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

10-20-1967 The thI acan, 1967-10-20 Ithaca College

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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 1967-68 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. 99 The Draft: 61; First Link In A

Last Monday afternoon, mem­ time to the anti-draft movement. ing a personal statement by try did not support the I As the professors left (again Mrs. Dorothy Hill, Chief Clerk bers of a nationwide group From Cornell they marched Daniel Casher (one of the protest. waged by that country th~n t~e to the applause of the group) six at the board would make no known as "The Resistance" stag- peacefully to Aurora Street and ors) they each handed their draft government was not workmg m clergymen entered the building statement. When asked if any of ~ ed demonstrations in key cities assembled across from the local cards to the clerk along with the best interests of the people t b ·t . - t t t · throughout the country. A chap­ Ithaca Draft Board, which had statements giving their personal whom it governed. o su nu s1m1 1ar s a emen s, m- the board members were willing ter of that group which has its been informed of their plans to reasons for doing so. As the group filed out of the eluding one from a minister who to make a statement she replied, headquarters in Ithaca was part demonstrate. The eight uniform­ The statements said in effect office they were met by applause was unable to attend. While they "The actual board members arc of this nation-wide effort. At 1 ed policemen said that they ex­ that they were handing in their on the other side of the street were in the office Rev. David Con­ in a meeting now and won't be p.m. approximately 200 people pected no trouble from the cards because they felt that from the rest of the protestors. nor, a Roman Catholic chaplain out for some time." met at where group. When the group had en­ Selective Service was the first Then a group of thirteen profes- at Cornell <1lso turned in bis draft they listened to speeches made tirely formed itself fifteen of its of many links in a long chain of sors led by Douglas Dowd filed card. Though his classification The ghost of the late Senator by several people, notably, Pro­ members walked to the street death and that they felt that the into the office to submit state- was such that he could not be Joe McCarthy seemed almost to fessor Douglas Dowd of the Cor­ corner and waited for the green law providing for compulsory ments of support for those who drafted it is said that he did so be looming overhead when at the nell Economics Department, and light in order to ,cross the street service was in direct op­ turned in their cards. Included because these other people were rally before the march one by­ Bruce Dancis a former Cornell (in order to avoid breaking jay. position- to human rights. That in these statements was the fact taking the risk in order to pre­ student who ripped up his draft walking laws). They then pro­ no government had the right to that the professors were aware vent senseless killing and he did stander was overheard saying "I card last April 15, and who is ceeded to the second floor Selec­ tell you who you must kill and that they could be prosecuted for not feel that he could hide be- better get out of here before my now on leave to devote his full tive Service office where, follow- that if the people within a coun- submitting them. hind the safety of his office. name gets on some list." HEl

A Weekly Newspaper, Published by and for the Students of Ithaca College. h I Vol. 40-No. 7 Ithaca, New York Friday, October 20, 1967 Drama Major Changes :ttllaca College Clloir ~apartment Proposed Schedules Before Open Carnegie Season l~.,Latest Congress by K. Jeffery Falkner To Standing Ovation Production · A major change in the power NEW YORK-Oct. 16 - The The boxes around the horse­ structure of MGB and WGB was Ithaca College Choir under the shoe shaped theatre were decor­ "As long as your teeth are proposed at the Student Con­ direction of Leopold Stokowski ated with the flags of many of the chattering, you know you're gress Meeting last Tuesday night. received a standing ovation to­ members, and alive!" ... that's the philosophy The new amendment to the Con­ night before a capacity house at the theatre audience was spec­ of Tevya, the Dairyman, created stitution would give these gov­ the season's opening of Cm:_nagie kled with the native costumes of by the great Yiddish humorist, erning bodies original jurisdic­ Hall. The choir presented four many of the world organizations Sholem Aleichem. The play, tion in all cases involving sus­ songs by the late Charles Ives constituents who attended. How­ "Tevya and His Daughters" by pension and expulsion. which took up the greater part of ever the audience was predomi­ Arnold Perl has been chosen by Presently only Student Court the first half of the program. nantly black tie in flavor. the Drama and Speech Depart- has this power to recommend Orchestration was provided by The show itself, as presented ·ment for its next production on suspension or expulsion to the the American Symphony Orches­ by the Ithaca College Choir con­ - 'November 1-4 at the College administration. It bas verbally tra of New York City. sisted of ''Four Songs For Chorus Theatre Downtown. been giving WGB and MGB the Also on stage with the col­ and Orchestra" by the late Char­ The Broadway hit musical power to do so, but this new lege's concert choir were the les Ives (Died 1954). They were: "Fiddler on the Roof" was based amendment would put it down Boys from the choir school of "Masses Arc Majority", "They on this warm comedy which tells on paper. the St. Thomas Church of New Were There", "An Election or of the problems confronting Also included in the proposed York; and the Greg Smith sing­ It Strikes Me That", and "Abra­ Tevya who has seven beautiful amendment would be the power ers. ham Lincoln-The Great Com­ daughters to marry off without to delegate the suspension-expul­ The Greg Smith singers are a moner". These were songs writ­ a kopeck of his own for the dow­ sion powers to the individual west coast choral group originally ten before World I, at which ery and how he solves each crisis house councils as the need organized by Professor Gregory time they were known as pro­ with a smile and a shrug. arises. Smith of the Ithaca College fac­ test songs. Don Croll is cast in the cen­ MGB and WGB's present juris­ ulty. After each song the chorus and tral role of Tevya, a combination diction extends only to cover in­ Ithaca's choir consists of two orchestra received a standing of Don Quixote and Charlie Chap­ fractions of rules not reserved to hundred voices representing all ovation. lin with a quotation from the Student Court, grievances be­ divisions of the college, although tween living centers, not includ­ predominantly the music school. The concert itself was re­ Scripture · to fit every occasion. corded for later replay by the . Peggy Schoditsch is playing ing greck organizations, the con­ American Symphony Conductor Leopold Stokowskl The American Symphony Or­ duct of students outside living chestra was originally conceived Voice Of America. Golde his long-suffering wife and centers who are on Ithaca Col­ by conductor Stokowski to en­ Following the concert a recep­ his daughters include Kathy lege property, and appellate tion was given by Dr. and Mrs. Bishop, Linda Mays, Karen Wood­ courage young musicians and is jurisdiction over house councils. now considered by many to be Howard Dillingham for Ithaca bury and Suki Riford. Other fea­ AdminstrationlHolds JLibeirall the number two symphony College staff, faculty, trustees tured roles are carried by Jeremy A third section to the pro­ posal would insure the right for orchestra in New York. and friends at the Carnagie Hall Snitkin, Antony Hoty, Nina This marked the opening of Cafe which was normally not Solotorovosky, Bill -Biskup, students being able to appeal Outlook Towards Po ]l])o Ao the 76th season for Carnagie open at that hour. Sherry Lilenfeld, Jeff Winkless any decision made by either the by DON GREEN House Councils or the governing Hall, and was celebrated in con­ The conductor, Leopold Sto­ and Robert Morris. boards. The section reads "all As the middle-aged, dark fig­ states, ''I do not believe we have junction with the 75th anniver­ kowski, as he was leaving the The play is being directed by cases may be appealed to Student ure descends the walk leading to a problem with PDA on the Itha­ sary of Ithaca College, and as a reception raised his arm, gained Robert Bardwell and the scenery Court". the Union, he casts a cautious ca College Campus." Dean Givens tribute to the United Nations. silence, and said: "Bravo Ithaca!" - d lighting which features two Congress also passed° a law glance towards a couple lying on agrees, but adds, "These students revolving stages, is being design­ stating that "All organizations the lawn near the library. He are may be conciously or sub­ ed by Peter M. Forward. seeking Student Government approaches them slowly, awk­ conciously trying to tell the The box-office opens at th e sanction shall present a state­ wardly, gazing at the buildings world 'someone loves me, or 'I'm Pennela Ann,(())u nces College Theatre Downtown on ment of purpose and a constitu­ and trees about him. The girl, Please tum to page 9 Wednesday, October 25th. All tion to Student Congress." The remaining prone to her partner, !, I.e. students are eligible for one sanction of these organizations glowers at the approaching form. OF SPECIAL INTEREST Freshman Class lElecti((])ns free ticket · upon presentation of may be withdrawn with a 2/3 Her boyfriend quietly curses to ' IN THE ITHACAN f an LD. card. Reservations should vote of Congress. himself. The intruder arrives. Student Body Vice President candidates for the four offices, be made early to avoid disap­ Any organization can be sanc­ "All right", he states. ''Let's THIS WEEK Skip Panella announced this president, vice president, treas­ pointment. tioned at this time by submitting keep this sort of thing confined afternoon that elections for urer, and secretary, and must be freshman class officers will be returned v.ith 100 signatures by Sholem Aleichem, whose real only a statement of purpose. The to private quarters." <> held Wednesday, November 1st. October 25th. The campaign for name was Solomon Rabinovitch, new law makes it necessary to Who is wrong here, the couple The Office Pg. 2 Panella said that in order for the freshman student govern• took as his pen name the com­ submit a constitution along with or the interloper? Is the couple freshman candidates to hold a ment offices will run from Octo­ mon greeting among Jews which it. guilty of public exhibitionism, or Serling .. Pg. 2 spot on the ballot they must pick ber 25th to November 1st. Can­ means, " be with you". A second law was proposed are they merely involving them­ Fall Weekend Pg. 3 up a petition on Monday, October didacies arc open to all fresh- Productions of the plays based on giving the plaintiff as well as the selves in playful "expression"? Editorials Pg. 4 23, in the Student Government man and must be run on a four­ his stories have been seen in defendant the right of appeal to The Ithaca College Administra­ Higgledy-Piggledy ...... Pg. 7 office in the Egbert Union be- candidate party basis. Anyone London, Buernos Aires, Canada, a higher court if they arc not tion generally maintains a very Susquehanna Win ... Pg. 13 tween 7 and 9 p.m. Each peti- with questions should contact An.atralia, and South Africa. Now satisfied with the decision. As it liberal outlook, allowing students tion must contain the names of Skip Panella at 3757. there will be one in Ithaca, New stands now, only the defendant to set their own standards. The West Chester Tonight Pg. 14 York. Please tum to pago 9 Dean of Men, Mr. Perry N o u n, Seo notke cm pa,go 6 THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 2 Membership Office Offers Service .Ser ling Speaks SuilR Operrn by KEVIN CONNORS by TONI SEGER Located in · the seemingly un­ Noted author, Rod Serling, re­ pretentious 'city of Ithaca, New turned to Ithaca College this On lEUJR week, for five days of lectures, by GEORGIANNA GLACE York in a storefront that is com­ as a visiting professor. pletely open _to the public is an Though committee chairmen Though widely known for his organization (Effort would prob­ long running television series; are chosen, there is still a need ably be a more appropriate The Twilight Zone and his fre­ for members in the various sub­ word) known simply as "The Of­ quent ·contributions to Playhouse, divisions in the Egbert Union fice" which serves as one of the 90, Mr. Serling has spent the past years away from T.V. Board. nations major suppliers of peace "At the moment", he said, "I According to Jim Brownold, literature to groups throughout Approximately thirty people are have a play, The Killing Season, the country. It also serves as the knocking around London looking attending the meetings of the center of peace activity in the for a director. The play has a E.U.B. Membership is still open Upstate New York area. cast and an' eager director", he and those interested may con­ What is now one of the best went on, "but it's rather difficult tact either Jim Brownold at 3755, equipped anti-war offices in the to get anyone excited about a or leave name and the committee country began as a local oper­ play about when ation just over two years ago. everyone's attention is centered on which you want to work at the around Viet Nam." desk in Egbert Union. Joe and Pat Griffith, long time movement people in the Ithaca Mr. Serling spent the summer The following students have area, decided that the most im­ in Ithaca working on a screen­ assumed the positions of commit­ portant single asset that they play entitled The Horde. Shoot­ tee heads: could have would be a printing ing will begin in Februacy and Social Committee Jim press. They got it. The press, the film should be ready for release by this summer. The motion picture companies as Brownold which is affectionately called the "Stop The War Machine" is quite Horde will be a film produced well as CBS and ABC are now Performing Arts - Linda Gill · possibly one of the busiest in the for television and was described producing telefilms." . Exhibits - Jim Focht area. Every week it pours forth as concerning "society's automat­ When asked how be felt about l Outing - Cafti Walsh 1) THE NEW PATRIOT; a news­ ed man". the recent trend of actors run-J ning for political office, Mr. Publicity - Gill Balenof paper of the in The Season to be Wary by Rod Serling replied that this could r Games - Ronald I. ruder Upstate New York, designed to Serling is a collection of ,three inform . people of and suggest novelettes recently published by definitely fighten anyone. who Personnel and Development - ways to stop the war in Vietnam. Little, Brown and Company. Mr. thought very long about it. "An Janet Slakin 2) Dateline Ithaca; a newsletter Serling commented that t h e s e actor's vocation is to get and - Two other committees have as of the peace activity in Ithaca. 3) stories had only been intended keep the attention of his audi­ yet to appoint chairmen. Th e y printing and reprinting by re­ as exercises in preparation for a ence. Those who have mastered are the Forum and the Film Com­ quest of local peace groups novel he is presently at work on. this art can really be dangerous." mittee. throughout the country who are "rve written screenplays for two Ronald Reagan, he went on, "is The Executive Board has also not able to publish' their own ma­ of the stories, but again only as the perfect example of a •g l i b announced their representatives: terial. 4) an almost unlimited finger exercises. They're a little glob'. There are two natural ca­ Nancy Martino, Earl Williams, supply of literature on ,the war grim, but maybe my daughters' tastrophies in California, s m o g Linda Freedman, Patricia O'Con­ and Governor Reagan. If he wins, I and draft movements. girl scout troop will produce at least lie'll leave the state, un- ' nell, David Epstein and Bob THE OFFICE depends almost them and I'll be able to see how Bluett ate the "members at they look." fortunately, I'll probably panic entirely on volunteer labor for and leave the country." - large"; Robert Walker, Business all of its operations, which, in Mr. Serling's forthcoming and Science Related; and Judy "Shirley Temple is another ! addition to the prin!_ing of anti­ novel, X Number of Daya, will story. Her campaign is so clean,~ Pizik as Representative of Music. also be published by Little, war literature, at present in­ I'm beginning to think she's r The Executive Board is pre­ cludes the building of a coffee Brown and Company. paring for many activities during heading a laundry ticket." i· hou~ on it's premises. Needless The writer spoke for a few mo­ As to his own political plans, the semester. First on the agenda to say, the satisfaction of seeing ments on some of the changes are plans for something peculiar Mr. Serling summed them up one's ideas transformed into con­ wrought in T.V. since his own with the following: "rm not to happen on Halloween. As Jim structive work with little or no Playhouse 90 and Twilight Zone Brownold says, "If things work qualified for political office. personal reward has not been suf­ days. "Live T.V., unfortunately, When Tris Speaker goes back to out, one shouldn't be surprised to ficient motivation for_ most or "The Office" carries a complete line of anti-war literature. appears to be a thing of the past. baseball, I'll run for Congress." find that something is missing for many, and therefore, The Of­ The big trend now is to movies the day after Halloween." Mr. Serling hopes to return in fice is greatly understaffed. made especially for television. April for another series of lec­ Other projects include, th e Those interested may contact The public, it appears, has been Children's Christmas Party, a IC Orchestra 1892, the year of the institution's tures. opening. Jack Goldman or Bob Pearlman satiated as far as situation new Budget, organization of one Will Perform at 308 Stuart Ave. comedies and at least a dozen or two things for Parents Week­ Ass't. Prof. Sanford Reuning FIRMS SEND REPS end and overall reorganization of Two Ithaca College Orchestras· will conduct the Ithaca College the constitution. will present their first concerts String Orchestra at 8: 15 p..m. by TERRY CLARK of the season Oct. 20 and 23 at Monday, Oct. 23. The program Interviews for Seniors looking for employment after graduation Walter Ford Hall. Both are open opens with Vivaldi's "Concerto Quality This to the pubic without charge. Grosso, Opus 3, No_ 2" and in­ deAguero To Show are now in full swing. week, four firms are sending represen­ Custom Framing The Ithaca College Symphony cludes Persicbetti's "Introit for Orchestra will perform under the Strings," Telemann's "Concerto tatives to the I.e. campus: direction of Prof. Don Wells at in E flat Major for Two Homs Art Work In Union Tues., Oct. 24 - Harris, Kerr, 8:15 p.m. Friday, Oct. 20. It will and Strings,'' Mozart's "Sym­ Forster & Co. play "Overture to Anakreon" by A one-man exhibition of oil Wed., October 2.5 - ·state I Dry "?ounting - Picture phony No. 7 in F Major, K. 138" Cherubini and "SymphOny No. paintings, water colors and pen­ Farm Insurance Co. , Rentals - Mats - Arts and "Vier kleine Stucke" by cil drawings by Edward deAu­ 78 in C Minor" by Joseph Haydn. Karel Husa. Thurs., October 26 - Pruden- ; Supplies - Non-glare glass­ In honor of the College's 75th an­ gero will opj!n Sunday, Oct. 22 tial Insurance Co. :1 Print Catalogues Available niversacy, it will also perform Soloists in the Telemann work in Egbert Union on the Ithaca Fri., October 27 - Toucbe, 1 are Martha McCool and Martha Debussy's prelude "Afternoon of College South Hill campus. The Ross, Bailey & Smart ~ 414 W. Buffalo St. a Faun," which was composed in Glaze, horns, and violinists Fred exhibition, a part of the Col­ Pre-law school handbooks pub- ; 272-1350 Klemperer and Charles Kinder. lege's 75th anniversary series of lished by the Association of ; The String Orchestra, composed special events, will continue American Law Schools, are avail· .l.i CLOVER CLUB of 25 instrumentalists, is begin­ through Nov. 11. able for use in the Careers Refer- ~ #EW- ning its second year under the ·Mr. deAguero, assistant profes­ ence Room. Part One of the 1~ 356 Elmira lld. direction of its founder, Prof. sor of Spanish at the College, is handbook gives general informa- '· flNO .. DANCING Reuning. Both -Reuning and also well known as an artist and tion on Law Study and Practice Every Evening Wells are members of the music has had a number of one-man in tlie U.S. Part Two lists the ac­ faculty at Ithaca College. <> shows in this country and abroad. credited law schools in the U.S. , SCHOLARSHIPS Last summer an exhibition of his and presents essays written by exotic Oriental Dancers paintings at the Fortuny Gallery deans of the various schools on BY COMPUTER 3 Shows - 10, 11 & 12 in Madrid attracted wide atten­ law study. Last year $30 million in college schof• <> AMES' WELDING tion from critics and art lovers. Applications for New York arsnips went unclaimed - because no Sundays - Rock & Roll qualified persons applied ••• because & SUPPLY CO. The siinilarity of his style to that State Professional Careers may no qualified persons knew of them- Ronnie Dio & The Prophest of Picasso was noted by several be obtained in the Careers Refer­ • Now ECS engineers and educators . . have programmed a high-speed co1:1· 618 W. Buffalo St. writers; Mr. deAguero studied Edward deAguero ence Room, Second Floor of the< puter with 700,000 items of scholast,_c under Picasso during· the sum­ faculty office building, by those ti aid, worth over $500 millio~, to permit Ithaca, N.Y. students to easily and quickly locate ANE ITHACA COLLEGE JEWELRY mer of 1966, but the influence of of · distinction, at the School of who may be interested in the op- i • scholarships for which they_ qualify. Picasso on his work had been Fine Arts at the University of portunities New York has to of­ • The student fills out a deta,led, con• AR 3-4911 fidential questionnaire z,nd returns it to noted-prior to this. Costa Rica. He continued his art fer. It is still possible to make ECS with a one-time computer-proces• studies under Kenneth Evett at the deadline for the December 2 sing' fee of $15. In seconds the com_pU• A native of Costa Rica, he 1 ter compares his qualifications against Cornell University. Civil Servic~ Exam. requirements of grants set up by foun• "Ames Aims To Please" studied painting under Francisco ,i dations, business, civic. frate~nal! re .. Amighetti, a water color painter Mr. deAguero's paintings are ~ ligious, and govcrnmcn~ organizations. ~ and prints a personalized report to to be found in several museums Schneeweiss To , the student telling him whcro and when including the Gallacy of Min­ to apply for grants for which he qual• Present Paper On ~, Uies. Thousands of theso do not depend ONE OF ITHACA's istry of Education· in Costa Rica, on scholastic standing or financial i;ieed. THE YARN SHOP Swim Casualties ! nicest eating places •.. the Museum of Modern Art of Santiago, Chile and the Museum Stephen Scbneeweiss, professor r FREE ------, JUMBO KNITTING where everybody meets Ii 1 llfFORMATION AND SAMPLE QUESTIOHHAIRE f NEEDLES of the Bull, Soria, Spain. Among of health, Ithaca College, will ~ I ...... NORTH AMaAICAN aDUCA'T10NALI • private collectors who have ac­ present a paper on investigation l i .. -~ CQM-..rt'afl -AVJCSa.lNc. Knit A Mini-Dress quired deAugero paintings are of non-fatal swimming accidents ' I ECS -,aeNa••"-u•Ts:i•.1tT I THE COLLEGE SPA I PRINCIITON,NSW_..,. I Governor Nelson Rockefeller and before RGW National Safety Con­ START TODAY­ State I St11dr-----OJ111t1,onnnlras 1 216 East Street Jacqueline Kennedy. gree at Chicago on Tuesday, Oc· I Cl~ 1 WEAR IT ON YOUR NEXT Mr. de.Aguero has been on the tober 24. An estimated 13,000 SPAIKUNG GOI.D AND SIi.YER • • namo 'a GEHU1NE FIEHQI ENAMEL DATE! Ithaca College faculty since 1957. delegates will attend the con· • (iiiiiiQ ~ofed for quality and Previously he taught at Appala· femce. aI ______addml------!:z1p ______PATTEN'S JEWELERS 204 N. Tioga St. service since 1938 chian State Teachers College and The paper will be reprinted in ·------~ Cornell University. "Congress Transactions." THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 3 \

their second range of thought Ryan Conttn.ents on "led us to realization that many students at the Ithaca College Fall Weekend Is Soul! campus had no previous experi­ ence with individuals from other Ithaca's Educational parts of society and would re­ turn rather unimpeded to the homogeneous suburban commu­ Opportunity Prograin nities at approximately the same by Mary Burdick level of ignorance about minority group problems that they arrived About one year ago a group of with. Without some intervening Ithaca College faculty and ad­ experience, many students would ministration formed the Com­ probably add to and strengthen mittee on Educational Oppor­ the existing unempathetic, indif­ tunity. This committee spent a ferent, hard core of American year inaugurating a program for middle class society." The pro­ our campus. This fall, through gram hopes to at least reduce their efforts, twenty-five students this probability. have come to Ithaca College In the light of these ideas the ') "who would not ordinarily choose committee began by appraising Professor John Ryan to come here." available funds both from fed­ In a recent interview, Profes- eral and state sources, and fhe sor John Ryan, the committee have suffered the deprivations. extent to which the college could chairman, explained to the "Itha- which grow out of school segre­ support the program. Finding The Soul Company can" that there were two "philo- gation, ghetto education or pover­ that they could accommodate On November 10, 11, and 12th where BEER will be served and sophical underpinnings" to their ty, and who have been unable to twenty-five students (20 from coronation, at 11:30 there will be work. fully recognize their academic IFC will present Fall Week-end the judging of the No-Shave Con­ you can swing to the sounds you various parts of the country and 67 which will be the first full­ test winners. Two winners will be have heard in concert. Around The first of these was that capacities. The committee felt five from the local Ithaca area) scale week-end at Ithaca College chosen; one with the fullest 2:00 the Terrace Coffee House there are many high school grad- that it was the "responsibility of they began reviewing over 100 this year. Fall Week-end will be beard and one with the most will against open a change of uates who are highly recommend- private organizations to make applications. Mr. Ryan observed an all-star revue of such SOUL original beard. Not only will the pace drink and entertainment. -::ed and who have "demonstrated some effort to mitigate the in- that they were_ "surprised io find entertainers as OTIS REDDING, contest winners receive FREE On Sunday afternoon, the Loretta Williams, Al Clark, and ELECTRIC SHAVERS, they will some capacity for achievement justices which mar our social the great number of students who Greeks will perform in the Rec on Friday night at the IFC CAR­ also be shaved on stage by a Room. The traditional Greek and the college level," but who order and threaten our domestic fell into th1s category . . . who NIVAL the SOUL COMP ANY will member of IFC. Sing will be conducted with the are without means to attend col­ peace." were looking for colleges to go return to IC for your dancing en­ After a night of drinking and purpose of your listening pleas­ lege. There are also students who Mr. Ryan went on to say that to." tertainment. dancing to the sound of Soul, ure and the Greeks chance to Since the students arrived on The week-end will be started some may be ready for a change compete in a different manner. off with a Hockey game at Linna of pace. At 12:30 the Terrace The Music Organization on cam­ campus, other functions of the Rink at 7:30. This, will be an in­ Lounge and Cafeteria will be pus and in IFC will offer a pro­ MOVIE REVIEW committee have evolved. They ter squad scrimmage and will open with coffee and donuts on fessional touch to the Sing. have established counselling, give the fans a chance to ob­ hand to calm your stomach and by Richard Gerdau The price for a FALL tutorial arrangements, and a re­ serve the team before the regu­ head. To steady the nerves, the WEEK-END ticket will be $6.00. Variety is the key word this week in downtown films. The medial program for reading, and lar season starts. Following the CAYUGA WAITERS from Cor­ By buying a week-end ticket in­ Ithaca has a well done documentary on ·rock singer-po_et, Bob Hockey game, the Inter Frater­ nell will perform a segment of stead of separate tickets for all have adapted to other perceived nity Council will hold its annual folk and smooth sounds. This Dylan, entitled Don't Look Back. New York film-maker Don events you will save $3.50. needs of the students. CARNIVAL at 9:00 in the Eg­ group has also appeared at IC Tickets will go on sale in the . Pennebaker, directed this well done look at one of youth's Presently the Committee on bert Union Rec. Room. Each before and put on an enjoyable Union Lobby October 23, 1967. :'./strongest models, concentrati~g mainly on his English concert Educational Opportunity is ex­ Greek will be operati11g a booth show. There will also be enter­ tour. ploring the possibilities of es­ or game in rooms U-1 or U-5. The tainment from certain Ithaca The Strand offers a fictional look at a factual event called tablishing an Upward Bound cost of each game will be a dime College students. Those students so you can play all night. Prizes wishing may remain at the Cof­ Robbery. The talented Stanley Baker produced and stars in Program. Cornell is already operating such a program, but will be given out at each booth. fee Hour or Dating Lounge until this British account of their own great train robbery. Jeanna theirs is directed towards Har­ While some are roaming around curfew which will be 3:00. Pettit co-stars in. the interes~ing retelling of this multi-million lem. If Ithaca College instituted playing games, others will be in Saturday afternoon of Fall dollar theft from the London-Glasgow mail train. Upward Bound, Mr. Ryan stated, the Rec Room dancing to the fan­ Week-end, the Ithaca Bombers Fiction gets further from reality in the nicely photographed it would "attempt to give hope tastic sound of the SOUL COM­ will meet American International PANY. This group comes from on the gridiron. The game held Point Blank, held over at the Cinema. Reality is all but for­ and motivation to disadvantaged students within the Ithaca com­ New York City where they have on South Hill Field will give gotten in the State's feature-Waterlwle No. 3. James Coburn munity and a few surrounding played in such clubs as The everyone a chance to cheer the stars in this comedy-western produced by one of America's communities." Cheeta, the Mettapole, and the team to victory and also give the somedy casters-Blake Edwards ( The Pink Pantker, Shot In The program is operated in Country House. They have also fans a chance to sober up in the The Dark). - such a way that students are toured with such shows as brisk Autumn air. "Blues Magoos", "Young Ras­ At 8:30 the doors of the Gym Fantasy makes up the bulk of Fellini's Juliet of the S-pirits, kept in touch for as long as four years before high school gradua­ cals," and "Jackie Wilson." The will open for the OTIS REDDING but it is the fantasy of the mind, and therefore closer to truth Soul Company performed at As tion. The purpose is to contact CONCERT. mentioned last '',- than any of the above. Mrs. FeHini, Guiletta Massina, stars them upon entering 9th grade Ithaca College last Spring Week­ week in the Ithacan, OTIS has end and was received very well had great success both as a per­ in this beautifully conceived and photographed tale of a lonely and sustain interest in higher Despite an ddiscontent middle-aged wife. The film is somewhat of a education throughout hi g h by the student body. The Com­ former and businessman in the 1 pany is not just another Rock and Europe. OTIS fiendish torture female 8½, and while Fellini makes this one more beautiful school., Students to participate 1 are recommended by guidance Band, they are polished perform­ is presently ranked the number to look at, 8½ is more worthy of contemplation. Juliet of the -! : dynamic BiC Duo counsellors and teachers. The ers who live the Soul music they eight SO.UL performer on col­ writes first time, Spirits is at the Cornell University Cinema on Friday and Sat­ general program would consist of play. To make your dancing a lege campuses and IFC is sure r. ' urday. a summer session on the Ithaca little easier, BEER will be sold everyone will enjoy seeing and ~0- every time! College campus and attendance all night at the CARNIVAL. hearing this remarkable man en­ ~ f' mc"s rugged pair of The Temple is screening the Boulting Brothers production ,. At 10:30, the King and Queen tertain. stick pens wins aga•n in of The Family Way. Hayley Mills and newcomer Hewell Bennet of special events on campus C throughout the academic year. for Fall Week-end will be Directly after the concert the unending war against act out nicely the roles of two young newlyweds in modern The problem with establishing crowned at the Carnival. They sound of the SOUL COMPANY .. :;: ball-point skip, clog and lr, smear. Despite horrible London. John Mills co-stars as the groom's rough and hoister- Upward Bound is that it is to be will reign in royalty over the rest will again be heard. A SOUL f( of the week-end. Following the t:l punishment by mad ., .. ous father, and has some very beautiful moments. So does federally funded, and at present dance will be held in Gym 3 =~ scientists, me still writes the film, but it also contains some very 'cliched stretches. such funds are limited in the k •., first time, every time. The story of an impotent husband fluctuates from the U.S. Government budget. Ac­ And no wonder. mc"s cording to Mr. Ryan, "prospects "'Dyamite·· Ball is the IBOOKDR.0/P IES"ff' AIBU..DSIHJ IE D ' truthful to th~ saccharin, and from the interesting to the boring. are dismal" until, perhaps, the .,, hardest metal made, The result is a few steps above mediocrity. The screenplay is war in Viet Nam is ended. A bookdrop will be establish­ fastest growing college. Founded t <·ncased in a solid brass ,N nose con<>. \V,Il not skip, by Bill Naughton (Alfie), and the music by Paul McCartney. O'I ; -'j The prospects of the present ed in the Egbert Union lobby last year by several Cornell grad clog or smear no matter Surprisingly, neither are very distinguished. The color cinema­ program of the committee look this Monday for text book dona­ students it now has a student !(2!1 what devilish abuse is :z tography is adequate, as are the supporting players. good, however. Mr. Ryan expects tions to the Ithaca Neighborhood body of three hundred, and a devised for them by to be able to "maintain and ex­ college. faculty of about forty volunteers Director Roy Boulting (just married to Miss Mills) has sadistic students. Get pand the program yearly." How A list of the copies of the from Cornell and Ithaca College. l:~ ., . the dynamic me Duo at k . l trouble bringing his comedy around to serious drama. He at- much it is expanded depends on needed books will be available The college is entirely sup- "::;.: 't your campus store now. 1 ' Jtempts a meaningful and° poignant ending, but weakens it by the availability of funds and the in the rack in the Union Lobby. ported by donations from the l 'j letting the comedy of the first half continue too long into the relative success of the program The "Book Harvest" is being community, and needs these text ,3_t_;llli} as it is now operating. The com­ sponsored by Pi Lambda Theta, r second. But, perhaps I'm being too harsh, The Family Way books to continue functioning. Ji WATERMAN•BIC PEU CORP. mittee is se~king financial sup­ an Ithaca women's service soro­ has a lot of truthful moments and is a tasteful telling of a port from outside organizations. rity. (M:u chapter). Any questions about further IIILFORD. COllll, •. topic which~ in other hands, might have fallen below the aver­ This would mean that any cam­ The books will be used by the donations or the operation of the age. Unfortunately, while its gentleness comes as a refresher, pus groups could contribute to stud·ents at the Ithaca Neighbor­ college may be addressed to Dr. at times 'it is a bit of a bore. the program if they wished to. hood College, the communities Charles Sackrey.

The Derby GEE'S SPORT SHOP Tompkens Your pumpkin will IEARIL'S SW AP SHOIP Cocktail Lounge 210 W. State St. ff»hotogrraphy collapse if you don't 539 W. State St. 273-6971 get off it soon and <> Come with your dates and o Guns • New & Used Applicatio~ and PaG:1pcms get your Halloween dance to a smooth band Clocks - Watches o Ammunition Quiclc Servlco Cords from Melvin at BIC Modium Point 19; every Sat1c1rday nTght. · Ithaca Col. - Guns o Reloading Equipment CHARJAN'S Coins & Supplies ITHACA SHOPPING PLAZA o Quality Fishing Tackle 134 IE. State St. Elmlra Rd. • 272-9715 o Gun Supplies 272-3000 State & Tioga Sts. New & Used Items THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 4 'i CAMPUS The Magi.ck Division ' By Robert Morris , U.o>.U. CALENDAR C.IP.S. I don't intend this to be a review. That should hardly be ~ Thursday, October 19 fair, as the play I intend to talk about was a "greenroom" pro- I MEMBER Pubfuked weekly by and for tke students of Ithaca College. All Day Stationery Sale, Union duction; a senior drama's Directing Project. In this case it was .fti The Odd Couple by Neil Simon. i~ Editor-in-Chief ...... Alex B. · Block Lobby - 11 0 All Day Rho Mu Theta Corsage Co-Managing Editor's ...... { ~~!r~~ Sale, Union Lobby why h~!1~a:'f: :~:~:? ot ~te c~t~~~i:g~fmt;1~\~o:~h:a~~~ ~'i Business Manager ...... Winifred Gillespie 4:00 Fr. Soccer vs. C o r n i n g recently divorced men, one an effecto, allergic sort of a guy, the ~ News-Mary Burdick Sports-Pam Davis Advertising-Sue MacCubbin Comm. College (lD other a cigar-chewing sportswriter type decide to share an apart- tl Terry Clark Jack Gedney Rick Biggs . 6:30 Christian Science Group, U-5 ment while they adjust to their new "'freedom". And they drive r• Kevin Connors Joy Malchodi Cheri Bleck 1 Cheryl Gelb Ben Reese Dick Cohen 7:00 MGB, U-1 . each other nuts for two hours. Simple, right? It's what they ~ Georgianna Glace Gene Slater Pam Forster 7:30 Rod Serling, "Occurrence at call a good promise, And Simon had a great hit with it, it [.1 Ellen Gold Rich Stryminski Jayne Koch Owl Creek", Rec. Rm. ran for a long profitable run on the "main stem", and last ·., Laura Katz Rick Wright Cathy Ross summer every "name" that you could think of had a crack Jeanne Murray Jim Sanmarco Serena Woolrich Friday, October 20 r Steve Pitches Mike Hinkleman Dave Karpoff at it in Summer Stock theaters from here to Fairbanks, Alaska. All Day Stationery Sale, Union A hit." But seeing it for the first time last Friday, I had the Barbara Stein Feature-Steven H. Pitches .Lobby Bill Stoller Cathy Lee Baker Make-uP-Jayne Gallo r.ather strange impression that it was not a theater where I was Alexis White George Budin All Day Rho Mu Theta, Union seated, but some new arrangement whereby a huge television Toni Seger Diane Golub Barbara Corey Lobby Donald Green Lynn Mace screen had been erected-in place of the usual proscenium arch. Carolyn Meyer 1~00 Student Recital, Ford Hall I kept waiting for a fadeout and a message .from Procter and Literary-Susan Longaker Fran Markover Chris Steele 2:00 Fr. Football vs. St. Law­ Richard Gerdau Robert Morris ~amble. And of course it occurred to me that what I was enjoy. - Jess Nadelman Jeff Falkner rence (A) mg so much at the theater was not a play at all, but a superb :~ Nanette Hartley 5:00 A E Rho, .fob Copy-Pat O'Connell Steve Schiffman T.V. comedy. A very different breed of cat indeed. , . Jeannette Smyth 8:00 Var. Football vs. West Have any of you actually seen a Neil Simon play? Come •:l Frank Scoblete Photoyraphy-Eric Shepard Chester (A) Society-Cheri Haring Linda struble Bill Yerkes, Ass't Ed. Blow Your Horn? Barefoot in tke Park? This one, The Odd ' Michael Wheeless Peter Wilkins 8:00 WICB Rock Dance, Rec. Rm. Couple? Each one is bright, funny, intended only to enter­ Exchange-Don Tannenbaum Bill Yerkes 8:15 I.e. Symphony Oreb., Ford tain ... and please don't get the impression that I see anything Steve Schwartz Hall Special Editions Editor ...... Kevin Connors wrong in that. I could hardly be writing from my vantage point Saturday, October 21 here m the M.D. if that were the case. But television I can Faculty Advisor ···-·······-···················································································John Mason Potter All Day Rho Mu Theta, Union watch 011 my own time. When I go to the theater I don't expect The Ithacan office is located on the ground floor of Dorm 12, Rm: 103 on the Ithaca Lobby to be treated to another evening with someone I am unable to 1· College South Hill Campus, Ithaca, N. Y. 14850. 2:00 Trumpet Recital, Ford Hall distinguish from the residents of the Dick Van Dike show or !; Advertising call 274-3147 - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 274-3306. anytime. Editorial views reflect the opinion of the Editorial Board. These views neither 2:00 Var. Soccer at Oswego . other l\ttractive people. Again, it was superb for televi;ion f' reflect the official position of Ithaca College nor necessarly indicate the consensus of make no mistake. If, for instance, I had tuned into "Love on ; A the student body. Sunday, October 22 Pogostick," or whatever is big this year, and had seen The· \1 All letters and articles submitted to the Ithacan become the property of the Ithacan. 1:00 Car Wash, sponsored by Odd Couple, during the first commercial I should have called as t The Ithacan reserves the right to correct, edit, or refuse to publish any material sub­ Dorm 7 - Dorm 7 parking many of my friends as possible, and told them all to find out mitted for publication. Subscription: $5.00 per academic year. lot - 75c what was happening on channel 12. We would have watched it, 2:00 Oracle Presentation for laughed, and agreed that the writing on this particular series Scampers, Rec. Rm. was above average, and that the acting had no little warmth 5:00 Mass, U-1 and charm. And that would have been that. But my friends and 5:00 Episcopal Services, U-5 I were not at home. Under any othe,r circumstance we would Editorials ... - 8:00 EUB film, ,,....rhe Lon!;ast have been paying those admittedly exhorbinate prices that Day", P..ec. Rm. - 25c theater seems to be char~ing these days, and should we not be Monday, October 23· scandalized by such a thmg, then, as Th.e Odd C<>uple? ~ Those of you who have seen Simon. Can you remember •·. All Day Rho Mu Theta Corsage one line of the evening's merriment? Now don't start to tell me Sale, Union Lobby about the "bits". I'm not up to that yet. I'm after one line a rlle Alllaenl Dralt All Day IFC Fall Weekend Ticket joke, some valid piece of dialogue that you remember which Sales, Lobby upon consideration is .· .. funny. Come on, try. It shouldn't be 3:30 Fr. Soccer vs. Rochester (A) 1 The United States of America, like most looks at himself as a character out of a all that difficult, after all, weren't we laughing it up for most ... t 5:00 WGB, U-1 of the show? That's Simon's famous style; a joke on a joke on a t other nations, enga~es in that old standard in­ ~oratio Alger ~tory, the college kid is start­ 7:00 Forensics, U-5 1 ternational institution, Warfare. And in order mg to have an impact on the good old Ameri­ joke. Then how come it's so devilishly difficult to remember 8:00 Frosh Class Meeting, Rec. one line of the stuff? Are we to conclude that we've been laugh­ to prove that it hasn't lost its love for the can political game. He has learned that even Rm. traditional, it holds dear to .its breast a law though he can't vote all these new and im­ 8:15 LC. String Quartet, Ford ing at so ~uch me~ingue? Are we not satisfied with a perfectly 1· known as the Selective Service Act which pro. portant things he wants to say will be heard Hall good portion of whipped cream? Or do we have no complaints, _·:·:. vides (as did similar laws in Ancient Greece, if he only says them loud enough. And so out and I'm a musty old gourmet who's seen too much television Rome, etc.) for its young men to be forced come the slogans and the placards and the Tuesday, October 24 anyway, or I wouldn't be satiated with its frothingll over into to serve in the armed forces. picket lines and the television cameras from All Day Rho Mu Theta Corsage such places as the theater. I do wonder, George, Trixie, I do wonder. ., What bearing does this have on those who the big networks to take pictures of them. And Sale, Union Lobby are involved? Well for the government it somewhere in a room in Washington where All Day IFC Fall Weekend Ticket A~l right, I ca_n see that before I fling my final dart at what :; there is a television set ( and no more smoke) Sales, Lobby I consider the chief reason we are cheated by plays like· Tke , allows them an almost unlimited resource of Odd Couple, cheated so artfully that we sometimes enjoy the bodies to be used as weapons in time of na­ somebody turns to the man sitting next to him 3:30 Var. Soccer vs. Cortand (A) tional emergency as well as to perpetrate the and says that something has to be done. And 4:30 Var. Cross-country vs. Os­ process, I'm goi~g to have to _defend ~yself, guard my flanks so4 desires of a particular administration, which at it has been. Unlike last year when if you wego (A) to speak. Occas1onally Mr. Simon comes up with some memor- ,: times shall remain nameless, to engage in com­ weren't a good college student you got yanked 6:30 Student Congress, S202 able l~nes. ~~haps they're ~emorable because they're so scarce. /1 bat in Southeast Asia without that bother­ out, you now have the benefit of a provision 7:00 Surfing Assn. Org. Meeting, But I m !'lllmg to agree with anyo!1e who comes to his defense known as immediate deferment for all college U-5 by recalling Oscar's anger at Fehx Unger (that's the cigar­ some old process of law known as Congres­ chomper and the sneezer respectively) upon finding a note one sional declaration of war students. And most of you are very happy 7:30 IFC, U-1. about it. Especially when you think that tkey 8:15 Grad. Students Recital, Ford morning which read: "We're out of cornflakes.-F.U:" He bawls On the other side of the fence ( and cur­ that he wa~ really angry at this "'Because it took me three long rently that fence seems to. be exceptionally might have taken away all college deferments. Hall So let's all sit still and be quiet. 9:30 Terrace Dorms Head Resi­ hours to figure out that F.U. stood for Felix Unger!" There wide for a nation of the people, by the people really should have been much more of that. Because consider: and for the people) the draft has had a bearing Morally: (HUH?) Not since the days of dents, U-1 slavery has this country been accused of such In the truly "great" comic plays one can think of it is al­ on almost every facet of American life, some Wednesday, October 25 ways a truly funny scene that. sprinl{s to mind. Reca'n School of which are listed below: blatant immorality. At that time the federal government was accused of letting it happen. All Day Rho Mu Theta Corsage for Scandal, perhaps the very first thmg that we picture is the Educational: For those who can afford it,' Today it is accused of causing it. Sale, Union Lobby scene when the screen fell and all the sham and surface y.as and for those who have the intellectual ability The Selective Service Act provides for you All Day IFC Fall Weekend Ticket brought out into the open. Or "Taming of the Shrew"-what do (whatever that is) there has been an unprece­ to be the weapon used in stopping the life of Sales, Lobby ' you r~call? Petruchio's lat_e entrance to his own wedding, riding dented exodus to the American "college of anyone you are ordered to destroy. There are 3:45 Head Residents, Job shabbily upon an ass? His forced calm to Kate's ravings and your choice" in an effort on the part of many those who fel that this is not the right of any­ 7:00 Career Night, Student Af­ railings? That great scene where he doesn't let her touch a ( even those who don't come rig_ht out and one or any situation. filiates of the A IJl e r i c a n morsel as he flin~ the wedding feast at the head of the nearest say it) to buy four more years. This is often College students have been bought off from Chemical Society, Slll servan~? Or, commg down to modern comedies, how about that done in the hope that by the time they get dissenting by a provision in the revised 7:30 Forensics - Debate, U-1 scene m M!. Roberts where the laundry explodes and Pulver out the "war" will be over or that some­ Selective Service Law which grants them dif- 8:00 Student Court, U-5 comes runnmg on stage head to foot in a thick froth of bubbly thing will happen in the interim. At any rate . ferments no matter how low their grades are 8:15 Kappa Gamma Psi Recital, suds? Do you see what I'm getting at? How can you compare these people are safe, although when you step or what their rank in class. This speaks for it­ Ford Hall t~ese wonderful moments (plural) with the "hits" (the "bar back and look at them objectively they seem hit", the "dumping ashes bit", etc.) that comprise the work self in regard to the type of moral rationaliz­ · Thursday, October 26 about as safe as an ostrich with his head in ing even the youth of this country has come of a Simon. It's a question of magnitude. the sand. All Day Rhp Mu Theta Corsage It's a rather sad comment ~n te state of today's theat~r to . accept. Four years of relative security, Sale, Union Lobby Political: That most dangerous of all crea­ while the poor and ignorant, who never wield that young actors must cut their teeth on such trivial fare. All Day IFC Fall Weekend Ticket (There ar~ ~ther wor~s ~o choose from, surely, but to be per­ tures today, that new wise guy who is no any political influence, fight, has been enough Sales, Lobby longer contented to play sandlot baseball, eat to cause many students to drop their charges fectly reahst1c about 1t, 1t seems. as th

Harvey stood in line with the others in the too honest, and he couldn't find anything clean, chrome and white dispensary. Naturally wrong anyways. Harvey was stark naked, as were the others He had walked funny for several days try. The ITHACAN Wants 0 0 e waiting to take their physicals to see if they ing to flatten his feet, but that was hopeless. Cooperative· Dates Breakfast qualified for the draft. He had. offered to marry several coeds he had Harvey wasn't especially happy about his known before he flunked out of Podunk U.; Out, out, outf Sunshine present predicament. He hated what was hap­ but they had refused. Thus Harvey had re­ Managing Editors pening in Vietnam. He hated the very reason­ signed himself to wasting the next two years. ,A Pleasant Landlady ing behind involuntary ; and the Closer. Harvey stared at the sterile looking More Room On Pages Sleep two years it would steal from his life. bastard in the white coat. He was just about Time 1 Poor Harvey. He had tried everything. He to be examined when he tripped and fell over Prewritten Papers Love (the plantonic kind ••• had asked all his friends to stick an ice pick the chair someone had left carelessly, and in his ear, being too big a coward to do it happily about. Happily because it was Har­ Otis (please) for Jaynie anyway) himself. However, they were bigger cowards vey's ticket out of the Army. Harvey had than Harvey. He had gone to his uncle the been castrated on the leg of the chair. Now ,Recognition of mind ••• not body? ,\ doctor for a medical excuse; but his uncle was even the Army didn't want him.

,I Ii THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 5 Letters to the Editor Draftee Migratioim

All letters submitted to The Ithacan must be typed and by Jess Nedelman signed. 1r o ICamulldai Everything has been said concerning the draft. Every ~l letters become the property of The Ithacan, and we r~ TORONTO - More than 100 tiny green pins, each repre­ argument has been aired. Now I will tell y~u w~y f!10St college serve the right to refuse to publish ·letters submitted to us. senting a potential draft-dodger who has inquired about com­ males between the ages of eighteen and thirty-six (1f you have Letters muse not exceed 400 words. to Canada decorate a large map of the United States on the been deferred once you have extended your liability ten years) wall. Mos~ are clustered around urban centers like Chicago, abhor the draft. By most of the college males, I mean the Dear Editor: age of the opportunity to ad­ Detroit, Los Angeles, San Francisco and the Middle Atlantic middle-class fat-cats who want only two cars, a suburban The student body should take vance and express its own goals? States. home, white picket fences, an adori_ng wife, and fat,ki_ttens. History has proven that a simple They are not the intellectuals and agitators. They are ninety­ immense pride in the way Mr. Pasted to the map is a newspaper headline: "\Vestmoreland Peter Burrell represented them and neat withdrawal cannot pro­ five percent of the male population of Ithaca College. They vide the answer that I believe Seeks 160,000 Reinforcements." Over it is a small snapsho_t ~f say they do not want the draft because it is unconstitutional at the 75th anniversary ban­ the pointing Uncle-Sam-Wants-You poster. In a sense, this 1s quet last Friday evening. you desire. Korea and Germany and discriminatory; it is unfair. The real reasons most college are examples of withdrawal or the war map in the war room of the most personal battle of males want the draft abolished or changed is because they want With only a few minutes in a dissent anywhere against U.S. policy in Vietnam. crowded 'program at his disposal, compromise in the solution of a to get into the corporate world immediately without a two problem of national or civil uni­ A One-Way Trip Mr. Burrell spoke with poise, year delay and because they are afraid of dyi!lg· Most _col!eg_e fication of a country. We now It is the heaquarters of the Student Union for Peace Ac­ males are not looking out for the Negro wh? 1s truly chscrim1- with grace, with forcefulness. Bis know the mistakes that we and tion (SUPA), Canada's small but most prominent campus New nated against by the draft set-up. In fact 1f they could they remarks were perfectly in keep­ others have made in these places Left organization. In the front office of a shabby, soon-to-be­ would switch their draft registration to Harlem or Watts. As ing with the decorum of the oc- due to the fact that hindsight is razed house near the , American draft­ far as the draft being unconstitutional I wonder how many of ,J casion, yet they defined wiih ad­ better than foresight. Do we want dodgers interview and counsel prospective enlistees in thier the college males have rei:.d the Con~tit_ution let alone _under­ mirable clarity the need f~r re­ a reoccurance of these situations lonely war against the country of their birth. stood it. They ,want to live, and this 1s probably their only definition of the role of the stu­ to come about in Vietnam? Though SUPA itself is a Canadian group roughly com­ truthful excues for hating the draft. dent at Ithaca College. 'It is my belief that we cannot parable to- the Students for J?emocrati~ Society (SOS) i~ the Most college males hide behind a white picket _f<:n<:e. of Later on ln the program, I tried withdraw from Vietnam and States the anti-draft progam 1s the business of those Americans altruism and unknown Constitutional law when leg1t1m1zmg to say something of the same leave a complete void where we who aiready have made tne one-way trip to Canada rather than their dislike of the draft system. Who are they kidding? thing, but since Mr. Burrell said once were. This would probably bear arms. it more succinctly, I must con­ be more disastrous to the people One of these is 20-year-old , who came here cede that he said it better. of that country than "strategic three months ago from Wichita Falls, Texas, his parents' home John Harcourt bombing". At least if we were and Binghamton, N.Y., where he was attending Harpur College. fFROM THE MAIILROOM English Department to quickly obliterate the whole For $25 a week, Satin answers letters from prospective draft­ by Steve Schiffman population they wouldn't -suffer evaders and advises those who drop by the office. Editor, the greater starvation that we "You live in the United States so long that you take on Th present day Collp;e generation likes_ to think of itself as would cause leaving ~them with ··, On Friday, October 6, 1967, some of the perverse qualities," this 20-year-old says benignly. the "Live Generation." Those involved believe that they, more a completely ruined economy and Ithaca College and Mr. Jack "Sometimes I think back to my college days ( he laughs) or I than any other group of individuals, are living life t<;> the fulle~t, a lack of male population. If this Squier unveiled a piece of sculp­ should say my high school days. Everybody used to feel they enjoying the world, and obtaining the most s~ti~fac~1on from life is what your conscience would turing donated to the college by wanted to bomb hell out of everybody, as if to prove their man­ and all that surrounds them. There are no d1stmct1ons here be­ allow you to do then I suggest a friend of the college. The un­ hood. There's something dreadfully sick with the United States." tween the so-called "," the Collegiates or the Intellec­ that we remove our troops to­ veiling took place at approxi­ Now that he's in Canada, he says, "I feel as though a great tuals. All of them, on this one thought, agree. However, there morrow and leave the void that is one fallacy in their thinking. mately four in the afternoon, and would cause their demise. Yet, weight has been lifted from my shoulders ... it's colder here, by midnight of the same day a An interview with a college student revealed his thoughts in all this discussion of black or but you feel warm because you know you're not trying to kill report had been turned in of the people." on the beauty of life. The young man described the _grace_ of white solutions there is an area the trees and the color of the sky. Of course, he was discussing sculpture being rocked on its of gray that may be bad for the The director of the anti-draft program says he is making a foundation and over thirty names special effort to learn about Canadian history and culture so a recent LSD "trip." Without the drug, he would never have choosing. We could try and insti­ thought about the sky, much less the color. and initials bad been carved into tute this solution now even that he will be a constructive citizen when he is able to apply the surface of the work. though it should have been un­ after five year as a "landed immigrant." But when he talks A musician, also a college student, told of the "deepness" Some of the students at this derway long ago. What Vietnam about the United States, he still says "we." of music he could hear when smoking "grass." He said that 'l college may not like the "bead" needs are teachers, doctors, Satin a believer in draft evasion for himself, advises others at each inhale he could become more "involved" with the beat. or the "SUper-ball" or whatever nurses, and other people who what step~ they can take if they are so inclined, but he says he An intellectual might say that drugs are an effective re­ :·? it is, but what right 9-oes that may help the peasant population doesn't try to peddle the idea. "There are some things you laxant. After a difficult day, he needs the calm they produce. give them to scratch and carve of the country become either can't tell people," he says, "like how to spend the next 50 years There are two main reasons, we offer, for this desire to it up. more educated or able to accept of their lives." "escape." Perhaps, before we begin, it should be explained that The sculptor, Jack Squier, not­ some form of government and Not Very Visible these are nothing more than conjecture on our part, and ~ore ed: "This is not a mark on the know how to express themselves But for those who want help, he is here. In spite of all the specifically, are not based on anything except some rational college, but rather a show of the at the poles or in council so that pins on the map though, business is slow. SUPA literature says thinking. immaturity of the students." a dictator or exploiter of the "thousands" of. ~oung Americans have come to dodge the draft The first explanation for this escape is that most people There is no need that the stu­ people cannot rise to power. and "thousands more plan on coming this summer," but U.S. are afraid to live. The second, is that most do not know how dents of this college need be And, if he does they have a way and Canadian officials here doubt there are more than a few to live even if they could overcome their basic fear. Now, considered immature under nor­ to effect bis removal from the hundred. , after d~fining our position, let us look at reality. mal circumstances or for that position he holds. The battle that No matter what the number, these Americans who have left matter under any other circum­ \Ve grow up in a world of phonies. Perhaps more import~nt, I talk of waging is not a political their native country for good are not very visible, except for the if people aren't phony, we think they are. Therefore, our first stances, but now, any one look­ or militaristic battle. In fact, if few who work at subsistence wages at SUPA headquarters or ing at the statue realizes that assumption in life is that all people aren't as they make the~­ there is to be a solution to this use it as a very informal hangout. selves out to be. With this philosophy, which no doubt 1s ::, the students are not as mature as war the political and militaristic Contrary to some reports of dodger-infested. coffee houses, they should be. handed down from father to son, mother to daughter, it. is little battles shouldn't be our respons­ there is no physical "colony" of draft-evaders in Toronto or wonder that everyone questions, everyone and everything. We Some of those · students that ibility. We should help these anywhere else. Most of them never contact SU~J\ a~d prefer to caused some of the damage have are afraid to accept at. face value, what we see. I_nste?cd, w,e people with our superior re­ make a new start in their new country by ass1m1lating. look beyond, remembering that over used expression Don t been caught and will be punish­ sources and technology in the For most Americans, it's easy. They are practica!ly_ indis­ judge a book by its cover." ed. The students who were not tinguishable from Canadians in looks a1:d talk, a!ld this 1s par­ areas of health, education, and Secondly we are not about to admit. even to ourselves, caught will get off, but none of welfare. Then if they want to win ticularly so around the campus and in Y orkvdle, the small the students at the college will touristy Bohemian section of Toronto. the true us ]~st we should be "discovered" to be real. Some or fight a "Civil War'' they may examples of this: \Vhen was the last time you admitted you get out from under the meaning Can't Arrest Them - on their own. Because, while were so afraid that your heart nearly jumped out of your of the word immature as long as we are increasing our benevo­ Finally, it's easy to hidt: simply because nobody_ is looking malicious damage like this ap­ for them, U.S. consular officials here have no authority and _no chest· that your hands sweated until you wiped them off on lent forces we will be withdraw­ our clothes; that you had a wonderful time and laughed so hard pears. ing our militaristic forces which way to take ony head coun~ or m_ake a_ny arrests, and Canadian ;; It's too bad we all have to be ofifcials have no interest in domg either. The dodgers have you barely made it to the bathroom; that you felt sorry for are causing so much tension and the kid down the block, who couldn't walk. 1 under a stigma for what a com­ ill feeling both at home and broken no Canadian laws and there is no extradition for draft This total involvement in the game of playin!!; the game has .. paratively few did. abroad. This would possibly give evasion. . . . left us without Being. Instead of existing in a real \vorld: _we " Frederick J. Shepard us the ability for a withdrawal Moreover there is no draft in Canada and conscnpt1on 1s live in a world of people attempting not to be real and fa1!mg Photo Editor, The Ithacan without leaving a void or "losing unpopular. So 'is the among many Canadians. The _..,-. miserably at it. This situation creates an ui:icomfort~ble feelmg, face" in the long run. public climate in the United States that would harass the stay- it produces the anxitics that we take i:nedcmes fo~, 1t forces us Letter to the Frederick Schafer at-home evader is muted greatly here. . into positions of suliminauon and rums our basic reason for Editors of the ITHACAN Dorm 12 Draft-dodgers aren't encouraged to come to ~anada, but 1f they do they are eligible for permanent statu~ like any other existance in the first place. . Your editorial in -the October voluntary emigre in this manpower-hungry nat10n that accepts Ironic as it may be, the fact remains that the unreality we 13 issue of the Ithacan entitled To the Editor, 148,000 foreigners a year. Only if_ tpey become public wards or produce causes us to look outside ourselves for reality. I1~ es­ "Vietnam: Tragedy In Perspec­ I was tempted to write this sence, drugs, alcohol, and the artificial world are our savo1r. tive" it is very good and criminals will they face depo~tat1on. . rm letter after reading page four of Strictly from an economic standpoint, most of the draft­ sure that it expresses your feel­ To return to our original point. \Ve are caught in a V_icious your Vietnam edition, but, as the dodgers are good raw material for a still-expanding young ings as well as the feelings of Circle. Being afraid to live never 1:resenrcd rhe opportunity to intelligent individual I hope I country. For the most part they ~re in goo? health and have I many others in regards to the learn to live. Until we learn to live, we c:in nrn-r overcome am, I saw that I would be better some college_ training:, and_ many either. ge~ Jobs as teachers or the fear to live. Vietnam ''War''. Yet, your solu­ off if I read the whole paper. continue their schooling with that end in sight. \Vhat is the answer? Perhaps there is none. Perhaps _it is as ') tion took me by surprise. This Upon finishing it, and then wait­ · conflict is possibly and probably Quakers Give Advice simple as watching the squirrels in the _park, or wa_rc~1111g the ing a couple of days, I can now Other groups, smaller th_an SUPA, al_so counsel would-1?e the most controversial and con­ people in the park, or laughing at somct~mg be~ause 1t is fu11:ny, intelligently give my views on draft resisters. The two mam ones are m. Mo~treal and m fusing conflict that the United or just sitting and thinking. Perhaps 1t. as sm1ple . as cry!ng, the subject. Vancouver. But Montreal is a French-speaking city, and Van­ or feeling pain, or remembering or forgcttmg, of gettmg excited States has ever been involved in I must say that I am glad that couver is more an industrial cen~er, so Toronto a~tracts most or relaxing, or just being real-for once. and it undoubtedly needs a solu­ your newspaper has taken a stand of the Americans. Here, the office of the Canadian Quakers tion, but your solution leaves where most people are afraid to also advises draft-dodgers. . . ---··--·------some credibility gaps itself. Ad­ think. This shows that you are A spokesman for the Canadian D1;partmen~ of Imm_igra­ mittedly war in general is an many steps above the average tion and Manpower confirms th'!-t. crossing ?"e~ 1s a relatively .. atrocious and immoral situation been no investigation "as such" of the dode;crs, he ~ays, "but we college newspaper. simple matter. "We have 60 m1lhon <;xan:imat10ns ac\oss our do try to keep abreast of developments." ! for any human to be involved in, I have to agree with your argu­ border a year," he says. "In. our exammanon,s, we cant ma~e At SUPA, Satin and his colleagues profess not to worry ., yet war has gone on for cen- ments, and that we should "END any special effort to determme what anyone s draft status 1s . turies. Now, don't misinterpret THE WAR IN VIETNAM." But I about the penalties awaiting them if they go hack ro_ the states­ Is a draft-dodger someone who has rec~ive_d a. draft call, o~ j~s.t five years in jail for evadmg the draft or 10 for 111ternat1onal me - rm not condoning war or can't see, having spent a year might receive it? Besides, we have no md1cau,~n of any s1gmfi. the Vietnam conflict ·specifically. there, just giving the country to flight to avoid prosecution. I\1ost have resigned themselves to cant number coming over to dodge the draft .. never going back. What I am saying is that your the communists. I can't see hav­ Alan B. Moreland U.S. Consul general m Toronto, says l.,. suggestion for a solution is rathal­ ing people who I knew and grew the whole matter is out' of his hands. "This is a sovereign coun­ Instead, they look to the future. They arc putting out a er unrealistic and wishfully ide - to love, being subjected to the, try and Canada determines its own policy," he says. "As far as newsletter called "'The New Canadian" ( not "the draft-dodger," istic. Do you, as educated people, at best, ostracism, at worst, well knowing how many are here, we're the last people on earth they Satin notes) and try to think positively. "After all," Satin says, actually think for a moment that ... who knows, just because they "this is a country we're living 111, not hiding in." the United States or the North would contact." . worked for the "Yankee im­ Moreland also denies any knowledge about allcgat10ns of Vietnamese could declare that Canadian Migration Article Reprinted from perialists." the draft-dodgers that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has they would withdraw and the The S1JTacusc Herald American other side wouldn't take advant- Please turn to p11go 6 sent agents into Canada to seek some of them out. There has THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 6

Letters to The !Editor Tuesday getting signatures; we sports events, poor turnouts for tion on Vietnam, he would keep the respective committees. It the highest ·intellectual, educa­ (Continued) were stationed in the lobby of big weekends, etc., is nothing it to himself, for surely it would was expected that these student tional and aesthetic value, and its Egbert Union. By 2 p.m., October new. Apathy, however, concern­ be treasonous to voice it. members would serve as well as work is not-yet finished. As cases in point, there was 3, 650 students had affixed their ing something which affects the Whatever the reason for their the student government. To the I take this opportunity, then, Mr. Hai, Miss Sally, Miss Nancy, names to the petition. At 2:15 entire campus community seems apathy, I think it is about time best af my knowledge, the sug­ and little Hoa (pronounced wah). to invite the students to involve two other students and myself relatively new, although it bas for IC students to stop "hiding" gestions presented by the student themselves in the 75th Annivers- These people would be punished approached President Dillingham, been here for quite a while. Al­ behind their 2-S cassification and members were given equal con­ for working for the Americans. ary Celebration. Some time re- , prepared to emphasize that a though most students at IC try protest what they feel is an un­ sideration with those offered by mains for the final development · , . '· · And all they did was office work great many students were against to pretend it won't, the war in just and illegal war. Last week's faculty members. Effort was or in the case of Hoa, janitorial of several symposia to be pre. the college's memo. At 3 p.m. we Vietnam will effect all of our Ithacan was a step in the right made to assure participation by sented by the College of Arts labors. These were people, and to emerged from Job Hall, feeling lives in the very near future. direction, but more must be done. all elements of the Ithaca Col­ prove that they would be punish­ and Sciences. Much remains to disgusted, depressed and highly Many have stated their opposi­ Each student who feels he is lege Community including stu­ be done in the publicizing of the ed, we have only to state that insulted. During those brief 45 tion to the war, and have felt in opposition to the war should dents, faculty in each discipline, the V.C. are, and have been since many events already scheduled. minutes we were told the follow­ that this is enough. see what he can do to help bring the administration, the alumni, Here, the reporters of the Itha- the start of their "rebellion," ing: that we had no right to ques­ Monday, October 16, an or­ about its end, and not be content trustees and the local commun­ killing anyone who even helped can are invited to seek out infor­ tion college policy or to try to ganized resistance to the Selec­ by simply stating bis opposition. ity. As a practical matter, much mation and stories concerning the Vietnamese. I'm speaking of change it, that if we were dis­ tive Service Act, prompted by Peter Orville '70 of the planning and arranging forthcoming events and to help the village chiefs, and the teach­ satified with the college policy the war occurred all over the of specific events occurred dur­ us in bringing them to the at­ ers, who have been trying to edu­ we attend another college, (one country. In Ithaca, about 15 men iµg the summer. Many hours of tetion of the College community. cate their people to learn what with a Jewish orientation), and refused to cooperate any longer To the Editor: work were required by the com­ A general invitation is extended we take for granted. Not just that our petitions were "probably with the Selective Service Sys- The recent editorial in the mittees during the summer. to all of our students to attend reading and writing, but the signed by students who just want­ tern, and handed their draft cards Ithacan entitled "a convocation Many hours of work were requlr­ those events of interest to them. basic rudiments of personal and ed to get out of classes". in to the local board. A rally out:_ by and for the faculty" affords ed by th<> committees during the The opportunities to hear, see communal hygiene. I am of the opinion that the side Willard Straight Hall at me this opportunity to express vacation period to complete the and talk with so many outstand- Yes, we should end the war, college's policy toward religious Cornell attended by some 750 some thoughts concerning the Convocation Day program as ing figures in many fields of but we ,should do it by escala­ affairs is totally absurd. Accord­ people preceeded a march down- degree of involvement of stu­ well as some of the other events. intellectual and , aesthetic en. tion. Escalation to the point of ing to President Dillingham, "Our town to the draft board by about dents in the 75th Anniversary Students were, of course, n o t deavor will not be matched soon effectively cutting of North Viet­ policy is one of non-involvement 200 people, where these 15 men Celebration. available during this period. again. Here is your chance to per­ nam's supply routes. Effectively in religious matters on this cam­ took the action they felt just. The policy of the Steering Com­ In any event, the development sonally meet Leopold Stowkow- stopping those supplies that do pus." The college can not and How many of the 300o+ IC stu- mittee of the 75th Anniversary of the Anniversary Program ski, Igor Stravinsky, Dr. James reach North Vietnam, from get­ moreover should not ignore this dents were present? Estimates Committee from its very begin­ was done with the goal of pro­ Perkins, Robert Brustein, Louise ting to Victor Charlie. In short, or any other religious issue con­ ranged from 4 to 10. Why? ning a year ago has been to fully ducing a program of the highest Day Hicks, Sidney Hook, Philip we should quit playing games, fronting the administration. I do It is very possible, that most involve the students in the plan­ possible quality - a program R. Morrison of M.I.T., Arthur and end the war by winning it. not represent myself only, or IC students are afraid. One Cor- ning and presentation of events that would reflect favorably upon Schlesinger, Jr., Dr. B. Sandler, Richard A. Cohen '70 other Jewish students, but I speak nellian, caught in the midst of of the Anniversary Year. To this the College and be in consonance and a host of other leaders in for 650 students at this college the forming rally said, "rd bet- end, students were appointed to with our theme, "Personal ful­ science, music, drama, education, To the Editor: when I say that students should ter get out of here before I get each of the subcommittees im­ fillment in a creative environ­ health and- public affairs. On October 2, a Monday eve­ not be compelled to attend classes my name on some list". This mediately concerned with the ment." The creative environment Join us then in this ·very im- ' :, . ning, a Hillel meeting was held. on religious holidays, nor should rather humorous attitude seems origination and development of is one in which our students may portant year of the life of our · It began as an ordinary meeting, they receive cuts for such ab­ quite widespread. Or maybe IC plans for the Celebration. As hope to find personal fulfillment. College. but as it progressed a certain students happened to bear Dean members of these committees, With · this end in mind the 75th sences. Transferring to another Raymond H. Kaaret subject was brought up, that of college is hardly the answer; it Rusk say over this past weekend the students were encouraged to Anniversary Committee as a Chairman, excused cuts on Jewish holidays. is merely an alternative for fight­ that if he had an opinion con. submit suggestions and to par­ whole has worked unstintingly to Students voiced their anger at a ing for what I believe. And our trary to the government's posi- ticipate in the deliberations of present a year-long program of 75th Anniversary Committee memo, that had been distributed petition was NOT signed by stu­ by President Dillingham to the dents who just wanted to get out faculty, that day. The memo "ad­ of classes, for it was signed by vised" the faculty of the import­ Christians, who as well as Jews, 1967 ance of the Jewish holidays, and look for a change in policy. The that was the extent of it. Presi­ holdays are over, and students Parents Weekend Program dent Dillingham promised a still express their disgust with Hillel representative, a month this nonsensical situation. ago, that all Jewish students Most people would agree that would be excused from classes this issue is over, dead, and for­ October 27, Friday on these days, if they spoke to gotten. I would disagree with their professors individually, yet 3:00 P.M. to 9:00 P .M. Registration-Main Lobby, Egbert Union them, for although (for the time FNIShman Football-Ithaca College vs. Manlius-(No charge) his memo made no mention of being) there will be no more 4:00P.M. the above statement. In addition, meetings with President Dilling­ 7:30 P.M. to 10:00 P .M. Open House-Radio-TV Center-DeWitt Park, Ithaca the memo pointed out that Rabbi ham and no more petitions, I will 8:15P.M. Concert-Ithaca College Concert Band, Walter Beeler, Conductor-Ford Hall­ Goldfarb had authorized and bad not forget the way in which this (No charge) helped in writing this statement. matter has been treated, and the 8:15P.M. Play--Open Rehearsal-"Tevya and His Daugbters"-Ithaca College Theater-De­ (This fact was denied by the way in which 650 people have Witt Park. (Tickets issued on ''First Come, First Served" basis during registra- Rabbi the day after the memo been ignored. Next year at this tion.) · was st?ut, for he declared that he time, I hope to be attending had never agreed to its wording Ithaca College, for I will not October 28, Saturday or content.) After speaking to transfer merely because I am dis­ 9:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon Registration-Main Lobby, Egbert Union their professors, students rea­ satisfied with school policy. If 10:00 A.M. to 11:30 A.M. Parenh-Faculty Meeting-Gymnasium lized that their teachers had in­ anything will change, it will be terpreted the memo as meaning my own perservereance, £or next Welcome by President Howard DIiiingham that absences on these days year I will work with increased Introduction by Provost Robert Davies would be unexcused cuts. We de­ vigor for this cause. Hopefully, Panel Discussion, Faculty and Students-"The Changing Values of College Edu­ cided on October 2 that action next year, someone will listen. . cation." was the only answer. Susan D. Kutel 11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P .M. Buffet Luncheon-Union and Tower Dining Halls (Tickets $2.00 at door),.... Therefore, we circulated a pe­ Dorm 5, Room 202 12:00Noon tition, requesting that "the Jew­ Varsity Soccer-'lthaca College vs. St. John Fisber-{No charge) ish students at IC be excused 2:00P.M. Varsity Football-Ithaca College vs. C. W. Post-(Tickets $1.50 at gate.) from classes on the High Holi­ To the editor, 2:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. Campus Open House-AU buildings and dormitories - Tea in Egbert Union days". We worked all night in Apathy on a college campus, 8:15P.M. Play-Open Rehearsal-"Tevya and His -Daugbters"-Ithaca College Theatre­ our dorms and spent all day exemplified by sparse crowds at DeWitt Park. (Tickets issued on ''First Come, First Served" basis during registra­ tion.) 8:15P.M. Concert-Ithaca College Concert Band, Walter Beeler, Conducter-Ford Hall­ • (No charge) 9:00 P.M. to 12:00 Midnight Dance-Gymnasium MAYERS SMOKE SHOP October 29, Sunday Religious Sorvlces

welcomes Entire Weekend Threo Dimensional Art by Edward de Aguero-Recreation Room-Egbert Union irhe lroBk.s {froDffil WARNING TO ALEX - I wish you CLASSIFIED would stop lenving mo olono on cold Meeting for All rnlny nights. - Affectionntely, tho SUDS.YOUR Benu.tiful . Mind. SPECIAL NOTE - to my urchin Billy. Prospective Frosh I miss you Bnd cnn not wnit to eeo CONFIDENTIAL - Lorrnine, pleuo DUDS · you. on the 27th. Love from your tnko mo b1>ck. I'll stop beating n ~;;i:!. friend with tho blnck oyo- dend horse. I lovo you. Class Officers Webster's Laundry DEAR JI!. K. --J Joeo nnd Jonnne hnvo .. <> il'o its new location at CONFIDENTIAL TO DON _ Shut up nothing on us. Excopt Blnghnmton. and Dry Cleaners nnd keep lnughing. Tho world is fun- P.S. Think no Bio. on F.\V.E. 7 :OO."Monday 1 0 t:icn~:mi:~:;, :;:-"fi';, ;~ two good JESS -< Don't boliovo everything you 4 0 Oct. 23rd 318 IE. STATIE STREET Same Day Service and hear~ PART-TIME HELP wnnted. King Sub­ Delivery mnrine Hou.so. Good pay. Apply in Egbert Union Rec porson, nfter O :00 p,.m. 327 W. Stoto GNOMON IS HERE! St. _ Room Just East of the Strand Theater Free_ Pickup & Delivery Xerox Copies Basement of Dorm 12 first copy of Sc each original· MIX'S ESSO Ithaca Judo Club in by 10 a.m. - Back by each, 2nd thru 10th Open 8 to midnight daily 107 N. Tioga St. copies of same orig­ 4p.m. 3c <> inal .lUBRICATION <> ADULTS: 2c each, 11th copy on COMPLETE TUNING COi" OP LAUNDRY BRAKES Tues. and Thurs. 7 P.M. GNOMON COPY SERVICE All Work Guaranteed AND DRY CLEANING 313 Eddy Street <> CHILDREN: Collegetown Cor. Buffalo & Meadow Ithaca Shopping Plam Ithaca, New York Ithaca,, N.Y. - AR 3•9719 Tues. and Thurs. 6:30 P.M; Phone 273~8686 THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 7 Ussachevsky To My Sister· Susan By Frank Scoblette by Susan Longaker I have a little sister. Her name be studying; she may be sleep­ As i shut my window this morning-the air, a draft stopped. Be At Cornell is Susan. I love her very much. ing. The miles between home and ;The draft.... here then, arc some poems somewhat related Vladimir Ussachevsky, compos­ • -~·•••,W"Ar ,, ,""'<-, ,...,,,,-:- • ",: .... ·• Before I came to college we here have caused us to gr o w to said ... but· first a few words- er and lecture-recitalist, is known were pals. Hell! we'd wrestle, and apart. She is fourteen; a fresh­ To the one with whom I have an anonymous discourse: internationally for his creative talk, and go to the movies, and man in high school. I am twenty; next week I will respond to you, i must, for you have moved work for the electonic medium. sing, and annoy everyone by mak­ a junior in college. , me. There is so much I have to say to you, whoever you are - Mr. Ussachevsky, chairman of ing stupid observations at din­ She is Susan still, but my Su­ Anthem For Doomed Youtk the committee of direction, Col­ ner. Whenever we ate peas I'd san no more. Where she used to by Wilfred Owen umbia-Princeton Electronic Music put a few on my spoon and sling be really ug ... (not pretty.} she What passing-bells for these who die as cattle? Center, will be presented at the them across the table at her. is now beautiful. Her eyes are so Only the monstrous anger of the guns. Willard Straight Hall Memorial She'd retaliate with a loud ob­ big and filled with emotion that Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle Room on Friday, October 20. noxious belch! My Mom and Dad its hard to gaze at them for more than a few seconds. Her skin is Can patter out their hasty orisons. A workshop-clinic of demon­ would try to look angry - but they couldn't fool us! Susan and fair, not a blemish to darken its No mockeries for them; no prayers nor bells, stration and discussion of th e Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs - I both knew they loved the love smoothness. Her teeth which for technical aspects of composition, years knew the torture and im­ The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells; will take place Friday afternoon which existed between us. I can recall many a night, after prisonment of braces, are white And bugles calling for them for dad shires. from 3:30-4:45 p.m. in the Me­ a tough knockdown dragged out and straight. And her figure is What candles may be held to speed them all? morial Room of Willard Straight fight, how we would talk. We not the dumpy little chubby tom­ Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes Hall at no charge. The concert ,l talked about everything, from boyish one I used to wrestle with; Shall shine the holy glimmers of good-byes will be held Friday evening at our fat gross next door neigh­ it has become that of a young The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall, 8:15 p.m. and will be followed bor to sex; she would giggle lady (a well formed young lady Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds, by a reception and informal dis­ about the former and listen in­ at that!} And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds. cussion with Mr. Ussachevsky. A few weeks ago I went home , Apologia Pro Poemate Meo tently to the latter. Or, we would Tickets will go on sale Wednes­ Vladimir Ussachevsky laugh about the time she slugged to see my family. She was sleep­ I too, saw God through mud,- day, October 18th in W i 11 a rd some bratty boy who threw a ing when I finally arrived. I , The mud that cracked on cheeks when wretcher smiled. Straight H:~ll Main Lobby, and snowball at her - and complete­ walked into her room and kissed War brought more glory to their eyes than blood, may be purchased at the door on had numerous radio perform­ ances. He was presented recently ly floored him! Susan and I were her on the cheek. She opened her And gave their laughs more glee than shakes a child. the evening of the performance companions continually, thru eyes and, for a moment was for $1.50. on CBC-TV "Camera 3" in his subject, and tours wide!y, in most of my youth, thru all of startled. I guess my new grown 'Merry it was to laugh there - Born in China in 1911 of a special times of season, through hers. mustache must have scared her. Where a cteath becomes absurd and life absurder. musical Russian family, he had the United States. Susan had a mind which never I am not the I she knew either. For power was on us as we slashed bones bare his first music studies there, and rested. She was perceptive and Three years of seeing each "•"J Not to feel sickness or remorse of murder. in his 'teens went to Pomona quick. Her observations of people other occasionally has changed ·' College in California, when he were amazing - old Susan could what we shared for over a dec­ I too, have dropped off fear - received his first training in really peg a phony. Many a date ade. She is now in high school ' Behind the barrage, dead as my platoon, composition. In his senior year Antioch Change had to pass the scrupulous eyes and I'm now playing collegeman. And sailed my spirit surging, light and clear at Pomona a full evening's con­ of my sister before I could take It is strange. She is becoming Past the entanglement where hopes lay strewn; cert of his compositions was pre­ her out. But Susan was always a memory. Our shared joys are sented. Later at Eastman School Bigotry Policy fair. She would never let her becoming but shared rem.i- And witnessed exultation - of Music he received his M.A. Yellow Springs, 0. (I.P.) - sisterly jealousy affect her judge­ Perhaps that is life. If it is, Faces that used to curse me, scowl for scowl, and Ph.D. degrees, and had major Antioch College's board of trus­ ment. then truly there is no one death. Shine and life up with passion of oblation, performances of his music. A tees recently adopted a preced­ I guess you would call it love. For I do believe a part of life Seraphis for an hour; though they were foul. period of Army service followed, ent-setting policy under which We did love ... even if she did for me is now dead, and exists in which his Chinese and Russian it will try to bring college invest­ tell my mother I teased her (you only in the graveyard of my I have made fellowships - language fluency was of service; ments into harmony with the col­ see Susan has an extraordinariiy mind. untold of happy lovers in old song. and in 1946 he resumed his lege's historic stand against rac­ beautiful nose - and I used to And Susan will marry. And I For love is not the binding of fair lips career in music at C o 1 u m b i a ial and , religious bigotry. The just love grabbing it!} or I will be an uncle. And I will love With the soft silk of eyes that look and long, University. trustees also voted to invite could never walk around in her children - and we will .) In 1951 he began his experi­ members of the Antioch commun­ shorts without her commenting smile if they throw peas at each By joy, whose ribbon slips, - ments on the tape recorder, and ity to attend all board meetings on my ape like appearance. other and belch. in 1952 presented his first pub­ except executive sessions neces­ I used to pretend I was Super­ But wound with war's hard wire whose stakes are strong; lic demonstration of these experi­ sary from time to tim,e. man. I'd puff up my chest and 14iIMy Qlahs Bound with the bandage of the arm that drips; ments. In 1953 be began an ex­ Both actions respond to stu­ strut about the house. S u s a n Knit in the webbing of the rifle-throng. tensive collaboration with his dent requests, raised dramatical­ would then take a flying leap Imported from Eng­ colleague, Otto Luening, a com­ ly at a May meeting when a and knock me on my ass! Then land 10 years old in I have perceived much beauty poser also at Columbia Univer­ group of 50 entered a traditional­ she'd pick me up, dust me off, fantastic condition, In the hoarse oaths that kept our courage straight; sity, in which the two men pro­ ly closed session of the board. and flip me over her shoulder! free from scratches, Heard music in the silentness of duty; duced major orchestral works "By that action, students called And could she (can she} ever Found peace where shell-storms spouted reddest spate. with solo tape recorder; suites to our attention that we were sing! She never took a lesson and dents or rust, orig­ for theatre productions, for bal­ not wholly responsive to the yet her voice is magnificent. She inal upholstery un­ Nevertheless, except you share let, and other mediums of public values we hold for education," reaches notes Julie Andrews marked. With them the hell in sorrowful dark of hell, presentation. Pres. James P. Dixon said, in an­ never he2rd of yet! IDEAL FOR TRIPS-­ ~-~ Whose world is but the trembling of a flare, Mr. Ussachevsky's individual nouncing t h e b o a r d ' s n e w Right now she is ... right now Close friends, dates, And heaven but as the highway for a shell, policies. ... now I do not know. She may work for the electronic medium in includes "Studies in Sound," "A Just how the new investment parents, family You shall not hear their mirth: Piece for Tape Recorder,'; "Sonic policy will be put into effect no­ back and ride in You shall not come to think them well content" Contours," a score for the film body, as yet, knows. Specifically, Your Plumber or peace and quiet. By any jest of mine. These men are worth "No Exit" from the Sartre book, the policy statement calls for the Heating Dealer A classic vehicle and Your tears. You are not worth their merriment. incidental music for films, as board's investment advisory com­ --Wilfred Owen attention getter. well as a major work for several mittee to consider a company's For Courteous and contact: choruses with electronic accom­ racial and religious policy when 0 Dependable Service Mr. Martin, Southgate 0 0 0 0 0 the committee is making or re­ paniment. Co., Enfield, Connecticut In 1957 a Guggenheim Fellow­ taining a particular investment. ARMS AND THE BOY HULL HEATING & (203) 749-2211 ship in composition allowed him To help implement the policy, PLUMBING INC. or Angie Martin, Let the boy try along this bayonet-blade to work in Europe in the tape information on Antioch's invest­ Wells College, 804 W. Seneca St. How cold steel is, and keen with hunger of blood; and electronic medium in major ments will be ,available to th e Aurora, N.Y. Blue with malice, like a madman's flash; studios of Gravesano (Switzer­ community and a procedure AR 2-3550 Ithaca, N.Y. (315) 364-9611 And thinly drawn with famishing for flesh. land), Milan, Baden-Baden and established so that questions or Paris. suggestions about investments t.-·.~ Lend him to stroke these blind, blunt bullet-heads Mr. Ussacbevsky went to the can be raised. When appropri­ Soviet Union in 1961 where be ate, the board or committe: will A Which long to nuzzle in the hearts of lads, COMPLETE Or give him cartridges of fine zinc teeth, gave inform:il illustt-ated lectures advise companies of Antioch's Sha_rp with the sharpness of grief and death. in Russian on electronic m u s i c views on these matters. MUSICAL SERVICE produced at the Columbia-Prince­ During the board session in DRDVIE-IN For his teeth seem for laughing round an apple. ton Electronic Music Center, to July when the new policies were There lurk no claws behind hid fingers supple; members of the Union of Soviet worked out, President Dixon IHI OC 1K IE1f''S And Gos will grow no talons at his heels, Composers in various Soviet spoke less formally. COURT AT MEADOW Nor antlers through the thickness of his curls. cities. In that same period he also "It seems to me," he told trus­ Phone 273-1111 MlUJSDC S1r0DUE -Wilfred Owen visited electronic music stud!os tees, "that some of our verbal Open 7 Days a Week in Poland, Holland and Germar.y. pigeons have come home to 11 a.m. 'til 1 a.m. 201 South Tioga St. Both in 1953 and in 1961, Mr. • 0 • • • • roost, complete with feathers." Friday and Saturday Ithaca AR 2-8262 Ussachevsky served as an Ameri­ He was referring to Antioch's 'til 2 a.m. SPRING 1942 ~an delegate to conferences 01;1 oft-stated beliefs that education electronic music in Paris. should be related to humane Once as we· were sitting by Sollie of his music has been re­ values, that a democratic college The falling sun, the thickening air corded on Columbia Record's, community involves students at The chaplain came against the sky RCA Victor, Composers' Record­ all levels of decision-making, And quietly took a vacant chair. ings, Inc., and Folkways, and that a college of the 1960's must these are frequently used for be able to tolerate creative And under the tobacco smoke: television productions and have change. "Freedom," he said, and "God" and "Duty." We stared as though a savage spoke. The scene took on a singular beauty. l?RAIT'S COOKIES, CAKES AND I And we made no reply to that IFloweD' Shop PASTRIES Obscure, remote commumcar1011, FOR STUDY BREAKS But only stared at where the flat 205 N. Aurora St. 'I I, Meadow dissolved in vegetation. at the <> And thought: 0 sick, insatiable The l?asll'ry Shop And constant lust; 0 death, our future; FLOWERS FOR ALL 0 revolution in the whole 113 N. Aurora St. ) Of human use and nature! OCCASIONS AR 2-7272 by Roy Fuller Arranged by FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES, BALTIMORE, MD. Please Turn to Page 10 THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 8 ManagemeD'llil' Chaplain's Corner Greek Columns 1Lecihu11reli" Oll'il by ~he Othaca College Chaplains Rev. George Clarkson Phi Epsilon Kappa Delta Kappa AERho 1Loll1le(IJl1' lL.eGll'll'ilDll'DSJ by Michael Scholl by Ron Kobosko · Ii \Vhat docs one's .faith have to do with Viet Nam or drugs Monday night the Brothers welcomed this semesters pledges. The Society for the Advance­ or concepts or morality? Some who ask this question almost This past weekend was a total At Alpha Epsilon Rho, nation. We wish all the Pledges good social success. The mixer with al honorary television-radio fra. i ment of Management held its hint ~hat perhap_s one's fait~ ouiht to have little or nothing to do with these tlungs, that faith 1s rather a matter of "religious" luck and hope they have as much Delta Phi Zeta was enjoyed by ternity, pledging has, of course I third meeting last Tuesday night worship, of rites and ceremonies. fun as 'the brothers do during everyone and carried on through officially begun. Bids were man'. f' and its last lecture on the CUP:t However, if we think in the line of the prophetic tradition, the pledge period. Our Pledge to the party that evening. Now e~ out last week, and response I, series. The guest lecturer was or in the mood, of p~e~ent:day "s_ecular" religion, we may say Master this semester is Jon Rob­ Bob DiGangi, Social Chairman, mght was held earlier this week. J bins, the Assistant Pledge Master A challenging pledge program Mr. David Michelson. Mr. Michel­ rather th;;.t ones rel1g1~n 1s not JUSt ~ way to gain peace, or is making plans for Fall Week­ is Dave Greenberg. Brother Rob­ end. has been devised by our pledge. son received bis B.A. at Hamil­ eternal reward or to satisfy demands with a ceremony. What is required? The prophet Micah answered: "To do justly, to love bins will go remembered for his We would like to welcome all masters, and the next six weeks ton College and his M.A. at Cor­ mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God." So we find ourselves unusual banner displayed at the the D.K. pledges into the Fall should prove most interesting. , nell University. He is presently deeply concerned with justice in our world for our fellow-men, Ithaca-CorUand game. Jon was .Pledge Program and wish both The brothers remind the pledges studying for his doctorate at Cor­ justice is inter-racial relations, justice is international situ­ creator and designer of the ban­ them and pledgemasters Neil to be alert and co-operative and nell. His lectures and film dealt ations. \Ve arc concerned with our "right" ( if this term is ner. All the Brothers are wait­ Lane and Bob Tottey the best of wish them the best of luck'. ing impatiently for the return Work progressed rapidly this with the question of linear pro­ correct at all) to use napalm and fragmentation bombs, with luck in the next five weeks. · of Brothers Wheelen and Moore We are proud to announce that week on "Behind the ~Scenes " gram learning thru audio visual one country's moral right to destroy another, even for the lofti­ est sounding reasons. \Ve arc concerned with mercy to innocent from student teaching so that our next fraternity meeting will the film Alpha Epsilon Rho is techniques designed to teach the victims of war, and about a just peace and the cessation of they can lead the Fraternity be held at the home of our ad­ producing for the 'Television."-J fundamentals of computer pro­ bombing. So too, the reality of God becomes most evident not in through Fall Weekend. The Fra­ visor, Dr. John Ogden. Radio DE'partment. The short nar- ~' gramming using Cornell Univer­ some spooky experience, but in the very inter-relationships with ternity dominated Leather Lug­ Among other alumni brothers rative is to be ready for showing : gers of the Intramural Football during Parents' Weekend as part sity Programming Language and one another as the meaning of an "agape" form of love unfolds. to return for last weekend's par­ League are maltlng a strong ty was former president Bruce of the program A E Rho w as running an IBM S/360 system. Even the experience of corporate worship comes alive when it includes inter-relationships that arc founded on this new showing after ge~g off to a Clarke, who hasn't changed a bit. asked to-prepare for the occasion. spirit. It was clearly said: "If you come to offer your gift and slow start. Greg Kulick, the Congratulations are in order A tour of the department will be have aught against your brother, leave your gift. First be apple of Phi Delt's eye, is leading for brother Ron Donlick for bis given on Friday night, and a ban­ quet will be held Saturday night recon~il~d to y~mr brot~er and thc!1 come and _offer the gift." the team from his quarterback fine job in last week's football In this hght, faith and hfe have an mtegral relat10nship. position. Horner · Asselta caught game, and brothers Bob Joly, in the Terrace Cafeteria. All TV­ COSENTINO his first pass of the year in last Terry Habecker, and Steve Kuz­ Radio majors and their parents are invited; . invitations have .J week's Susquehanna game. Diego rnan for their parts in last week's ,,i SHOE REBUILDERS Segui ended the season with a soccer victory. been mailed to all parents. Stu- fine 2.63 e.r.a. dents will be admitted free; ad, <> Knepper To Be 8n 11 mission for all others will be American Men of Science" a~Q ~ FAST EXPERT Sigma Alpha Nu Al of us were pleased to learn { Director of Editors Mrs. Eliza­ 2. Research activity of h i g h REPAIR SERVICE Gamma Delta Pi by Bud Fernet this week that our Alpha Epsilon lfl beth Cattell bas informed Dr. quality in science as evi­ Rho sweatshirts have arrived. i <> Alvin Knepper, Associate Profes­ denced by publication in re­ by Patti Heydt After sitting a week with ears The sweatshirts are white with sor of Ithaca College, that he has putable journals; or, for those and mouths tightly shut, the Our thanks go out to all the lettering and our fraternity sym- PICK UP EVERY DAY been selected to be included in whose work cannot be pub­ brothers of Sigma Alpha Nu are bol in emerald green. ., the 11th Edition of the S o c i a 1 lished because of govern­ Greeks who helped us celebrate now ready to begin our fall our birthday Tuesday night at Currently under discussion in f: AT and Behavioral Sciences Section mental or commercial or in­ pledge program, under the lead­ A E Rho are ideas for· further of AMERICAN MEN OF SCI­ dustrial security, research the Box Car. Too good a time was I.C. CLEANING CENTER ership of Pledgemasters Bob pledge activities, and our booth ENCE. activity of high quality in bad by all, at least that's how it Woodill and Dan Bradley. We an­ seemed when we sat down to and other plans for LF.C. Week­ Ground Floor Dorm 12 The criteria as stated in the science as evidenced by the ticipate an o th er memorable end. i letter of selection are: judgment of the individual's take prelims on Wednesday! - pledge program will add ap­ j. <> "l. Achievement, by reason of peers among his immediate Congratulations to our four preciably to the brotherhood. ,· experience and training, of a co-workers; or girls nominated for I.F.C. Week­ The brothers of Sigma Alpha t Rho Mu Theta DOWNTOWN: stature in scientific work at 3. Attainment of a position of end queen. They are: Gail Mc­ Nu wish Mary Evan Keenan the by Dave Conkrite least equivalent to that as­ substantial responsibility re­ Carthy nominated by Pi Lambda best of luck in her bid for Fall l 'i 117 N. Aurora St. sociated with the doctorate quiring scientific training Chi and Phi Epsilon Kappa, Mary Weekend Queen. We also wish The brothers are all looking ~ I forward to a great pledge period AR 2-2900 degree, coupled with present­ and experience of approxi­ Evan Keenan nominated by Sig­ to thank Pi Lambda Chi for con­ l ly continued activity in such mately the extent described ma Alpha Nu, Janet Hogeboom sidering us even with our "bal­ and expect to have a fine pledge : work; or for (1) and (2)." nominated by Kappa Gamma Psi, loonless" banner. Our warm class under the watchful and al­ and Carol Engel nominated by' thanks to the Administration for ways understanding eyes of \ Phi Mu Alpha. our window, the first in eleven Pledgemaster Dave Conkrite. I Pledgemistress Chris Bennet months. Meanwhile, last Friday was the :i and her assistant, Kathy Burns, Congratulations to B r o t h e r scene of a "Pines Party." Several have outlined a program to keep Alan Hyman for beirig appointed alumni brothers returned for the our pledges busy, and we hope­ Co-managing editor of THE ITH­ weekend and had a great time. happy, for the next six weeks. ACAN. The "golden fluid of life" flowed Why don't you make your Mom And here's a thought,for all those The brothers of Sigma Alpha in great quantities as usual and : individuals aspiring to become Nu wish the sisters of Gamm a everyone agreed that it was the,,r1 members of the various Greek Delt a very happy second birth­ best party to date. : organizations-just keep smiling! day. The brothers wish all the : happy lby giving ~er G new pledges good luck and hope that . they enjoy the pledge period. «:orrsage to wear iro alB of i'he As a reminder, PARENT'S WEEKEND is only a week away, so don't wait until the last min­ rParentt's Weekend IEven,ii's ~utull

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. ; : 1 ·.' 1,:.. ' THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 9 stein Medical Center in the GREEK COLUMNS :::tfciaity of emotional attach- 7T wosomes CONTINUED Bronx. This will be an excellent opportunity for us to see where The Dean of Women, Helen H. WilCB Will Broadcast Music Phi Delta Pi we will be spending our last year Hood, agrees that "it's generally Much is new this week at strengthened "good music" policy by Sharon · T. Wolk at Ithaca College, meet some of the insecure couples involved in WICB-FM. Plans were made to with the addition of what is call­ On October 25 and 26, the the faculty, and talk to the kids PDA." She believes however, that begin carrying the required lis­ ed "chicken rock." On the more t~hysical Education Department who'll be able to tell us what's affection should definitely not intellectual side, the "George­ •: £ Ithaca College will sponsor a in store for us. be stifled for the good of ap­ tening for "Intro to Music". and town Forum" is heard each Mon­ dance clinic by Mr. and Mrs. Er­ Next weekend the tickets go pearance or principles. Dean "Hi.story of Music" in the near day night at 8:30, and "State of win. Many of the sisters are busy on sale for I.F.C.'s Fall Week­ Hood states that "This is the age future. These will be featured the University" is heard Wednes­ helping Mrs. LaRock with post­ end, so let's get the Greeks to when girls are becoming very during two half-hour shows per days at 8:30 at 91.7, WICB-FJ',,'I. ers, signs, and much of the other give it their entire sspport. emotionally attached to men. week hosted by Marty LoMonoco. WICB-AM continues its Top 60 paper work involved. Mr. and They are picking husbands and Another new feature is "Broad­ format and its complete service ]lfrs. Erwin will be instructing Sigma Alpha Iota becoming engaged. Certainly this way Request," Sundays between to the Ithaca College community. us in many of the social dances. by Cynthia Monterose can't be done with a handshake." 1 and 2 p.m., during which Sandy Listen for "Discussion" with We hope to see you all there. The yearbook committee of Agreeing with. the other Deans, ,Miss Jean Ruth Oliver, senior Hall invites listeners to call in Steve Schiffman Sunday nights On January 13, 1968 the Ph i Sigma Alpha Iota has finally she believes PDA is fine when and request their favorite broad­ at 11:05, and "Weekend Pre. Delta Pi Alumni Chapter will speech pathology major, is en­ completed this year's 1967-1968 not personally offensive to gaged to David Lee McGee, a way tunes. "All That Jazz," views" heard Thursday, Friday, hOld a Career Day ,for many of yearbook. The book has been others. heard Fridays from Midnight to the surrounding area schools. Cornell senior planning a career and Saturday nights. "Robin dedicated to Dean Craig Mc­ Many students interpret the in Veterinary Medicine. 2 a.m., has a new host - To m some of the sisters will be on Henry, Dean of the music depart­ term "personally offensive to Good and his Merry Men" will be Miss Ellen Callahan, a junior Hill. Tom has some groovy things hand to help wherever they will ment, and Mrs. McHenry, a others" very loosely. Such loca­ heard through the end of Octo­ majoring in Music, is engaged to lined up for the future, so listen be needed. We hope it provides tions as the library have become ber; follow his adventures night­ patroness of the fraternity. The Robert Woodill, a senior Radio­ weekly beginning tonight. A l s o _',l rewarding experienc for all yearbook bas been sent to the virtual "spots". Students here listen for ''Folk Music Ithaca" ly between 7 and 8 p.m. Requests those concerned. T. V. major. Ellen is a member printers and should be ready by seek the privacy of the small al­ Saturdays at 6 p.m., "Spotlight" are taken at 3214 and 3215 week­ Our work project at the Im­ coves and carrols as places to ex­ of Sigma Alpha Iota sorority, October 23. The committee mem­ Bob is a member of Sigma Alpha Sundays at 3 p.m., Al Rosen's nights after 9 p.m. and all day maculate Conception school is press their emotional desires, Rock Show Sundays at 9 p.m., bers were Barbara Inglis, Janet Nu.. now in full bloom. For the past Ives, Judy Jerome, Stephania quite indifferent to the students and "Wonderland" Thursdays at Saturdays and Sundays. Stay tun­ few weeks the students have been Muraszczuk, Cynthia Monterose, about them. Most students steer Miss Constance Jean Slovik be­ 10 p.m. "Weekend Panarama" ed to Radio 60 for "sound enter­ helped with their soccer skills. editor, and Elissa Zahn. Karen clear of the library, but some are came the bride of Mr. Nelson D. and "Escapade" continue with a tainment." Next week :nstruction in gym. Nezbeda designed the cover. making PDA a definite issue, in­ Beebe on Saturday, September nasties and basketball will begin. viting restrictions by either the 2. The bride is employed at Now that pledging is in ses­ librarians or administration. Schuyler Hospital; her husband Congressional Amendments is a senior here _at Ithaca College. sion we would like to take this Continued ..• The Ithaca student body, tend­ CODDDNGTON CARRY-OUT opportunity to wish all the ing towards indifference on most Miss Cynthia Kirby became pledges from the different Greek has ,he right to appeal a deci­ Mrs. Stephen W. Lapham at the sion. pertinent issues, makes PDA no 124 Coddington Rd. houses the best of luck. We also exception. Many do not consider Merchant Marine Academy at Student Body President Peter "'.bpe that next semester we will PDA to be a relevant question, Kings Point, on August 5. Mrs. Burrell also announced that see a lot more girls with a 2.3 and indeed it is not until a stu­ Lapham is a senior here, major­ lights would be up along the new index. dent is involved in or offended ing in physical education. Mr. entrance to the college as well as by a Public Display of Affection. Lapham, a graduate of Bucknell WITHIN WALKING !DISTANCIE Delta Sigma Pi other safety precautions such as Sophomore John Quayle, tak­ University, will be attending widening the shoulders, adding ing time off from a cO-ed wrest­ Cornell University, majoring in by Bob Arensteln traffic control signs, and remov­ Deltasig is busily preparing for ling match, stated that "PDA business administration. ing hazards such as the dirt isn't at all wrong on a playful SANDWICHES - COMPLETE DINNERS - PIZZA the coming of Parent's Weekend, which was blocking the view next week. Delta Sigma Pi along and congenial level, but I do around the circle. think serious expression should with Rho Mu Theta sponsor this Student Congress Chairman MOE'S weekend. Our Parent's Weekend be saved for private." Dan Karson also announced that Apparently, this is the view of Committee Chairman, Dave Ep. any student interested in the FREE DELIVERY with $5.00 minimum stein, has informed me that there most students. Those who tend Barber Shop proposals which will be voted towards more serious displays of will be both a play, put on by the upon at the next meeting (Tues­ MOSE NORMAN, Prop. drama department, and a concert, affection are certainly somewhat day at 6:30 in the lower lecture justified. The administration has .:,-,it on by the Ithaca College Or­ hall of the science buiding) are HOURS OPEN chestra Friday and Saturday taken a "reverse" stand on this urged to attend and voice their issue. While they have no limita­ nights, so there will be s o m e - opinion. 4 - 12 - 7 days c week thing for everyone to do tliis tions on Public Display of Affec­ 118 N. Aurora St. weekend. If there are any ques­ tion, they have limited the ex­ Call 272-1379 Public Display of Affection tent of Private Display. Such ~72 8184 tions on the weekend see either Continued ••. Dave Epstein or Jim Oaks of Rho locations as dormitory rooms, Mu Theta. capable of loving'.'' Dean Givens apartments, and upper floor Plans are underway for our also believes that such Public lounges are not accessable to Annual Founders Day Party. This Display of affection "reflects a those desirous· of privacy, year the International Fraternity r------~i of Delta Sigma Pi will be 60 years old, and a gala celebration Cornell Laundry at Coddington's Restaurant is ,;l}mmed. · IFC Weekend is coming soon HONDAS and we have planned a banquet and lodge parties for the entire weekend.. FOR RENT Pi Theta Phi by Diane Golub Our Fall Pledge Program got underway· this past Sunday eve­ ning in the lounge of Dorm 16B. This years' Pledgemaster, Steve Olsen, outlined the objectives for the next six weeks of pledging. Professional, as well as social, aspects are going to be combined, so that a richer appreciation of ,,physical therapy can be achieved, IBy the Hour, Day or Week while a closely knit brotherhood can be established. United Rent-Alls Student Agencie!:i, Inc. The weekend of October 2oth, 409 College Ave. the fraternity has made plans to 363 Elmira Road visit the Seniors who are cur­ 273-1807 272-2100 rently studying at the Albert Ein-

BROWNING, KING IHIAS 11UT11 Just like Clara Bow in the '3~s -Be as kissable in our Shirts by-Gant, Hathaway, Eagle, Arrow (plenty of perma-press, too) Sweaters by - Jaeger, Leonardo-Strassi, Robert Bruce, Kandahar Cool, cool Sport Coat, Trousers Outerwear, etc., etc., etc. Come in and browse around - anytime - see you. Signed H~skell Davidson-the guy who runs l!U(. <> BROWNING, KING & C

I But one ~ing we l~arned: there is no glory in the deed 1·-1.; I Until the soldier wears a badge of tarnished braid; . !' There are heroes who have heard the rally and have seen The glitter of a garlan round their head.

Theirs is the hollow victory. They are deceived. But you, my brother and my ghost, if you can go Knowing that there is no reward, no certain use In all your sacrifice, then honor is reprieved. l •\. I To fig_ht without hope ino fight without grace, 1·: be fashion smart in '67 The self reconstructed, the false bean repaired. Then I turned with a smile, and he answered my salute ,; ... wear 01 Dynel Fall As he stood against the fretted hedge, which was like whit1" lace. . J Phone· Se~vice Will ~ 0 black 0 dark brown ' ,.

0 blonde 0 auburn Aid Students At Texas :·: Austin, Texas (LP.) - _A con­ The new service is part of a 0 light brown 0 pastel tinuous _ telephone information plan to expand and improve slu· service, staffed by professional dent advisory programs in each counselors, will be available to institution of the University Sys­ University of Texas students be­ tem. The Board of Regents an~ '67 is the year for exciting fashions both in clothing and ginning with the new academic its standing committee on aca· year. demic and developmental affairs!~ styles. Hair is being worn long with .only a little Designed to meet emergencies began discussions of student ) curt or piled very softly on your head. A Dyne! Fall and to guide students on ques­ counseling in November, 1965. Al ? tions of all kinds, the 24-hour in­ the request of the Regents, the ·; can give you this fantastic loolc in only minutes! Come formation system is one of administration in May, 1966, ap- ! in soon and select the color and style most suited to several additions to the Uni­ pointed a special faculty commit- : versity's· counseling program re­ tee on student counseling headed : your tastes. sulting from intensive studies by Dr. Robert L. Sutherland, pro- ~ over a period of 18 months. fessor of sociology and director i The counselors who will an­ of the Hogg Foundation for Ment· ! swer telephone queries to th e al Health. Two students were ex· · Emergency and Referral Service officio members. have been in an intensive train­ The committee's lengthy a n d Millinery, Second Floor ing program in preparation for thorough report was presented -1 the open-hour shifts - 8 am. to the Board of Regents last N<>- ~ State & Tioga Sts. to '4 p.m., 4 p.m. to 12 midnight vember. Administration'. officials I: and 12 to 8 am. They will have were asked to submit recommen-l access to the Student Health dations for innovations after Open Friday Nite 'til 9 I Center and headquarters of Cam­ pus Traffic and Security Services making an intensive evaluation by telephone extensions and di· of existing programs of student rect lines. services. THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, .PAGE 11

l~w49&98-M-MM~MIMMIMM:MIM\M, BUDIN'S BIT by George Budin I lIOlJB CIAJIJDED ST*R I, I

.A mmhfu1 guide to mystic mishaps by HaN'jl V. Plate

ARIES (1forch 21-April lq): ll!nrs is 1n 20 degrees Arion and, thUR, if, 111 nmietcr trino to the Sun in 23 dcgret•s Leo this week. Tho obviou11 conRc qucnccs will tnkc plnco over the wcek­ ond with f'Xp)osivc force. Prepare a,, beat you can.

TAURUS (April 20-Mny 20): 'fhis is tho week you will meet. p mnn of culture, grncc and polioh ... who will dcmonstrnto a connoisseur' a tnstc in ~ art, litornturo and music. He iK nt one,• a dilettante and nccom1>hnhcd man of lcttcr::J. In addition, ho lb n bunku urtist. o" GEMINI (lllny 21 - Juno 21): Do somoth1ng nico for Grecco thif, week. Othorwieo your fourth solar boU!>C' will ehp throu.'gh your fingers and lund in a p1lo of soggy fried potatoes.

CANCER (Juno 22 ' July 22) : A lloon·:!r.lcrcury ospcct in your third lunor houso or Jupiter indicates a. '\o"Ory poor WL'ck for ony octivity involving physica.l exertion or etudy. Pick some flowers, go to bed ond tur11 off.

LEO (July 23-August 23) :Livc_n TRIANGLES your lifo with some funny prunks this weak t Slip a. sn.ako into your room­ moto' a bud, dcflato o.' friend's auto tires place o. few cronk ca.Us to local PBI 'office. Oct to kno,v n good lawyer. •\nd lcorn First Aid.

VIRGO (August 24-Scptcmbcr 22). • Your sign is the '·Virgin of August'' which mcons t.hat you must ta.kc n.d­ vontogo of opportunitios now, o.s ne:tt summer will be uneventful for you.

LIBRA ( September 23-0ctobcr 22) : Stop doubting other people's motives. You hovo o. auspicious noturo which ca.uses you to bo wary, ekcpticu.l of others who octuolly only want to help yon. With this in mind, send $500. cash to this paper for helpful, more complete horoscope reading.

SCORl'IO (October 23 - November 21): A clever mnn from Latvia will try to gain acccae to your privn.to nuto parts this weekend. Keep your gcnerutor un­ der lock and key. The Air Force do.esn'twant-to SAGITI'ARIUS (November 22 - De­ cember 21): Tho. etnrs indicnto thnt your rotations with others thie week, whilo centered on a core of concentra­ tion, will tend to be depth structured within nn intor·disciplina.ry frnmework_ waste your Bachelor of Science. Try drinking your way out.

OAPRICORN (December 22 · January 20) : Fut n little duplicity into yo!'-r life this wookl Your easy, domestic, Degree any more than you doc puppy-dog nnturo cncourogcs people to take odvnntngo of you. Stnko back with guile. B. Sc. Those letters have an im­ The Air Force Is like that. They ped for the assigned mission. You"lil pressive sound. hand you a lot of responsibility fast. be trained to fly exciting aircraft. AQUARIUS (Janunry 21 - Fobrunry But they won't be so impressive Through Officer Training School 10) : Sto.rs ore right nov-· for s·ocin.1 Just examples. There are so surfeit. Live llfo to its fullest while if you get shunted off into some you get a chance to specialize many more. you 're still young-bny o sports cnr, obscure corner of industry after where you want •.• in the forefront n new wnrdrobo . . . indulge I So o Wouldn't it be pretty nice to en­ check or two bounces, it's not tho end you leave college. A forgotten man. of modern science and technology. joy officers' pay and privileges? of tho world. You want activity. You want to Suppose, for example, you And serve your country, as well? get in there and show your stuff. wanted to become a pilot and serve l'ISCES (Februnry 20 - March 20): Also, you get retirement benefits. A tall, nminble, handsome, chn.rmin~ All right. How do you propose to as aircraft commander on airplane 30 days' paid vacation, medical sv.·indler v.rill amble into your life this doit? · crews. You'd plan missions and weok, offering o plAn for quick riches and dental care. through finnncinl scheming. Although If you join the United States Air insure that the aircraft is pre-flight• 8. Sc. Very impressive letters. forcworned bore, you will probably foll Force you'll become an expert fast. ed, inspected, loaded and equip- victim to his artifice, ns you tend to be Now, do something with them. partinl to tnlt, n.mmblc, handsome, charming swindlers.

wondering what happened to the hurtin' . • .. that Delta Sig's TV humane in humanities . . . that is working again. . . .that Hell's Gamma Delt's B. day party at the Angels invaded the campus last Box Car was a great success with Sat . . . that Bob Tottey had a all greeks attending and then ring in his nose ... that all flow­ some ... that cold sores are not er children are invited to pur­ from being passionate . . . that chase at Rho Mu Theta's Flowers this week's Chicken Little Award Sale in the Union (for Parent's by C. Lee goes to the campus patrolman Weekend) ... that I.C.'s wonder­ who took !D's when the "Head" Have you· heard . . . that Bits ing what happened to the draft was initiated by equally artistic and Pieces will keep the same burning demonstration which was students. title . . . that 2 football players scheduled for last Mon. in the from IC overslept and had to arts qual. .. that Pansies grow in hitch to the stadium • • • that Mt. Vernon . • . that dumping is . sometimes it takes 2 days and a way of life .•• that art instruc­ "Directories will a side trip to a New Hampshire tor Floeter refuses to make a J.P. to get back from the World value judgement on the "Head" be out within Series, right, Harrington? • • . . . . that Mademoiselle is having two weeks" that the Ithacan needs proof read- more contests ... that it's mid­ desperately . . . that Hutch's 'term-pile-0n-time again . . . that -W.Adams partment was the center for a the music majors on block are 6 a.m. religious discussion (?) . . . that Ednar still thinks that To­ morrow, Tomorrow anl Tomorrow is the name of a Sophia Loren movie ... that no one is helping Jack Gallager with Pi Lam's car­ nival booth and his sex life is

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Chrysler Division: The Chrysler line is probably the least · WAA Tennis Intramurals changed of all the corporation's offerings for '68, with the only The World major change being a new roofline for three hardtop models. The Chrysler half of the Chrysler-Plymouth Division also reveals few To Be I~ Sports Day c~a~ges on the lo~ selling !ux~ry ~ine _the· Imperi'.11. The only Six girls from W.A:A. Tennis Elaine Goldband, Sandy Vielie, of Wheels s1gmficant change m the Imperial lme 1s a new ·gnlle and dual Intramurals will represent Ithaca Val Dreher, and Leigh Rosati. side mouldings. · Dodge Division: The ads proclaim "Run with the Dodge College in a sportsday at Harpur. For any information regarding By JACK GEDNEY Also represented at the sports­ ScatPak, the cars with the bumblebee stripes," and if styling day will be Harpur, Oneonta, this sportsday or others to be This week the "World of Wheels" takes a look at the 1%8 truly does sell cars then Dodge Division is in for a good year: and Keuka. Playing for I.C. - held at Ithaca just contact Ginny models of the Chrysler Corporation. REHASH, REDO, or The big news at Dod_ge is their candidate for "'Car of the Year" Kathy Baizler, Chris Flatley, Willetts, Sportsday chairman. NEW: AND THE BEAT GOES ON ... Since its low ebb of honors, the all new Dodge Charger. The Charger which looked the late fifties and early sixties, Chrysler Coporation has like what it was for the last two years, a Dodge sedan with a W AA ANNOUNCES SECOND BLOCK ACTIVITIES bounced back to a strong position as the number three auto fastback roofline, comes off as something else for '68. It has a MONDAY company with a full 18% of the domestic market. The reasons decided European flair, with a low silhouette, uncluttered lines f 3:00-4:00 Competitive Swimming for this arc many, and vary from a leadership in warranties, to a "Kamm" type chopped off rear, wide wheel cutouts, and "hide'. I' 3:00-6:00 Gymnastics Club the fantastic Hemi V-8. The corporation has not, however, been awa)'.' he~dlights." The 1968 Charger is_an_ all ne~ car sty!ewise,) 1 4:00-5:30 Volleyball Club a style leader, and instead its prc-1968 offerings have often and 1t will probably be a trendsetter w1thm the mdustry m this TUESDAY appeared very G.M.ish. This is not so for '68, and at least at area. As in the past the Charger will be available with numerous 3 :00-4:00 Competitive Swimming Chrysler the NEW is emphasized. powerplant-drivetrain combinations, with the odds on favorite in 7:00-9:00 Intramural Volleyball Plymouth Division: The big news at Plymouth this year is this area being the revitalized 383-335 "Road Runner" engine 7:00-9:00 C.y-mnastics Club the new Beep-Beep Road Runner Belvedere. The Road Runner for sensible buyers ,and the famous 426 HEMI V-8 for those 7:00-9:00 Open Swimming is a low priced, budget supercar which comes standard equipped less conservative members of the automotive jet set. The Dodge WEDNESDAY with a 383 cubic inch, 335 horsepower engine, four speed New Coronet series is little changed· for '68, and the top of the Ii 3 :00-4:00 Com~etitivc Swimming Process taransmission with floor shifter (but no console, and R/T reflects only minor changes. The monstrous, but bulky, 4:00-6:00 Bowlmg Intramurals none is available), Goodyear Speedway Wide Tread F70-15 tires, and low-winding 440 V-8 is once again standard equipment in , 6:30-8:30 Gymnastics Club extra heavy duty suspension, and last but not least one of these the R/T, and once again it will probably not be a competitive 7:00-9:00 Co-rec Swimming Road Runners, and that high revving 383 makes an unwary setup in the N.H.R.A. ·classes due to its out to lunch camshaft, THURSDAY G.T.O. look like Wylie Coyote. Also m the Performance Plus mild compression, single point distributor and restrictive exhaust 3 :00-4:00 Competitive Swimming category this year is an upgraded G.T.X. wtih a 440 cubic inch, system. If any die-hard Dodge fan cares to attempt to rectify 4:00-5:30 Volleyball Club 375 horsepower V-8 as standard equipment. The G.T.X. is these numerous drawbacks, then I personally wish him good 7:00-9:00 Open Gymnastics definitely an improvement in the class category, with much more luck, for the 440 T.N.T. engine is a dud. The Dodge Dart is also 7:00-9:00 Dance sumptous interiors and better detailing than the '67's. Un­ little changed for '68, with a new grille, new taillights and a full 7:00-9:00 Synchronized Swimming fortunately prices for the '68 G.TX. have crept up to point length beltline strip as the only real changes in styling. The FRIDAY , where a fully optioned one goes for a whopping $4000. The Dodge Dart G.T.S. model, however, is equipped with a new Afternoon Valiant, Barracuda and Fury/VIP models remain little changed engine for '68, the 340 V-8. The 340 engine replaces the smaller and Open Bowling for the '68 model run. The only real changes for the Barracuda 273-235 horse engine as the top of the line V-8, but will probabl: Evenings are on the interiors which have been substantially upgraded be ~ard_ press~d. to beat the high-winding, solid lifter 273, The second block program begins Monday, October 30th. for 1968, with a full ten different all-vinyl combinations as despite its cubic mch advantage. The Polara/Monaco lines for: Find the activity for you and take an active part in W.A.A. optional equipment. '68 exhibit few changes over last year's models. A new hardtop' roof for the four door models, and a 3-section divided grille are the only major styling changes. The Delta tail-light theme is FRATERNITY JEWELRY STAMP IT! expanded upon from last year, but basically the '68 is a '67 We're Proud of Our lube ll"STHEllAG& redo REGULAR by L G. BALFOUR CO. Jobs! In summation the 1968 Chrysler products exhibit con­ MODEL. temporary, and competitve stylin~ in all lines, and in the . Ithaca College Class Rings Charger series show true styling brilliance. Chrysler must also '. ..3 LINEMYS2 TEXT Ray Tlla finest INDES111UCT1Bl£ IIEl'AL ~e cor!1~ended for its e~te!1sive safety changes for '68, and for . Robinson-Rothschild's Dept. Store POCIIET RUBBER STAIIP. 'n:" 11 r. its eff1c1ent, and unrestrictive smog control system which they Barnetts' Sunoco Send check or money order. Be Fint Floor sure to Include :,our Zip Code. No call C.A.P. (Cleaner Air Package). The Road Runner and p09tage or handll~ charires. Ade! 519 W. State St. snles tax. Charger must be considered two of the "better ideas" for '68 SPORTSWEAR-FAVORS-MUGS-TROPHIES Pnnnpt shlpmlllt. SatlsfacllcmGamaslNd despite what Ford Motor might have to say about it. ' Ithaca, N.Y. AR 2-9881 THE MOPP CO. ·Phone 272-5959 P. 0. no. 18623 Lana Squara Stallea _Helpful Hint: The wmtertime startability of an aut ATUNTA, GA., 30326 mobile does not rely solely on a well functioning electrical syste1?1 as_ many people believe. For an engine to start on a cold mornmg 1t must be able to turn over fast enough, and the oil viscosio/ (thickness) can greatly affect this ability. If a car What do they mean owner 1s not presently using a High Detergent, Multi-Viscosity ( lOw-30 or IOW-40) Oil, he should change to it before the . when they say cold sets in. To further increase a car's cold starting power a can ·. of either Wynn's Friction Proofing or Shaler Rislone Con­ c~ntrate sh?u.ld als~ ~e added to the oil. The cost for a complete Genesee Campus shirts 011 change wt1h additive runs around $5 and is well worth it. are the newest HER NAMEIN West Chester: campus style?· They're putting you on. STERLING SILVER A Growing \· I College · The institution now known as West Chester State College has been part of Pennsylvania's edu­ cation scene since the early years ~

of the nineteenth century.. Th e 1 college traces its origin to the West Chester Academy, founded in 1812. Shortly after the Civil LOVELY War the Academy developed into the West Chester Normal School, HANDMADE NECKLACE devoted to the preparation o Frank Hammer's teachers. The four-year program ALTMAN & GREEN of teacher training came into be· Jewelers ing in 1927 when the Pennsyl­ vania State Legislature broaden- 144 E. State Street Please tum to page 13

ITHACA COLLEGE Innsbruck Ski Package Dec. 28 to Jan. 12, 1968

7 Nights in Innsbruck New from Genesee ... sweat shirts .------ORDER FORM------and party shirts of long-wearing, NAM"------7 Nights in Kitzbuhel mitten-soft cotton. Each one has a STREET------­ Genesee beer mug and the world's CITY_· -----STATE----LZIP CODE-- $348.00 n_icest invitation-"come along SWEAT SHIRTS ..... $2.40 Each with me" -in bright red and black. Med _____lg. ____ X-lg----TOTAL $---- Rate includes: RT Air Fare, Hotel Accommodations, You'll always have a mug of Breakfast, Transfers. Based on 15 or more traveling to­ PARTY SHIRTS ..... $1.75 Each gether. Genesee with you when you wear a Sm·---Med I g X-lg___ TC)TAL $---- Genesee Campus Shirt • • • and Total Amt. Enclosed$,___ _ FOR INFORMATION CONTACT you'll enjoy your snow-cold Send your check or money order to: Genesee Campus Shirts, P.O. Box 9856, Genesee Beer in style. Southtown Station, Rochester, New York 14623 · Cook-Gauntlett Agency, Inc. Prices lncludo ell Stoia end loco1 raxos. posto'1D and handllno chorge,. Allow l'hroe wools ro, dollvorv or your ocdor. This oiler void whon, Prohlbltod by law. 207 N. Aurora St. AR 3-3073 1HE gEHESEE DREWINQ COl&PAMY, IIIC. CIOCHC!ITEl1, N.Y. THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 13 On The Slate Bombers Demolish Weak by Gene Slater The spanking new American .1?asketball League made its q~but in the various concerned cities throughout the country. '(/- will be quite a feat if this rival to the established N.B.A. §usq~eh~nna JEJeve@ is able to finish the year out. The A.B.A. has many obstacles to overcome. Its main problem is competing with the elder by James San Marco league. The N.B.A. has been around for years and has survived numerous threats ..It. has alrea.dy turned l>ack a rival league Outlined against a blue-gray on Ithaca's schedule. Statistics How do the Bombers feel about Susq.-Liddick, 14 run (Lidlick which was very s1m1lar to this new. setup .. The N.B.. A. has October sky, the Four Horsemen thus far bear this out. They have playing thist small college power­ kick). established stars where as the A.B.A. 1s startmg out with has. rode again. In dramatic lore they beaten highly touted Villanova, house? The word is that the team Ithaca-Howell, 6 run (Bonney beens, neverweres, and :1 sl?attering of capable ballplayers. are known as Famine, Pestilence, scored a total of 100 points in is in excellent spirits and they kick). The A.RA. suffered its first defeat before the players had Destruction and Death. These are their last 2 games, and attained are tickled to have a big win Ithaca-Bonney, 34 (filed goal). even laced up their sneakers. That defeat was in .the form. of a only aliases._.Their real names are the ranking of the No. 1 small under their belts. They are really Susq.-Cononrs, 10 run (Liddick court ruling which refused the' Oakland franchise the nghts Armstrong, Home, Hymen and college team in the East. Regard­ looking forward to West Chester run). to the already proven N.B.A. superior, Rick Barry. Bar-ry:'s Giroux. Last Saturday one could ing West Chester, Coach Butter­ and are super-psyched ! ! ! ! Ithaca-Gehler, 13 run (Bonney father-in-law, Bruce Hale, was named as coach of Oakland m not help but wonder if something field had this to say. "This will Ithaca 20 7 9 7-43 kick). the new league. U:ndou.btedJy his appo\ntment. was <;iue. to his similar to this was going through be the best football team we've Susquehanna O 7 O 8--15 First Downs 21 11 coaching talents with his bemg_ Barry s m?law JUSt comc1dental. the Susquehanna coach's mind. seen. The Pennsylvania club is Ithaca-Armstrong, 13 run (kick Rushing Yardage 381 4 Anyway at a faculty picnic Hale was able to convert his son­ The 43-15 victory evened the 5-0 and last week disposed of a failed). Passing Yardage 91 126 ; -,.law o~er to the A.B.A. Rick was offered half of Fort Knox Bomber slate at 2-2 while Susque­ strong Bloomsburg State team 50- Ithaca-Howell, 6 run (Bonney Passes 7.25 9-26 and no Mother-in-law problems if he si~ned. Rick jumped at hanna fell to 0-4. It was a big vic­ 28. They are an awful lot bigger kick). aPsse Intercepted by 1 2 the opportunity an~ said so long_ to his old tea~n:iates, the tory for the Bombers as the en­ than we are. They average 215 up Ithaca-Armstrong, 2 run (Bon­ Punts 2-33 5-39 San Francisco Warnors. The San Fran brass were visibly upset tire squad played at least half of front. They've get numbers and ney kick). Fumbles 0 2 and took the Barry case to court charging Rick ~th breaking the game while Coach Butterfield ability and size· and they recruit Ithaca-Slattery, 6 run (kick Yards Penalized 12-120 9-72 his contract. The courts broke up the happy family setup and substituted freely mid w a y for speed." failed). Aettndance, 4,573 informed Oakland that he would be unable to play for them through the second quarter. The until his Warrior' contract expires. AH of a sudden Barry was entire Bomber squad was as high a man without a team. He could have eaten humble pie and as a kite and team morale had rejoined the Golden Gaters but he has decided to sit this year never been better. out and count his money and hope to get back into his family Offensively, the passing attack, graces. With a name such as Rick Barry to form around the although still lacking somewhat, S2'BB£ WBBB£S A.B.A .. would have had a nice gate lure on the West Coast did show improvement with 7 instead of their cast of thousands which are in uniform today. completions in 25 attempts for 91 ;1ith Barry getting into· a legal predicament it also discouraged yards and 2 interceptions. Rush­ · ther N.B.A. players from jumping leagues. All the others sat ing is still I.C.'s strong point tight and are once agaii:i in ~heir own flock. Men sue~ as ~t. though as the Bombers gained Louis' Lou Hudson decided 1t would be better to stick with over 380 yards on the ground. the established league than be a guinea pig. This narrowed There were a host of offensive down the A.B.A. tal~nt picl-.ins' because any good ballplayer standouts; Bob "Brute" Arm­ was in the N.B.A. strong, Paul "Scooter" Giroux, EACH Another blow was delivered to the upstarts when their Gary Worden, Steve Hymen, Mike 13-lnch Size New York franchise was informed that they had no place to Barton, Rick Gehler, and Rod 14-1 nch Size *4.44 play-and were forced to move their home games to the Teaneck Howell. Armstrong played the Armory. Now I may be wrong but if I were running a Pro best game of his career finishing 15-lnch Size $5.55 Basketball team I think I would rather play my home games with 2 T.D.'s and over 50 yards when bought with a in New York's Madison Square Garden than the Teaneck rushing. His biggest contribution, Armory. however, was his outstanding Sure .the American Football League has taken great strides blocking and bis performance ·11 competing with the established N.F.L. but don't forget those earned him the offensive player nrst few years of A.F.L. existence were sheer hell. They had of the game award. "Scooter" the money and ability to endure but the main reason why the Giroux again led the rushers A.F.L. was able to remain in existence was due to the fact that with 111 yards gained and he also the fans were ready for Pro Football expansion whereas Pro had a 65 yard sprint for a T.D. Basketball, althougti, on the rise, has not completely caught Joe nullified because of a penalty. Fan's fancy. Sure The Celts and 76ers draw great but did you Gary Worden and Mike Barton, ever catch a Detroit-Baltimore Sunday afternoon game before both sophomore linemen, came a crowd of 25 people and the reason they are there is because off the injured list and did an they are the player's ~ves: What I'm trying to say is ~ro outstanding job of lineblocking. Basketball is not booming hke Pro Football was at the time Captain Steve Hymen showed of the A.F.L. birth. Also the talent is not there to floor that again why he is considered one many respectable Pro calibre teams. , of I. C.'s best offensive guards Y,ft;$tt8M The A.B.A. has tried to bring bac~ the basketball ad­ ever. Halibacks Rod Howell and ·:antage to the little man by ~warding 3 points for any baskets Junior Rick Gebler contributed · ade from 25 feet or more and 4 pomts for any baskets made 3 T.D.'s and 122 yards rushing from the men's room but no rule that is made will take the between them during their play. JRACTIONAIRE WINTER TIRES game of Basketball away from the big man. Sure it's nice to see ing time. Soph placekicker, Dave a long set shot now and then but this is no longer the day Bonney was successful on a 34 TUBELESS BLACKWAUS yard field goal, the first of his 7.50-14(7.75-14) lllllii. For of the center jump. It is the big man thrashing a dunk that 6.70-15 (7.75-15) I" 2 •35 fills the Palestra and the Boston Garden. The three point career. ruling may be all right for girls intramurals but not the fast 8.00-14(8.25-14) bi.. r Defensive standouts included 1.10-15 cs.1s-15) ,.- 2 .-or *38 pacing rugged game that is played today. ' Sophomore Wes -Kissel, Seniors Some of you Basketball fans may have already become Jack Michalak and Bill Horne • 8.50-14 (8.55-14) h.. For 2' $42 brainwashed by A.B.A. President George Mikans ridiculous and the ever present Chuck Schir­ 7.60-15 (8.45-15) ,.. , statements that the A.B.A. will play anybody anytime, includ­ mer. Kissel, although weighing Tubeless Whitawalls Slightly Highar ing the N.B.A. We know that if the President pf the league only 185 lbs., played an outstand­ 6.00/6.50-13 Tubeless Blackwalls doesn't have confidence in his organization no one will, but I ing game at middle guard. Jack All prices PLUS $1.80 , thing George has beeri watching too many Twilight Zone movies ,Michalak enjoyed another fine to $2.56 per tire Fed. when he says the A.B.A. today is ready for the N.B.A. Maybe game and was particularly effec­ NO· MONEY DOWN - Excise Tax; sales tax I didn't read far enough and he said that in order for his tive against Susquehanna end and 2 trade-in tires Take Months to Pay/ off your car. league to beat the N.B.A. the older league would have their sweeps. Bill Horne, playing a new ' ands tied behind their backs but if not, George better take position (Def. Tackle) for the first a couple aspirins. time, played such an excellent My best wishes are extended to the American Basketball game that he was rewarded by League in this their initial campaign but if I were you I would being selected Defensive Captain think twice before I bought an A.B.A. season ticket. I'd buy for I.C.'s next game. L.B. Chuck a hula hoop instead. Schirmer played his usual out­ , For those of you who are still interested in buying tickets standing game. Pri~ed 01 shown at fire,rone Store,, competJttvely prked at flra1tone Oealera and at all aervic:• 1tatlon1 displaying the flrulono 1tg11. ,' for the "Poll Bowl" game between SOUTHERN CAL and With the Susquehanna game . ' Notre Dame see Rick Fidgeon in Room 312 as he is chartering now a thing of the past and West

·1 a plane for this, the last game of the season. Chester on the horizon, I.C. is My most humble apologies for my Football sr,heduling trying to patch up a number of SD'lloW 1io!i"e error in last week's column hut I was too busy thinking up a weaknesses which were very evi­ me for the thing that now resides on our campus. dent in Saturday's game. For one, the passing attack although Shorrtage improved still has a way to go WEST CHESTER COLLEGE before it can be considered effec­ ICE and IFoD"eC

THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 20, 1967, PAGE 14

Continued from pogo 13 Bommbeirs Challenge satisfy various prof e s s ion al Sports Desk needs, certification requirements By PAM DAVIS [ among them. The second phase is West Cheste~ Friday a graduate program leading to The World Series is history-the cha~pions are crowned! the Master of Education degree and happiness reigns in one American city. The annual fall .. by MIKE HINKLEMAN in the following fields: elemen­ classic going the full limit was the frosting on the cake for the tary education, health and physi­ This week, the Ithaca College and may in fact be even better stake. . . . Last week, Harvard darlings of the baseball world. Their final scamper to the flag Bombers will travel to the Phila­ than the offense. The defensive pasted Columbia 49-13, while cal education, music education, was the triumph and glory of 21 years of frustration. Entering delphia area Friday night to take secondary of Ed Swetkowski, Cornell was crushing Princeton English, social sciences, French, on the Rams of West Chester Fred McKonley, Len McLaughlin, 47-13 .... Ironically enough, both .German, Spanish, biology, geog­ the series the cinderella kids were the underdogs-being the State. Head Coach Bob Mitten's and Denny Shank has already teams were undefeated at a raphy, mathematics, physi.cal sci­ underdogs they stirred the bandwagon that follows those su Rams, unbeaten in five starts, are played together for two years. similar stage last season, when ence and - pending Department ·as they. Going into the fifth game they were down 3-1. Then of Public Instruction appoval - currently the 11th-ranked small Shank was an all Pennsylvania Cornell traveled to Harvard, and a giant of a man stepped to the mound and silenced Los Birdos. college team in the nation, ac­ State-Conference safety · a ye a r was beaten 21-0, as Harvard chemistry, physics, guidance, and The Bosox were riding their Impossible Dream home to Boston cording to the latest UPI poll. ago. Other defensive standouts in­ later went on to grab a part of audio-visual education. Graduate West Chester, although small, clude Brian Mulhern, tackle the Ivy League Championship. study toward the M.Ed. degree -that unreachable star was looming closer. Now Waslewski is exhibits quickness the likes of Mike Haines, and linebacker ... Now that the Orange of Syra­ may be pursued on a full-time on the mound. He isn't even on the World Series program but Alabama, both on offense and de­ Terry McConnell. Last year the cuse has been defeated, the top basis during both the fall and the way he starts off it certainly doesn't seem to bother him. spring semesters and the sum­ fense. Offensively, the Rams are defense held opponents to an av­ ranking in the East is up for Petrocelli is ·at bat-Boom over the green wall. But the Sox grabs. . . . As for predictions, the mer session. paced by senior quarterback Jim erage of slightly over 10 points get behind later. It's the fifth inning and a parade starts-­ Haynie, a dangerous passer. Two per game. season record is 10.9 for 526. _ .. The second major objective of weeks ago, in West Chester's 50- West Chester has not had a los­ This week's winners (?): the College program is to provide Vaz, Smith and the little short stop for a repeat performance. 6 rout of Millersville, Haynie ing season since the second West Chester over Ithaca - a liberal arts education for the The old nemesis of the Red Sox Lou Brock steps up--400 feet fired three touchdown passes World War, and with its versa­ The Rams have too many guns youth of the Commonwealth. To over the bull pen-4-4. On the home side of the 7th inning t!J and accounted for some 205 yards tile, ex p 1 o s iv e offense, an d and too much balance, but the this end, the College was official­ Bean to~ players go ahead to stay-their unreachable star· 1 ly approved by the State Council with his strong right arm. Other strong, fluid defense, this season Bombers will give 'em a real 'within their grasp. offensive standouts include end will certainly be no exception. battle. of Education for the purpose of Don Wilkinson, who hauled in 49 Undoubtedly, it will take a su­ Cornell over Harvard - Jack offering a liberal art5 program, The finale· Lonborg vs. Gibson-two profesisonals, two ath. passes a year ago, the Nye preme effort by the Bombers to Musick need only remind hi s effective September, 1962. Th e letes, two men with a job to be done. The pitchers duel begins. cousins - Bert and Dick - and dislodge the Rams from the ranks charges of last year's 21-0 defeat four-year program now leads to The 2 game winners are readying .themselves to either be cata. Roger Grove, all solid runners, of the unbeaten. at the bands of the Cantabs. a Bacpelor of Arts degree in hu­ pulted to immonality or to be resigned to wait till next year...... manities, social sciences, natural and all of whom can score from Alabama over Tennessee - The Jong season is boiled down to nine innings of championship any point on the field. The outfit Hot off the Grid: Al Santos, Dewey Warren is hurting, and sciences, and mathematics. of Ha.ynie & Co. averaged over Bridgeport punter, leads the 'Bama shows signs of returning The continued growth and im­ ball. The anthem is being played and a hush- falls over the parti­ 400 yards a game last year. West NCAA small-college division with to form. provement of the College's cur­ san Fenway crowd. Their Lords of La Mancha take to the Chester's only weakness last a 48.7 average, latest statistics Texas over Arkansas - This is ricular offerings is an ongoing field-Old Fenway shakes with the noise. You get the feeling year, if that seems possible, was revealed. . . . The Ivy League the year of the Longhorn in the concern of the Administration that win or lose the fans will still love their team. Each pitch in the place-kicking department. showdown battle looms large as Southwest Conference. and faculty_ Under the leadership hangs heavy and every play has meaning. Champagne celebra. To remedy this situation, Coach unbeaten Harvard invades Cor­ use over Washington - O. J. of the Dean of Academic Affairs Mitten added the talents of soc­ nell to do battle with the unbeat­ Simpson & Co. remain undefeat­ and the Curriculum Development tions rest on the outcome. It is the fourth inning and Lo, cer-style hooter Glenn Porter. en Big Red this Saturday with ed in their march toward the Committee, periodic evaluations Birdos lead 4-0. The star mov'.es further away. A glimmer in t The defense is veteran-loaded, first place in the Ivy League at pivotal Nov. 18 date with UCLA. are made, with emphasis on both fifth as Scott comes home. But Julia Javier hits a 3 run homer. subject matter content and Suddenly it's over-the whole season is ended. The Cardiac methods of teaching. Special ad. kids strove toward that star with every ounce they had but hoc committees make continuous Hockey Team Downs Cortland were beaten back by a worthy opponent. Two teams, champions The Ithaca College field hockey combined individual skill with The lineup - study of a broad range of cur­ ricular problems and report their in their own right, started on the field, the better team left team faced Cortland, one of its teamwork to produce 6 LC. goals. Goalie ...... Jan Robinson, findings and recommendations to as champions of the world. St. Louis is in ecstasy; their c~­ toughest opponents, on Thursday Lynn Tyler di.splayed great stick­ ·. Joan Finn* work and accounted for 5 goals. Left Fullback ...... Penny Curtis the faculty and the Administra­ quering heroes have done it. Three Gibsons were too much for afternoon_ The final score was Jrnet Cahoon went in for the Right Fullback ...... Jackie Goss tion. anyone. His pitching was perfection and he deserves the crown. Ithaca 6 - Cortland 1. In the field of teacher educa­ other Ithaca score. Left Halfback .: ... .Cookie Brahm What of his foe? After the 6th inning Lonborg left amidst the The game was at a stalemate at The team has 2 games to go Center Halfback .... Chris Holden tion, the great bulk of the Col­ cheers of thousands. A standing ovation to a worthy recipient; the end of the first half at which - one with Wells College and Right Halfback .... Ginny Willetts lege's program offerings has re­ time the score was 1 all. In the another at Brockport. Brockport, Left Wing ...... Sara Jane Werner ceived Program Approval status his head hung in defeat. But Boston salutes him for the 2A second half a fired-up I.C. team another tough rival, will really Left Inner ...... Lynn Tyler from the Department of Pub 1 i c that were masterpieces. Though the Sox are second best tha ·. took the field and played a great Instruction. This means that in be out to come back with a win Center Forward ...... Carol Smith incentive enough to try harder next year. 1 game. The defense was at its after losing to last year's squad Right Inner ...... Janet Cahoon the not too distant future t h e Next spring is a long way off. A chance for us to recover best stopping all Cortland':; at­ by 1 goal. We hope that neither Right Wing .... Dianne Ingraham, College will issue directly to its and for them to revitalize. Next season will dawn brighter tacks and feeding the forward team will be able to spoil our Alexia Larson• graduates the provisional certifi­ for the glow of this series and the heat of the pennant race will line beautifully. The forwards team's unblemished record_ • Substituted in second half cate for teaching in those pro - brighten the hopes and dreams of everyone. Baseball got a need­ grams. ed shot in the - and I'm glad the Beantown Bombers had a LINKSTERS PLACE FOU,RTH The various programs at West hand in providing it. After all is said and done it can be re­ · Chester are comprehensive; de­ flected that this was truly a season to remember. Ithaca - The Ithaca College of 316. Each man encountered strokes as Ithaca recorded a total signed to satisfy the intellectual, golf team traveled to Syracuse one or two bad holes, as Wright of 329. The scoring was high due physical, and spiritual needs of on Saturday, October 7, to par-. and Bobbett led the team with to tricky greens and the extreme all students. A wide span of ex­ ticipate in the E.C.A.C. Region- 78's, Moore had a 79, and Riseley length of the course. Rick Wright tracurricular activities - lee­ a1s at the Drumlins C.C. The ,four had an 81. None of the team recorded the second low score of tures, concerts, entertainments, Challenge Round man team, consisting of Rick members were able to finish in the day :is he shot a 79, finishing religious clubs, and undergrad­ By Ben Reese Wright, Ron Bobbett, Butch Rise- the individual qualifiers as the one stroke behind Dave Mayer of uate publishing among them - ley, and Terry Moore, placed top ten cut off point was 77. Plattsburgh State. Other Ithaca affords each student opportun­ 1. Which Tea,ms played the first college football game? fourth behind Canisius, Colgate, On Friday, October 13, the players and their scores were ities to enrich his personality Princeton and Rutgers played the first game at New Bruns and St. Bonaventure in the team ended its fall season by Ron Bobbett (82), Butch Riseley and character, to mingle purpose­ wick, New Jersey, on November 6, 1869.- Rutgers won the St. Bonaventure in the twenty placing second out of ten teams (81), and Terry Moore (87). Coach fully with his fellow students and game 6 goals to 4. All this stemmed from a challenge. Rutgers team field. The Bombers missed in the Brook-Lea C.C. Invitation­ Broadwell was quite pleased with his faculty, and to seek the full­ challenged Princeon to a series of three !@mes, the first to be qualifying for the finals in Long al, in Rochester, N.Y. R.LT. beat the teams effort,; in both tourna- est expression of his talents and played at Rutgers, under Rutgers rules. The second game was Island as they recorded a total the Bomber Linksters by four ments. potential capacities. played at Princeton, using the Princeton rules, and was won by Princeton. The third game was never played because of FACULTY AND STUDENTS the dispute over the ground rules. for the 2. Who once made four long touchdown runs in the first ten· minutes of tke game? month of "Red" Grange, of Illinois, turned in one of the greatest per­ ½ ·PRICE SPECIAL October formances. eyer against Michigan on October 18, 1924. Grange Show your I.D. or 'Parking Permit to the cashier for SO% discount on your car led the Ilhm to a 34-14 rout of the Wolverines before a crow wash. Texaco Credit Cal'ds honored. of 67,000. He ran back the opening kickoff 95 yards for A touchdown before the game was 10 seconds old. To this he -... Mon. thru Sat. ~ added touchdown runs of 66, 55,and 40 yards. He was then 8:30 to 5:00 taken out, but returned in the third quarter to score a fifth touchdown, thus accounting for a total of 30 points him- Sunday self. , 3. Wlzi.ch two teams p/,a,yed in the first Rose Bowl? . 9:00 to 2:00 Michjgan pl.ayed Stanford. i1:1 the first one on Jan. 1, 1902. The Wolverines, led by Wdhe Heston, a great running back, and coached by the great Fielding Yost slaughtered the Indians, 49-0. ' 4. Who were the stars of the VTDD-DF Army backfields and who were the otker backs? "Doc" Blanchard, known as "Mr. Inside" and Glenn Davis, known as "Mr. Outside", were the star running backs of the Army from 1944 to 1946. The ·other backfield players who played wtih Blanchard and Davis were quarterbacks Doug Kenna and Arnold Tucker in 1945 and 1946. The other runni~ back in the Army backfield ~as Herschel Fuson. I will !11' to answer any and all questions readers mif!;ht have pertammg to spons. Please send al] questions to Beo Reese, Ithacan office, Dorm 12, rm. 103.