's SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO., THE WORLDS l.ARGEST RE­ House noticed Ross's hat ... that mon-i TAILING ORGANIZATION WILL CONDUCT INTERVIEWS sters crawl at 2:30 a.m. in Tau­ 801 West Buffalo ghannock Falls • • . that Sanny WITH ITHACA COLLEGE STUDENTS INTERESTED IN" ] has few alumni-they all came back . . . that the green weenies CAREER OPPORTUNITIES AT SEARS". now have competition from the electric blue flames ... that the You'll Have white rabbit (I'm late, I'm late!) award of the new semester goes to Chris and the Kidd for arriving VEAL at Delta Kappa's N.Y.E. at eight minutes of twelve. JANUARY 31~ 1968 PARMIGIANE HOTEL LEONARDO t Interview Rooms-Faculty Office Building. Friday Matinee Riglit Next Door ... VALLEY BOUSE Special! · CARRY-OUT SERVICE Proving Every Day That 3 - 6 IPoMo Consider these :n:mportant JFacts: You CAN take it wi~ you! 1 OS N. Aurora St.

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108 NJ. Aurora Streell' THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 16 Rochester Edges Hoopsters Split Sophs May De_cide Bombers 66 - 65 Wrestlers Fate Last Four Garnes by Rick Wright by Alex B. Block cold spell Mr. Hurst benched R h t J 11 If "Mo" and paid the price under Even the best student needs a two minutes remaining, but, by . oc es er - _anuary . - the boards. that stage, the starters had re­ it. was cold outs1dde. (a~d itt wf as, Mark Rowley, Baldwinsville week or two to "get back in the with temperatures 1ppmg o our " h e saw heavy action as groove" after a long vacation. A tired. ·t c Ider, ~op omor ' The Bombers clicked on 38 for b e 1ow zero ) ' I was even o M"k St 1 got into early foul basketball team is no different. inside for the Ithaca College t I ebl eRe e ho nded up It took the Bombers several 66 shots from the floor (19 for 25 . . the rou e. ow 1ey, w e in the second half), but a 40% Bom b crs this evemng a_s . Y with 12 points, to be second high games to get moving again, as were edged out by the University h d d b handling they split four games in a 9-day accuracy mark from the charity scorer, s owe goo a 11 line prevented them from hitting of Rochester, 66 to 65. on offense, but looked dismal on period (Jan. 11-20). The two vic­ A noiscy throng of Ilhaca fans defense. tories were over Lock Haven and the century mark. watched the visiting Bombers Although the game looked tight Roberts Wesleyan by a total mar­ Ithaca vs. Mansfield lead most of the way, but never up to the last four seconds it is gin of 27 points, while the losses "Mansfield is a good team: But by more than eight points. In this observer's opinion that it to University of Rochester and no one would believe me before early foul trouble coach Hurst was lost when, with 12:49 remain­ Mansfield were by a 4-point the game," remarked Hurst. was forced to depend heavily on ing in the game, leading Bomber spread. At press time the Ithaca Mansfield IS a good team. Good his bench throughout the game, rebounder, Ed Kowalski, fouled College record was 7-3. enough to overcome a 39-34 half­ and the reserves could never out, being reylaced intermittent­ The sweetest win was at Rob­ time deficit; good enough to win open up a really strong lead ly by Russ Marron and Bill erts Wesleyan, 92-77, on January 80-77 over Ithaca after trailing against the fired up Rochester Gustafson, neither of whom could 20. Ithaca stormed to a 49-31 half­ by 7 (72-65) with 3:07 to play. team. do the same rebounding job. time advantage, outran. and out­ The clincher was a rebound Cocaptain Don Andrejko led Richie Miller, a six foot Ithaca rebounded the Red Raiders. tap-in by Mansfield substitute South hill scorers with thirteen junior, saw heavy action and "We're trying to run more now. Fran Duncheskie with four sec­ points, but had an off night as made his best showing of the sea­ We're going to try to do it for onds in the game to break a 77-77 team playmaker. The bombers son. Miller had seven points, but the rest of the year," commented tie. A technical foul was assessed had trouble working the ball in- more importantly pulled down IC coach Hugh Hurst after the to Ithaca for calling an extra time side to big men Ed Kowalski and several important rebounds and game. out, whereupon Duncheskie sunk Greg Albano, and were forced to looked alive on offense, which is Greg Albano notched 25 mark­ a toss for the 80th point. That shoot from the outside. more than could be said for many ers and 18 rebounds to lead the was it. Ithaca attack; Ken Curtis, the "\Ve were a victim of circum­ IC Wrestlers ~an the season with their first match last Saturday.\ Usually high scoring Bob Mod- of his teammates. Wesleyan high scorer (28.2 aver­ lisewski showed the effects of a Overall this can be summed up stances," said Hurst. "Richie Mil­ age), was held to 24. ler got the ball twice on rebounds two and a half week layoff as he · as a team failure. Ithaca had the The home team tried to switch With only three returning let- are filled by sophomores from \ went ice cold from the floor, get- better personnel, but early fouls and was called for an offensive 1 from a man-to-man to a zone de­ foul and then walking. Mansfield termen from la:t years squad, ! last year's freshman team. Rich ting his first two pointer several and a long layoff combined to 1 fense during the game, but to no the 1968 grappling outlook de-: Goodman, North Caldwell, N.J.,, minutes into the second half. make it a heartbreaking night for went on to score after both turn­ avail. Ithaca then played posses­ pends upon the success of several will handle the "123 lb. division. Shooting too often during the both players and fans. overs and they had the incentive I sion basketball. "We didn't want to win.': sophomores, eight to be exact. Tom Hochfelder, Roslyn, and Bill to shoot outside against the zone Mansfield simply didn't crack The team faces a tough ele:.-·.~m I Meisner, Carle Place, N.Y., will -we had a 20-point lead-so we under pressure. Down twice by match schedule this year, which I cover -the 152 and 160 lb. spots. To Keep Your Spirits Up just played catch for a little while ten points, the Mounties, led by was started last Saturday, Jan- Tony Scaringe, Albany, will al­ until tb_ey went back to man-to­ Walt Bartkowski (22) and Joel uary 20, against Cortland State ternate between the 145 and 152 PHONE AR 2-2111 man again," said Hurst. Griffing (18), battled back for in the LC. gym. lb. divisions. Wayne Keebler. The Ithacans led by 90-67 with their ninth win in 12 games. The team is led this year by Geneva, and Wes Kissel, Olive H H LIQUOR WINES The lead changed hands 17 Co-Captains Terry Habecker, a Bridge, N.Y., will handle the & & times. There were 15 deadlocks, junior letterman from . Mendon, chores at 167 and 177 lb. They 218 £. STATE ST. 103 N. Aurora and 56 fouls were called in the N.Y., and Mike Turco, a senior will be supported by Rod Howell, tight man-to-man struggle. letterman from Ithaca. Habecker Ludlowville, and Gary Meier­ ITHACA, N.Y. 273-9922 It was Ithaca's first setback on and Turco wrestle in the 137 and diercks, Elmont. Jim Wieta, ~ "Your Closest Liquor Store to Campus" their home floor. 145 weight classes respectively. West Babylon senior, will help Ithaca vs. Lock Haven At present Turco is inactive due out in the heavyweight division. BIG DADDY The Ithaca-Lock Haven tilt on to a shoulder injury incurred in On Saturday, January 20, the January 13, got off to a sluggish pre-season practice, but his re- grapplers opened their season SUBS start as the Rams tried to play tum is looked forward to in the with a 16-16 tie with the Red possesion basketball. The half­ near future by Coach Herb Broad- Dragons from Cortland State. 10 VARIETIES time score was Lock Haven 28, well. Coach Broadwell was satisfied Ithaca 24. · Stu Allen is the other return- with the outcome because it was Discount on Orders over 20 SIKD THIE BUG ONIE Y "They (Lock Haven) had us ing letterman in the I.C. lineup. Cortland's sutth meet of the sea­ playing their type of game in the Allen is a senior from Corning, son. Rick LaFrance tied the AT LOW, LOW MID-WEEK RATES I first half," according to the IC N.Y. He is expected to win sev- match with a decisive 16-4 deci­ SUDS YOUR mentor. "They really had us wor­ eral match:s in the 130 lb. weight Ision over Francisci of Cortland MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY ried, but we started to get more class off hIS record for the past in the heavyweight finale. Ithaca shots in the next half." two years. Experience is also was forced to forfeit the 130 lb~ DUDS The Bombers only shot 17 times present in other weight classes. match to CorUand and give them in the opening period, but scored Bob Auble of Ithaca, a junior a valuable five points. Rich Good­ Webster's Laundry 44 in the second to clinch a 68-56 saw some action last year, and man won the 123 lb. class with and Dry Cleaners victory. will compete in the 130 and 137 a 13-6 decision over Scheinbaum All Day $5.00 Led by Greg Albano with 25 lb. classes. Junior Bob Ellis, from of Cortland. After the forfeit, Same Day Service and points, Ithaca turned the tables Merrick, N.Y., wrestled in several Bob Auble decisioned Church 1(). classes last year and· will be 2, and Ithaca took the lead,' 6-5. IHalf Day $3.00 Delivery with only 1 ½ minutes left to win by 12. called upon for similar duty this Then Habecker pinned bis op­ year when the situation arises. ponent in the 145 lb. class in Free Pickup & Delivery Continued on page 17 ONLY $3.00 George Kiley, senior from New four minutes and increased the Hartford, and Rick LaFrance, I.C. lead to 11-5. Hochfelder (152), Basement of Dorm 12 for junior from Groton, arc experi- Meisner (160), and Kissel (167) enced competitors in the heavy- then suffered decision losses in NIGHTS, MON. - SAT. 6:30 • 10:30 in by 10 a.m. - Back by Contemporary and weight class. the next three matches and 4p.m. Early American The remaining weight classes Cortland took a 14-11 lead into the last · two matches. When ~ Gifts in Iron Wayne Keibler .tied his opponent, in the 177 .lb. class, Ithaca was! COIN OP LAUNDRY visit

BROKERS Robert S. Boothroyd - Class '24 Robert L. Boothroyd - Class '60 Henry G. Kaiser - Class '52

!?HONIE 272- 8100

312 IE. SiaR-e Si. lthoca1 N.Y. George's Restaurant and lounge 11 We Welcome Your Inquiry' Comer Cayuga and Green Sts. Opposite New Woolworth Store - THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 17 Mansfield has less money, and less jobs to Wood's team graduated, and 32-point outburst against RIT in work with than the colleagcs he Hurst, who hadn't come in until Baslkeirba~O a recent game won by Hartwick, Continued from page 18 bucks, yet he has still begun pro­ the spring, barely had time to 123-100, and his 21-point effort in The man pushing him is one ducing a winner. When you ask recruit Don Andrejko before the BOX SCORES: an 86-71 loss to Southampton last him if he is looking forward to summer, and the end of the week. of Hurst's two starters, who usual­ 92 FG FT FTA Pts Roberts Wesleyan (77) the NCAA's this year, he tells you school season was over. The fol- Ithaca < > Three weeks ago in Hartwick's ly starts on the bench. Slim 6'1 Albano 10 5-11 25 FG FT-FTA Pts everyone asks him that, but all lowing winter Hurst recruited Andrejko 76-73 loss to Hobart, sophomore )!:ark Rowley is the only member 6 5-9 17 Curtis 9 6-7 24 he knows is that the team plays actively, coming up with one of Steele sharpshooter John Harmatuk sus­ ·of this year's team to make an 3 1-4 7 Scribner 3 0-0 6 Hartwick tomorrow night. the best freshman teams of all Kowalski tained a knee injury, and is s~ill Iinstant transition to the starting 3 1-3 7 Rose 1 0-0 2 Hartwick is the game these gen­ time, one that beat the heralded Marron out of action. At that time, Harm­ varsity. Rowley has all the tools, 11 2-6 24 Stephens 3 2-2 8 tleman would like to win. The Syracuse frosh that winter. From Rowley .. tuk was the second leading but needs maturity to be a regu­ 2 1-4 5 Schultz 6 1-2 13 season's first loss was suffered that team came last year's sopho- Burr ~corer on the team. Then too, lar starter. If he doesn't start 1 1-1 3 Smith 2 4-5 8 at the Hands of Oneonta's pride, mores, but Hurst's bad luck was Miller there have been injuries to 6-4 another game this season, he 1 0--0 2 Easterly 3 1-2 7 and it was a bitter pill for these just starting. Ed Kowalski was Ronovech sophomore forward Joe Cullen, won't miss a start in the next 1 0--0 2 Roache men. Even though it is Winter academicly ineligible (after lead- Shields 1 4-7 6 Coach Ralph's leading reserve, two seasons. 0 0-0 0 Luke 0 1-3 1 Weekend, one of the status sym­ ing the frosh in rebounding), and 6-1 pivot Mike Davies, both B. Gustafson 0 0-2 0 Page 1 0-1 2 The playmaker on this team, bols of this team's success should Steve Hoffman, (and the leading of whom are strong off the and. in his own way, the key to be out again tomorrow night, the TOTALS 38 16-40 92 TOTALS 29 19-29 77 scorer on that team), chose not Ithaca 49 43-92 boards. the way the entire team goes, is crowds. to play. Other key personnel for Hart­ RWC 31 46--77 FOULED OUT-Schultz, Smith. the team's sole senior, Don An­ Last year the cheerleaders and After the 66-67 campaign, Don wick include backcourt dynamos drejko. The 6' Binghamton na­ players had some nights when Barenburg transferred and the Mansfield (80) FG FT-FTA Pts Marty Kenney and Co-Capt. Ed .tive averaged 8.9 points per game they could hear themselves freshman team of promise had Bartkowski 9 4-6 22 Ithaca (77) FG FT-FTA Pts Zwinscher. Kenney, although only ,last season, and has once again breathing, and a big night was matured into a nonentity. Griffing 5 8-11 18 Albano 6 4-9 16 5-9, has quick hands and is an ~een a high and consistent when one full section was filled. Bob Modliszewski was one of Collier 4 1-3 9 Andrejko 2 3-4 7 ' excellent playmakcr and ball- scorer this year. Donny began This year, the gym may not be a group of transfers Hurst per­ Brisiel 2 1-2 5 Burr 3 4-7 10 handler, who also excels on de- playing the game at the local big enough. suaded to come to Ithaca who Tammaro 4 1-3 9 Kowalski 1 0-2 2 fcnse. Like Kenney, Zwinscher Boys Club when he was eight, After his seven starters, Hurst have meshed with the remnant of Duncheski 5 3-3 13 Marron 4 3-5 11 is also a fine ballhandler and and he hasn't stopped since. "He has fine bench strength to look that freshman team to produce Dunham 1 1-2 3 Miller 3 5-6 11 leads the team in the assists de- has a lot of poise," comments forward to as well. Richie Miller, this years winner. This burly 6'1 Luckman 0 1-2 1 Rowley 2 2-2 6 partment. Hartwick's forte, how- Head Coach Hurst, "If it is a an Ithaca native has shown well sophomore had the ability, if Walker 0 0-0 0 Steele 4 6-9 14 ever, is rebounding - and the tight situation, it always seems coming off the bench this winter, healthy, to break every scoring TOTALS 30 20-32 80 B. Gustafson O 0-0 O Warriors have two of the best in that Don is handling the ball as has Steve Burr, who has made mark in the book. Right now, shin Mansfield 34 36-80 TOTALS 25 27-44 77 the persons of Pete Arnold, a 6-5 most of the time. He has a knack up for Kowalski's benchings due splints, and other assorted ail­ Ithaca 39 28-77 Officials: Acrilly & Schum junior, and Chris Lane, a 6-9 sen- of setting up the right play. to fouls. Burr potentially is the ments arc holding him back, just ior. The husky Arnold is averag­ Equally important, when he has best rebounder on the team, if as his ill status held Ithaca back Ithaca (68) FG FT-FTA Pts ing about 10 rebounds per game, an opening, he's not afraid to he can find the handle, and can in their one point Rochester loss. Albano 10 5-9 25 Lock Haven (56) FG FT-FTA Pts in addition to a scoring average shoot". get some experience. John Gustaf­ One of the keys to Hurst's Andrejko 1 0-0 2 Curry 2 3-4 71 of 12 points per game. Lane is a ;} Steele 0 4-4 4 " Andrejko's play doesn't. go un- son, and Keith Shields round out hustlers is the rebounding Daley 3 1-2 7 · terror off the boards, as his 16- a sound bench. strength of 6'3 Junior Ed Kowal- Kowalski 0 1-4 19 Detcr 6 5-6 17 rebound average per game will noticed by the opposition. "He's 3 0-0 6 a cool customer," Buffalo State This team, in an overall analy­ ski; and one of the weaknesses is Marron McLean 5 0-0 10 verify. Lane is also scoring at a sis, has not lived up to it's entire Kowalski's tendency to get into Modliszewski 0 0-0 0 Randolph 5 0-0 10 16.3 clip per game, and is hitting Head Coach Howard MacAdam 4 2-2 10 remarked after Ithaca had de­ potential, but the fact that it early foul trouble. The parodox is, Miller Posteraro O 1-1 1 on 54% of his shots from the shows potential does merit atten­ as Coach Hurst says: "If he stops ~~;~ 0 2-3 2 Uhlig 1 0-1 2 field. feated the Orangemen 81-59. 27 14-22 68 1 2 "When they needed the big play, tion. In losses to Hartwick, fouling, he will top being effec- Young O-O Despite the fact it has been a Rochester, and Mansfield they tive". As long as Kowalski is in Ithaca 24 44-68 TOTALS 23 10-14 56 1 disappointing season for Hart- he seemed to do the right thing 28 28-56 at the right time. This is the have come close, only to falter at the game to join Albano under Lock Haven Officials Cioffi and Solie wick thus far, the Warriors do type of player you need to be a the last moment. They.. seem to the boards, they put a no tres- Ithaca (65) FG FT-FTA Pts possess some fine talent, and are winner." need a bit more experience, sta­ passing sign on the three-second Albano 4 1-5 9 Rochester (66) FG FT-FTA Pts capable of beating anybody on a bility, and a healthy Bob Modlis­ zone of every court they play on. Andrejko 5 3-4 13 Huddle 1 0--0 2 given night. coach Ralph's The toughest job in basketball zewski to be a consistent winner. Mike Steele, a 6' junior from Steele 1 2-2 3 Vance 5 5-7 15 charges have been utilizing the I is the ability to come off the They have what it takes, now they Owego, New York, joined the Kowalski 4 0-2 8 Askew o 3-7 3 go-go offense - running and jbench, and immediately be as hot must learn to give it out con­ Bombers last year after a two Modliszewski 1 1-1 3 Baker 3 0-1 6 shooting - averaging in the la hand as the other nine men on sistently. year tour at Broome Tech to Marron 4 0-0 8 Taylor 6 4-5 16 neighborhood of 90 points per }he court who have been getting help the team to a winning sec­ Rowley 5 2-2 12 l\lacintyre 2 4-7 8 game. This, in addition to their the range since the opening buz­ ond season. This year, after be­ Burr 0 2-2 2 Brown 7 0-1 14 rebounding strength, measures zer. Frank Fazio did it two win­ HOOPSTERS Continued ing second leading scorer in only l\liller 3 1-3 7 Bennia 1 0-0 2 up to an acid test for the IC ters ago, Don Barenburg did it among the top five scorers on the half the games, Steele had trou­ B. Gustafson 0 0-0 0 TOTALS 25 16-30 66 ! Bombers, who'll be hoping to gain last winter, but neither did it as squad. ble making the team. Being con­ TOTALS 27 11-21 65 revenge for ~hat earlier. loss. well as Russ Marron, this sea­ I The key to this team, and in stantly pushed by sophomore son·s fireman. his own way paradoxically the Mark Rowley, Steele has learned Russ was once elected presi­ to play defense, rind to hustle, ITHACA COLLEGE BASKETBALL TOTALS quictiest, and loudest man on the (as of 10 games) dent of the sophomore class at court is a 6'5 junior from Irving­ something he couldn't always re- 'Ithaca, but, when it came time to ton, New Jersey, Greg Albano. member to do last season. He has FG FGA FT FTA RB PTS. AVG. Albano 73 123 40 81 122 186 18.6 fill out his term, he was sitting out Albano led the Bombers last year also become a much greater asset z:t:~c Marron 51 100 18 30 51 120 12.0 the season at Florida University. in scoring, field goal percentage, to the team for it. Modliszewski 54 127 26 31 48 134 16.7 The following fall Russ was back, and rebounding, hitting 118 of (8 games) but, due to the transfer rule, he 237 shots for a .498 mark. Andrejko 33 72 20 31 28 86 8.6 Steele :..ad sat out a year at Florida, and Watchi.ng Albano on the court Bombers fro 24 68 22 32 15 70 7.0 had to sit out another at Ithaca. Kowalski 31 48 6 21 110 68 6.8 is like watching a sleeping Pan­ Miller 14 35 8 12 10 36 3.6 This winter he came to Coach ther on the court, and no one has Host Hartwick Burr 7 13 8 12 9 22 2.2 Hurst and asked if he could come ever watched an uncaged panther By Mike Hinkelman B. Gustafson 2 2 1 7 4 5 0.5 out for the team. Mr. Hurst said J. Gustafson 5 9 2 6 9 12 2.0 sleep for very long without meet­ (6 games) yes, but told him only if he Tomorrow night, the IC Bomb­ ing its suddenly waking claws. ers will play host to the Hartwick Shields 3 6 2 3 5 8 1.0 could make the top six or seven; Albano's dark eyes seem to othcnvise he would have to move Warriors. The Warriors come in­ TOTALS 318 650 173 298 432 809 80.9 wander all over the court, as the to the contest with a record of over to make room for a sopho­ ball heads ·straight into the more on the bench. Russ is still 4-5, including a 100-92 victory TEAM SCORES basket. During a lull in the play over IC earlier in the campaign at on the team, and if all goes well Greg seems to leave the world Ithaca 89 Colgate 87 Ithaca 88 Cortland 65 he has at least one more season Hartwick. for a few seconds, until needed, By and large, it has been a dis­ Ithaca 83 Wilkes 53 Ithaca 65 Rochester 66 ahead, a season he will probably when he suddenly erupts with the spend as a ·starter. appointing season for Coach- Ken Ithaca 81 Buffalo State 59 Ithaca 68 Lock Haven 56 strength of the meanest beast in Ralph's charges. Hartwick was ' To watch Hugh Hurst during a the jungle. Perhaps that is why expected to have one of its Ithaca 93 Hartwick 100 Ithaca 77 Mansfield 80 game, sometimes, it almost seems Greg is the steadiest man on the strongest teams this year, but the Ithaca 73 Oswego 60 Ithaca 92 Roberts Wesleyan 77 as if he is a spectator, not the team. His coach, Hugh Hurst, disappointing 4-5 record certain­ oach. He sits on the right side feels he improves with every ly wouldn't indicate that. The of the bench chatting with the game, and is still far away from main problem confronting Coach player he is getting ready to his plateau. Only a junior, Greg Ralph this season has been a rash If you missed the deadline for Christmas giving - we send in, or who has just come out, combines with his teammates of injuries and other mounting are accepting oppointments now for Valentine Day de­ and either carries a blank look, perfectly, as the loudest, quietiest disadvantages. First of all, Co­ livery. or a childish grin when things man on the courts. Capt. Steve _ Wright, last year's arc going well. His team has come Without a doubt, the loudest leading scorer, voluntarily asked to know him as a man who knows man on the court is hustling Bob to be dismissed from the team GORDON CAMPIBIELL IBUZZIEllL basketball, and the fans have Modliszewski. "Mo" came to Itha­ for academic reasons three weeks come to understand they will ca from a school in Virginia as ago. · Wright has since rejoined Portrait Photography never know him. Each game, his part of Hurst's hurry up recruit­ the club, and provided sorely Phone 271-3473 team looks better, and each game, ment program. needed impetus to the Hartwick 128 East State Street ~'Yi! looks the same. When you talk When Carp Wood retired in cause. This is evidenced by his {Over Brooks Pharmacy - across from Kresge's) t~ him in private about the team, the spring of 1964 he had just Continued in last column his eyes flash with joy, and he completed one o·f the most suc­ a_nswers every basketball ques­ cessful seasons in Ithaca history, tion with an authority and an ex­ having seen his team eliminated perience that can not be doubted. in the first round of the NCAA's $1.65 REGULAR SIZE IPIZZA Hurst might be considered a at Akron, Ohio. When he stepped re_cruiting cripple in comparison down he left a void that it took With many of his collegues. He Hurst two full seasons to fill. fforr 98c with this coupon FRATERNITY JEWELRY by L. G. BALFOUR CO. Ithaca College Class Rings Pizza Inn Ray Robinson-Rothschild's Dept. Store 112 N. Aurora St. 273-8744 First Floor SPORTSWEAR-FAVORS-MUGS-TROPHIES This offer expires Feb. 1st

Phone 272-5959 8JC Fino Poinl 25: THE ITHACAN, JANUARY 26, 1968, PAGE 18 Albano a-nd Frith Named Hot Corner Co-Athletes of Week by Ben Reese The Bombers are now playing better than .500 ball. l\luch Basketball center Greg Albano poll back in December before better. In recent years that meant that the football team, 1 and hockey winger Rod Frith exams. soccer team or the baseball team was having another good year have been elected Co-Atheletes Frith fired home five goals on the recent three game hockey The team in question now is the basketball team-1967-68 of the Week at Ithaca College for version. With the leadership provided on the floor by the two their performances in last week's road trip to Boston where Ithaca defeated M.I.T. and lost to Boston Senior co-captains, Don Andrejko and Mike Steele, the Bomb. action. ers have come up with the best winning record since the 1963. Albano fired in 33 points and State and Salem State. 64 team under now-athletic director Carp Wood. 'Andrejko and captured 35 rebounds in Ithaca's "Rod played the best hockey Steele are but two of the players recruited by Co,ach Hugh 66-65 loss to Rochester and their of the year, and I mean in every Hurst. When H~rst came to Ithaca to coach basketba11 he took 68-56 win over Lock Haven. Al­ respect," Coach George Moore bano now leads the team in scor­ said. "He kept up alive against over a team which had gone to the NCAA playoffs the previous ing, with an 18.2 average, and in Boston State and his three goals year. \Vhat he also took over was a squad of inexperienced play. rebounds with an average of 12.5 against l\U.T. were the deciding ers in that mos~ of t~e starte~s and second-liners .9f the year per game. factor in our winning." before were semors. S!nce takmg over the basketoall reins in "Right now," Head Coach Hugh Frith currently leads the team 1964, Hurst has compiled a record of 31-33 won and lost with Hurst said, "I feel Greg is the in scoring with 12 goals and· four only one year at or above .500-:-10 and IO in 1%5-66. This best small college center in New assists for 16 points. Last year, year appears to be different. Hurst has been able to recruit the York State." as a freshman, Frith led the team type of player ~e wants. When he first took over the team he 1 Albano was elected Athelete of in scoring and wound up with 57 was saddled with players brought to I.C. by the previous the Week in the only previous points. coach. He started recruiting right away. The men he got to come to school here and play basketball are now seniors and form the nucleus of this year's team. Also included are some junior col­ lege transfers who have helped provide the punch needed on the Dave Roberts and IC wetbacks out to beat the watch. court. This is the kind of team Hurst has wanted and it is be­ ginning as a unit and is becoming one of the best at Ithaca College in recent years. Saw the J.C. hockey squad play against RIT the other night at Lynah. It looks like a long season will get even longer. Soph S-w-itntner Both lines played well enough to score seven goals between them. That's right-b,oth lines. Coach Moore has only eleven players left out of the eighteen original skaters that began the season. Things got so bad that there was a defense man playing wing 011 ' Heads For Top the second line. - At the end of the current pool," Roberts continued. "Since :·­ Bob Modliszewski didn't play against either Mansfield or school year, Portland, Oregon's I was~swimming all summer, it Roberts Wesleyan in_ an attemp~ to ~e'.11 h~s aching legs,-Russ David Roberts may well be rated meant that I could practice al­ Marror:i has been domg a good Job filh_ng m for "Mo", scoring the top varsity swimmer, and pos­ most the whole year around." 24 agamst Roberts Wesleyan.-Joe Maire seems to be spending sibly the top varsity tennis player, Two older brothers help give quite a bit of time in the penalty box. He had 15 minutes of at Ithaca College. And no, he's the Roberts family an admirable misconduct against RIT.-The new Sports Information Direc­ not a senior, either, just a sopho­ record in athletics. "My older tor, Mr. Phil Langan, is really dong quite a job. My desk has more who has already left his brother swam in high school and been flooded with his releases since the return from vacation. mark in the Ithaca College athle­ was probably the best high school A tip of the hat for a job well done.-Greg Albano appears to tic books. tennis player in the State. Al­ be_ following his regular form again this year. He starts the sea­ Right now Roberts balds the though he didn't go to the State son slowly and just gets stronger as the season progresses.­ School record in the 200 yard in­ Tourney, he had beaten the Don't forget the ball games this week: Brockport on Jan. dividual medley and is also a eventual tourney winner and the 24 at home, and the BIG game of the season with Hartwick, number two man in previous com­ member of the 400 yard freestyle here on Jan. 27. relay team. "Before he's through, petition." I expect Dave to break quite a Roberts' next oldest brother few records," Coach Bill Ware was the number one tennis play­ said. "He's the best butterfly, er at Wyoming Seminary Prep in Pucksters in action at Lynah Rink. his favorite stroke, and individ­ Pennsylvania for two years. Mansfield · Downs IC Hoopsters ual medley swimmer on the team. As far as the two sports are by Alex B. Block It sort of gives you a secure feel­ concerned, Roberts gives the nod ing to know that he still has two to tennis as his favorite. "It's one Varsity Hockey Battles and a half years left and can against one in this game, and you Mansfield's Mountaineers drove those sophmores and juniors compete in so many events." can afford to make a mistake and up and down the hardwoods of (there was only one senior on Roberts' tennis ability is ex­ still come back and win,'' he com­ Rochester Tonight Ithaca College's South Hill Gym­ the squad) heard one old basket. pected to give Ithaca an excep­ mented. "In swimming, if you If tonight's varsity hockey 20 points. Aloian has three goals nasium in dark blue, almost ball sage mumble: "Those kids tional varsity team this Spring. make a mistake, you very rarely game between Ithaca and Roches­ and nine assists for 12 points and black, uniforms. Ithaca's Bombers took a beating tonight, but in the ran as well, bedecked in gleaming next year or so they are going, Last year Roberts gave an indica­ can come back." ter Tech. is anything like last has been a standout, both on wing This past summer Roberts was uniforms, and if one was to judge to come back and whallop t~ tion of what be could do when be Saturday's presentation, there'll and defense. defeated earning's number one a life guard and got to play ten­ by the crowds reaction, the re­ Oswego team". This year in their man in three sets. The kid from nis every day. "I was in great be a lot of action starting at 6:30 The objective of both R.LT. sult was the slaying of the white first meeting it was Oswego 60, Corning bad never lost a match shape when I returned and I p.m. at Lynah Rink. and Ithaca at this point in the knight by the dragon. The fact Ithaca 73. in competition until Roberts came think this has helped me to get R.I.T. took a 10-7 decision in season is a high finish in the that an emotion packed crowd It is more than just a year's was there to take sides is part along. off to a good start in swimming the opener of the two game set Finger Lakes Collegiate Hockey maturity that bas made this team Until last May, when be moved tI:iis winter. I'll probably follow of the new look in varsity bas­ a winner both on the court, and but had to survive two great League and one of the four top to Portland, Roberts bad spent the same program this summer." ketball this winter; a part of in the hearts of their long suf. all of his young years in Bing­ Roberts is a math major at comeback by the Ithacans to do spots in the League Tourney in Hurst's Hustlers. fering fans. It is an injection of hamton where be attended Bing­ Ithaca's College of Arts and Sci­ it. Adding those facts to the March. Two-time League champ, Mansfield won that game, after personnel who were around last hamton Central High School. "I ences, a School be chose because fierce body checking and the up Oswego, and current League lead- Ithaca had led most of the way, year to watch the misery but, at had been swimming since I was of its academic reputation. "It and down action, Ithaca Coach er, Buffalo, seem to have two of but losing is not a part of what this time, could not do much was my first choice all along," he is new on this team this winter. about it. Bob Modliszewski, Russ seven or eight,'' Roberts said, George Moore feels another the spots locked up. Ithaca, "and it just seemed natural to volunteered. Last year at Oswego, after a Marron, and Ed Kowalski all join the swim team. Besides, When college is over, the com­ thriller is definitely possible. R.I.T., Brockport, and Canton 102-63 defeat at the hands of the watched from the sidelines last Central High has a great back­ petitive swimming ends for Rob­ "They surprised us a bit," Tech. will be fighting for the Staters a dejected Ithaca team year, but this season all are ground in the sport and it meant erts. "I want to go into computer Moore said. "They came out fast, other two positions. ''We have to walked oU the court, but few of Please tum to page 17 something to make the team." work and by that time I'll have caught us off guard and displayed win Friday,'' Moore added. "It's a Roberts not only swam on the had enough of the sport." some fine .shooting and playmak- 'must' game." freshman High School squad but Roberts' current home in Port­ be also competed for the local land is only two miles from the ing. Our goalie, Al Cox, was a Outside of the three afore­ 1 YMCA which just happened to home of Olympic sensation, Don little bit off in the first period mention~d losses, the Ithacans DTHACA S OUTDOOR STORIE have a championship team. He Scbollander. "I wouldn't mind if and they bad us 6-1 before we are in good shape. Des1_1ite last 206 E. State St. then went on to produce a fine a little of his magic rubbed off knew it. We'll be a bit more pre- Saturday's roughness, ~veryone is varsity high school record. on me,'' Roberts added. After a AR 3-3891 pared _for Friday's game." healthy and anxious for tonight's "A big advantage for me was half year of varsity competition, Next to First National Bank that Central High had its own it looks as though it might have. Ithaca faces the rest of the rematch. season with a manpower shortage. Moore will play -Barry Lubotta Tim Wagner left the team in De- on left wing with Rod Frith and W AA Winter Fun cember to concentrate on studies; Joe Maire, and put Dave Char­ The W AA winter activities Brice Diedrick, Moore's first line nock on the left side of Ted MID-WINTER CLEARANCE have begun, and I hope everyone center, decided to transfer to Willis and Ralph Cox. Aioian, Bob Reg. Sale will want to take advantage c,f another school during the vaca- Robichaud, Co-captain Steve For­ them. This is your chance to work fom period; and last week, first man and Dave Patterson will re­ Woolrich Jacket $19.95 $15.00 off those · extra pounds you put line wing, Otis Murphy, left the main on defense. Sweaters $14.95 $10.00 on over the holidays. team to concentrate on a tough I.C. Statistics: Badminton, under the direction Liberal Arts program. Won 3; Lost 6; Pct. .333 of Gail Kullberg, is being held on "You can't lose men like Mur- Outerwear Jacket 20% -50% OFF Wednesdays. Nancy Fennelly is phy and Diedrick and not feel GOALTENDING managing Basketball intramurals the pinch after a while," Moore Al Cox: Averaging 38.5 saves per on Tuesday and Wednesday eve­ nings. For the adventurous out­ said. "Murphy was playing good game and 5.7 goals allowed per SKIS door person, we have instruc­ hockey for us just before be made game. tional skiing on Tuesday with the his decision." SCORING All Styles 25% -50% OFIF help of Lynn _;Blades and' Miss The pressure of maintaining a G Carnell. A strong offense rests now on the Rod Frith 14 6 I hope everyone is anxious to SKI BOOTS stay fit and will participate in shoulders of Rod Frith and · Co­ Joe Maire 6 8 either the above activities or in Capt. Bob Aloian. Frift continues Bob Aloian 3 9 11.ace & Buckle Boots 25%-50% OFF Open Gymnastics, Co-Rec. Swim­ to lead the Ithacans in scoring Ted Willis 3 7 10 ming, and Open Bowling. with 14 goals and six assists for Barry Lubotta 4 5 9