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

10-24-1969 The thI acan, 1969-10-24 The thI acan

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XLII - No. 8 Ithaca, New York, October 24, 1969 Price 15 Cents Fall Weekend Is On Field Work To Become Reality by Gregg Lindsley The energetic Interfraternity .,•·,·:--;···,~:- council bas put together another Committee Presents Report on Fall Weekend for those who want Noted Critic to test their survival ability. Feasibility of Public Service The Weekend begins tonight at by Jean Stillitano 8:30 p.m. with a carnival held iql Relcvan~y and active education programs, Dr. Bisno will speak at ,~v•~,j ~=::~:!;; To Visit under the "Big Top" located near are two big points which are the college at 4 pm and 7 pm the tennis courts. Entertainment ::t'{i Attacked seeping into the universities and on the potential for a community will be provided by "The Sounds \tt.i Thursday c::olleges throughout the United service and public affairs pro­ of Magic." The coronation of the >:'i Five Ithaca College students States today. Not to be left out­ gram at IC and Community serv­ ing and Queen of Fall Weekend ·"'-) :: canvassing for signatures during One of the foremost literary side the move to make education ice and relevancy for the Ameri­ ill take place a.t 10:30 a.m. Greek '.~~'.·; Moratorium Day activities on Oc- critics in the English-speaking a personal learning experience, can Undergraduates. If students oaths will be set up to provide ·«· ., ·; . tober 15 were threatened by a Ithaca College has just issued the generate the interest and become world, Northrop Frye, will visit urther entertainment. Beer, will, ~::r-· man wielding a wrecking bar and results of a summer long study involved in the possibility of a as usual, be .served. ··tf~ shouting obscenities. the Ithaca College campus on in public service education­ public service program at IC, sev­ (Last year the carnival was so ';-;(.' : .~. . The five. students - Patricia translation:' Field Work. Last eral aspects of the report can be successful that a person had Thursday, October 30, and Friday, O'Connell, Tod Rossi, Rosalie La­ Spring the campus was hit by implemented immediately. trouble moving about without October 31. monica, Jim Butts and Iris Good­ groups from all departments They include the selection of nocking some poor soul over: man-were visiting homes in an J\Ir. Frye will highlight his pushing for relevancy and up. a coordinator for the program in his year, IFC has rented a larger Ithaca neighborhood to garner dated curriculums that would community service and public ent for the festivities.) visit with a lecture Thursday at signatures on a petition urging give students the freedom and re­ affairs who would be chosen Tomorrow afternoon at 2 p.m. 8:15 p.m. in the Union recreation sponsibility to take the book from among present faculty mem­ he bleachers will be waiting for , ·Yi. the passage of a congressional bill submitted by Senator Charles room. learning and to use it outside of bers. The coordinator would be all those who wish to see the Goodell (R.NY) calling for the the Ivy Tower situation. With responsible for curriculum de­ thaca Bombers try for their According to Professor John · · withdrawal of US troops from this in mind student congress un. velopment and coordination, as fourth straight win when they Viet Nam by December, 1970. Ogden, who is in charge of the der the direction of a three man well as advising students who take C. W. Post College on the choose to focus on community for Mr. Frye's visit, committee sponsored a study into Hill. In a statement issued one day the feasibility of a public service sel'vice. In addition, an office of At 8:30 p.m., the Buddy Miles after the incident, the students re· Mr. Frye will visit classes and dine program in the IC curriculum. field placement (something simi­ counted that the man jumped out Express and the Friends of Dis­ Peter Orville, a member of the lar to the career planning office) of a truck, swinging a wrecking with mixed groups of students tinction will present a concert in committee announced that the re­ could be established. This office, the gym. This should prove to be bar, and yelled several times, and faculty during his stay. On port, if taken seriously by all according to the report, "would "I'm going to beat your heads in." one of the most exciting events Friday night he will attend "The college members, from adminis­ assist in placemc!Jt of students in community projects and keep of the weekend, so even if you Shaken by the incident, the stu­ World of Saki," a reader's theater tration and faculty down to the have not purchased a weekend dents returned to DeWitt Park to students, w o u 1 d "radically a file on all projects and re­ tickt, don't m,Ss these grealt turn in their signed petitions and production. He will depart for change" the idea of IC's educa­ search. A wide range of services groups, then proceeded to · the hOme of Wells College in Aurora on tional structure. In its goal and would be provided, including con­ Dr. Jake Ryan, professor of poli­ tact with various community After this concert, a second Saturday. objectives the report states: "The dance "under the Tent" featuring ti<'al science. From there they Ithaca College program was born organizations to aid in placing "The Sounds of Magic" will con­ called a lawyer for advice. He Mr. Frye is being brought to of a desire to further illuminate students in work-research-situa­ counseled them to call the city tions, and an information and clude the weekend. Beer will campus by the College Center of the student's academic work flow again. prosecutor, who is handling the through personal work experience placement service for any depart­ the Finger Lakes. ment wishing to place a student." This year's Fall Weekend will case. in society's structure, organiza­ rank high upon the list of the The students went to court A proxcssor at Victoria College tions, and events. It would have Curirculum adjustments, would two unique features. First, it is be mandatory. "Cooperating de­ best Ithaca College Weekends of Thursday morning and filed a in Toronto, Canada, Mr. Frye has all time. Do not forget-there c i formal complaint. The complaint, for undergraduates. Second, the partments would be requested to are no curfews for those women according to Miss O'Connell, been a critic of prominent stand- program is interdisciplinary." take actions approving curriru­ lum· relating their departments with permission and three o'clock specifies a Class A misdemeanor ing for many years. His published The big test of the work of Dr. on Friday night and four o'clock under the Menace Statute. Chester Galaska, Peter Orville, to the program. Courses would works included Fearful Sym­ be added to supplement present on Saturday for those others If convicted, the alleged assail- and Kevin O'Brien, as well as the affected. metry, a study of William Blake, test for the program in general offerings." Also necessary to the ant could receive a one year jail program would be a standing If you have a date, have fun. will come this Monday when Dr. sentence, a suspended sentence, Anatomy of Criticism, and Fables committee on community service If you don't, Winter Weekend The Friends of Distinction Herbert Bisno appears at IC. An of Identity, a collection of 16 cs- and public affairs, composed of is not far away. in Concert Saturday. or a suspended sentence with a international authority on com­ fine. says on poetic mythology. munity service and public affairs Continued on page 2 Plans Set I & E Offers For Parents Hot Cider by Seth Morrison Senator Charles Goodell (R. N.Y.) will be the keynote speaker at an honors convocation on The Impressions and Expres­ Saturday, November 1, at 10 a.m. sions coffee house has announced in the Hill Physical Education its plans for Fall Weekend. Center. . The convocation, a highlight of The coffee house will remain Parents Weekend, is held annual· open all night Friday and Satur­ Iy to honor those students who day for students who do not want have achieved academic excel­ lence. to pause in their enjoyment of The program includes an aca­ Fall Weekend. Hot apple cider, demic procession with faculty donuts and coffee will be avail­ members dressed in full academic regalia and accompanied by the able. The coffee house is located students being honored. The col­ outside the chaplin's offices, un­ lege orchestra will play during the ceremony. der dorm 3. All are welcome to Honors will be awarded to stu­ drop in. dents who have earned member­ The coffee house has an­ ship in the campus honor socie­ ties, Zeta Sigma Nu and Oracle, nounced plans for a folk concert and the top two students in the to take place in the Spring. The sophomore, junior and senior classes. ·Departmental awards will concert wUl feature folk artists be given by the academic depart­ from the Ithaca-Cornell com­ ments. munity. Anyone who is interested Joe Mariello, chairman of in participating should call Laura Parents Weekend, has announced the full weekend schedule. On MacEachen at X-3577 or 277-4819, Continued on page 2 or David Horte,n at 277-3973. 8:30 p.m. - the Buddy Miles Express at Hill P. E. Center. THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 2 ·cLASSIFIEDS PUBLIC SERVICE B E f d Th s d A N. 10¢ per word - 110 minimum. Submit m•m::ti•.:°':::: ::.:;..,1 .tan. n oBrce . e tu ent . -S. 1gger- AD TO THE ITllACAN OFFICE (:Saae­ ment We&t Tower) or Call 274·3207 - with the duty to direct the pro- ~~gatnst ooze (The. following article, which enter. The faculty tell him what cept "two truths," as did certain Mou· Fri. 1 - r, P,M. gram in the first year. we printed several years ago, has courses to take (in my depart- medieval churchmen. Outside of The entire feasibility report After discussions with student beccme almost a standard in col- ment, English, even electives class, things are true to your depends on involvement and, as leaders, the deans and the Presi- LEE'S GARAGE ort adds, "proJ· ects may lege journalism. We are reprint• have to be approved by a faculty tongue, your lingers, your sto- the rep dent's Cabinet met Wednesday vary from totally voluntary serv- ing it at the urging of many stu- member); they tell him what to mach, your heart. Inside class, FOR: Repairs on all makes and called for the cooperation of and models, including for­ ice with no course credit or dents and faculty members.) read, what to write, and, fre- things are true by reason of ·clat·onshi'p to proJ·ects with all components of the College eign cars l 1 F quenUy, where to set the mar- authority. And that's just fine be- specific research goals and appro- community · in strictly enforcing by Jerry arber N.Y.S. Inspection gins on his typewriter. They tell cause you don't care anyway. Miss priate academic credit." Projects the ban on the possession of al- Students are niggers. When you him what's true and what isn't. Wiedemeyer tells you a noun is Front End Alignment would not be created artificially coholic beverages at on-campus Electrical Tune-Up get that ·straight; our schools be­ Some teachers insists that they a person, place or thing. So let ior research, but would grow out athletic events. gin to make sense. lt's more im­ Brake & Motor Overhaul of known community structures encourage dissent but they're al­ it rbe. You don't give a rat's ass; and needs". The policy basis for the prohi- portant, though, to understand most always jiving and every she doesn't give a rat's ass. 402 S. CAYUGA ST. Said Dr. Galaska, "The big bition comes from the section of why they're niggers. If we fol­ student knows it. Tell the man 273 - 1821 Rear Entrance point of the program is aiming the student handbook which low that question ·seriously what he wants to hear or he'll The important thing is to Loward the establishment of a states: "use or possession of al­ enough, it will lead up past the fail your ass out of the course. please her. Back in kindergarten, public service department which coholic beverages on campus, ex­ zone of academic bullshit, where When a teacher says "jump," you found out that teachers only dedicated teachers pass their some schools have already. Right ce_Pt where explicit!~, authorized students jump. I know of one pro­ love children who stand in nice now Ithaca college isn't ready will not be tolerated. knowledge on to ,a new genera­ fessor who refused to -take up tion, and into the nitty.gritty of straight lines. And that's where for the entire department. But Action to enforce the ban re­ class time for exams and required I human needs and hang.ups. And this at least, is a step in the , fleets the concerns expressed by students to show up for tests at it's been at ever since. Nothing from there right direction." students, members of the faculty we can go on to con­ 6:30 in the morning. And they changes except to get worse. sider whether it might ever be Dr Herbert Bisno's schedule 1 and guests after last Saturday's did, by God!. Another, at exam School becomes more and more for Monday at IC is as follows: \ game that overindulgence in a.l­ possible for students to come up time, provides answer cards to from slavery. obviously a prison. Last year I l ·00-3:00-Conference on Currie- 1 cohol posed a threat to public be filled out - each one enclosed First let's see what's happen­ spoke to a student assembly at · ulum (Room U-5) j order and safety. in a paper bag with a hole cut in §yl11au Jlltlls ing now. Let's look at the role Manual Arts High School and 4:005:15--Ithaca College's Po-; To aid in enfor~ing the policy, the top to see through. Students students play in what we like to stick their writing hands in the then couldn't get out of the god- tential For A Community Serv- signs are being posted at the call education. 1757 Slaterville Road ice and Public Affairs Pro- stadium stating that possession of bags while taking the test. The damn school. I mean here was NO , gram (Room B-103) alcohol is prohibited. The Safety At Cal State, L.A., where I teacher isn't a provo; I wish he WAY OUT. Locked doors. High 6:00-Dinner at Terrace Cafeteria Division has been instructed to teach, the students have separate were. He does it to prevent fences. One of the inmates was 7:30-9:00-Address: Commmunity refuse admission to persons car­ and unequal dining facilities. If cheating. Another colleague once trying to make it over a fence DINNER Service and Relevancy For rying alcoholic beverages. Mem- I take them into the faculty caught a student reading during when he saw me coming and dining room, my colleagues get 5:00 to 9:00 American Undergraduates hers of the Liquor Control Com- one of his lectures and threw her froze in panic. For a moment, I (B-101) mission will be on duty in the uncomfortable, as though there book against the wall. Still expected sirens, a rattle of bul­ were a bad smell. If I eat in the another lectures his students into lets, and him clawing the fence. , CLOSED SUNDAYS stadium during future games to assist with en.forcement of the student cafeteria, I become a stupor and then screams at What school amounts to, then, policy. known as the educational equiva­ them in a rage when they fall for white and black kids alike, lent of a niggerlover. In at least asleep. is a 12-year course in how to be ~C&II.N"f-2: one building there are even rest Just last week, during the first slaves. What else could explain Steaks, Sea Foods, rooms which students may not meeting of a· class, one girl got what I see in a freshman class? and Roost Prime Ribs i~ NOW OPEN PARENTS WEEKEND use. At Cal State, also, there is up to leave after about ten min­ They've got that slave mentality: , on an unwritten law barring student­ Continued from page 1 utes had gone by. The teacher obliging and ingratiating on the ELMIRA ROAD faculty lovemaking. Fortuately, rushed over, grabbed her by the surface, but hostile and resistant I Friday and Saturday evenings at this anti-miscegenation law, like arm, saying, "This class is NOT underneath. .• • Ice Cream Made Daily Specialists in 8:15 p.m. in the Hill Center, there its Southern counterpart, is not dismissed!" and led her back to As do blaclc slaves, students SUNDAES, SHAKES & CAKES will be a gymnastics and swim­ 100 percent effective. her seat. On the same day another vary in their awareness of what's PARTIES AND BANQUETS ming exhibition. Students at Cal State are poli­ Open late Fri. & Sat. Nites teacher began by informing his going on. Some recognize their The Jacques Loussier Trio will tically disenfranchised. They are class that he does not like beards, own put-on for what it is and even "Play Bach" Friday evening in in an academic Lowndes County. mustaches, long hair on boys, or let their rebellion break through Ford Hall at 8: 15 p.m. Their per­ Most of them can vote in national capri pants on .girls, and will not to the surface now and then. formance promises to be a keen elections - their average age is tolerate any of that in his class. others - including most of the Rock and Roll Music combination of the fine musical about 26-but they have no voice That class, incidentally, consisted "good students" - have been talents which the artists and the in the decisions which affect more deeply brainwashed. They 11 mostly of high school teachers. THE COMMON TOUCH" works both employ. their academic lives. The stu­ swal!ow the bullshit with greedy playing at To top off Friday evening, the dents are, it is true, allowed to Follow Orders mouths. They honest-to-God be- entire campus is invited to spend have a toy government of their Even · more discouraging than lieve in grades, in busy work, in BOOTS' INN Halloween with Steven Brown own. It is a government run for this Auschwitz approach to edu- General Education requirements. Friday Nights on West Danby Rd. and the "Que Pasa," in the Ter­ the most part by Uncle Toms and cation is the fact that the stu- They're pathetically eager to be ; concerned principally with trivia. COUNTRY IMM race dining hall beginning at dents take it. They haven't gone pushed around. They're like those 10:15 p.m. It will be a time for The faculty and administrators through twelve years of public old greyheaded house niggers you Saturday Nights parents and students alike to decide what courses will be of­ school for nothing, They've can still find in the South who fered; the students get to choose Danby Rd. (968} 272-9727 socialize Friday evening over learned one thing and perhaps don't see what all the fuss is soft lights, pleasant strains and their own Homecoming Queen. only one thing during those about because Mr. Charlie "treats smooth drinks will be provided. Occasionally, when student lead­ twelve years. They've forgotten us real good." After a buffet lunch following ers get uppity and rebellious, their · algebra. They're hopelessly College entrance requirements convocation on Saturday morning, they're either ignored, · put off vague about chemistry and phy- tend to favor the Toms and screen the individual departments will with trivial concessions, or sics. They've grown to fear and out rebels, not ·- entirely of conduct open houses in their maneuvered expertly out of posi­ resent literature. They write like course. Some students at Cal I tion. they've been lobotomized. But, State L.A. are expert con artists respective buildings. At 3:30 p.m. in the recreation Smiles and Shuffles Jesus, can they follow orders! who know perfectly well what's room of the Egbert Union there A student at Cal State is ex­ Freshmen come up to me with an happening. They want the degree will be a panel discussion-forum. pected to know his place. He calls essay and ask if ~ want it folded- or the 2-S and spend their years Speaking lo the question "My Son a faculty member "Sir" or "Doc­ and. whether their_ name should on the old plantation alternately -The Student Activist," will be tor" or "Professor" - and he be in the upper right hand cor- laughing and cursing as they play .Tames Ball, Dr. Walter Carlin, smiles and shuffles some as be ner. And I want to cry and kiss the game. If their egos are strong ...... Kevin O'Brien and Dean of Stu­ stands outside the professor's of­ them and caress their poor tor- enough, they cheat a lot. And, of dents John Brown. fice waiting for permission to tured heads. course, even the Toms are angry Students don't ask that orders down deep somewhere. But it make sense. They give up expec- comes out in passive. rather than ting things to make sense long be- active aggression. They're unex­ for they leave elementary school. plainably thick-witted and sub­ Things are true because the ject to frequent spells of laziness. "HAPPY'S HOUR teacher says they're true. At a They misread simple questions. very early age we all learn to ac- They spend their nights mechani- FRIDAY 3:00 to 6:00 cally outlining history chapters while meticulously failing to PITCHER OF "THE KING OF BEERS" Your Plumber or comprehend a word of what's in front of them. BUDWEISER - ,ONE BUCK Now open on the Elmira Rd. Heating Dealer At This Price - Bring o Date I HULL HEATING & Inward Anger The saddest cases among both PLUMBING INC. black slaves and student slaves TRY OUR For Courteous and are the one who have so thor­ oughly introjected their masters' Dependable Service values that their anger is all CLUB BURGERS Kitchen Aid turned inward. At Cal State these 11.IJ:Pt }\ 804 W. Seneca St. are the kids for whom every low - S0l'ELSE~CE 49~ 272 - 3550 Ithaca, N.Y. Continued on page 8 TAVERN LLpYD1S -SECRET ARIAL 201 CLEVELAND AVE. - 272-6463 • hamburgers · • french _fries Typing - Mimeographing - Photo-copy 108 N. Aurora St. Duplicating - Notary Publf, • Electronic Stenclls Cut • cheeseburgers • thick shakes SATURDAYS NOON 6TIL 7 letterpress Printing BLOODY MARY'S 1/2 BUCK Dining Area AYailable 8 a.m.-4 p.m. - Mon.-Fri. --Evenings by Appointment - THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 3 ,------,----~--r Happy Birthday Erasmus Rod Serling Reporter lnvesti,gates BE WISE To Be Lecture Theme Reappears On Mysterious Construction by Marnie Holober by Chas. Lyman IC Campus· Does the populous of South Hill · details of the "new building·• The 500th birthday of the six­ tion at Princeton to Erasmus' !:now what the campus really were clarified. I teenth century Dutch humanist, intellectual development. by Seth Morirson needs? Duhious? Next question: As far as a new art building is Erasmus of Rotterdam will be The opening lecture on Tues­ Do the stuC:ents know what 1hcy, concerned, plans arc still "up in celebrated at Ithaca College on day, October 28, will be given by Professor Rod Serling, a visit­ a1·e going to gel? Rumor has it the air" because of a Jack of October 27 and 28 by a series of historian Lewis W. Spitz at 10 ing Professor of Radio and Tele­ that a spoking new edifice will funds. However, the :irt depart­ Jcctures. The lectures, to be host­ p.m. Spitz, a history professor at vision has been teaching this soon take its place among the ment is now growing and in des­ ed by Dr. Richard L. DeMolen, Stanford University, will lecture week at I.C. He has been speak­ box-like structures on the Hill. perate need of space in which to assistant professor of history at on "Erasmus as ~eformer". ing at IC since 1966, and was ap­ Sume think it is going to be a new hold their classes. Ithaca College Ithaca College, will discuss the Since 1967, he has been the pointed a Vis~g Professor in student union, some a new art first offered the art major in the Jifc, works, and place in history American Managing Editor of the 1967. Serling sjfoke to the fresh­ building, and others are waiting fall of last year. The temporary of Erasmus, and are to be held in Archive for Reformation History. man class during orientation for the college's own indoor skat­ solution to the art department's USE CLASSIFIEDS! Textor Hall, B-102. Ithaca College His publications dealing with the week about his views on today's ing rink to be built. A number of need was to convert the garage is the only college or university Renaissance a n d Reformation world. This past week, he has students, notably those of the bays below the football field into lectured in classes in Drama, FALL WEEICEND -:-lart1. 1h1"l aftf'11111 .. 11 in the United States to celebrate have appeared regularly in such physic:il education department, a workable space for classes in :1t tlu• 1:tn.t·.,r l ,· ((H•1l1, :.:-l'l :nt11 his birth on the eve of October journals as Church History and Film and Television Production, arc convinced that the soon-to­ painting and sculptering. This Hnc·k nn,l lhmt·~ ~ (,.r ;,111 27, 1469. Journal of the History of Directing and Writing. He will bc-built structure will emerge as project is scheduled to be com­ the L('t at :,II h.11111 out clurm;: a joh mtrr· Ideas. speak to all R-TV freshman on the long-awaited indoor polo pleted by the middle of Novem­ , H'\\ Tl11• J!l"lnatp n1rp1.1rn.• pilot \\ ill. Dr. Spitz has been awarded fel­ Monday. field which the college has always ber. Long-range plans have been CIIARTAIR :.!:i7-1066. lowships by the Guggenheim In an interview with this re­ wanted. What about these talked about for a permanent art LINDA G.: TURN l'>U: ON. DEAD Memorial Foundation, the Ameri­ porter, Serling . had both praise rumors? What is the new building building in the next three or four M'.AN. and criticism for the R-TV de­ can Council of Learned Societies, going to be? Is there going to be years, if funds are then available. J11ST A MINUTE--Thnt·, nil ,: :,kc, the National Endowment for the partment He feels that the de­ a new building? Ithaca College is still firmly (11r an .d,•1 t l'rHACAN n•:ult•r to "Jlnt ,our .:cht"rtl'-1·1111•11t ant.l d1•t1•11ky faculty member since 1946. far enough in the study of the more about it." In the interview motivation behind television and with Provost Davies, some of the plans announced. J)u.,l:111 Ju•,t \\t•t·I~ :1t lhe Bnxrur , As an editor, Dr. Olin bas radio. SEE YOU IN WASHINGTON NEXT published the following major Prof. Scrling feels that our MONTH? works. Christian Humanism and CLOVER CLUB film department is also very the Reformation: ·Selected Writ­ SUPPORT THE BOMBERS TOMOR­ ROW! ings of Erasmus; Calvin Sadoleto: good. After viewing student pro­ A Reformation Debate; The duction here and at other schools GIRLS-·,o•· ,11h111!- .. i1111 :-1t thf' Jh,\• ,,r Catholic Reformation: Savon­ he feels that the only students t 111°' :dtt•r110011 Heading the list of distin­ arola to Ignatius Loyola; Luther, producing better films are those Erasmus, and the Reformation: guished speakers will· be Dr. Al­ who have had previous film ex­ Catholic-Protestant Reappraisal. St(',·1• .S• in,arl1 j,. 1111,<' ,llltl W('ll bert Hyma, Professor Emeritus of perience, such as most of the History at the University of The introductory lecture, "Eras­ 356 Elmira Rd. \\'h,· r1•11t ,,hrn vnu 1an 1111v' Blnrk mus in Profile" will be given by students at UCLA. .\1•a1lt•m1<' ~1:,,.1,•r.., Ho11t> : $10 00 Michigan. He is the historian who DANCING I>t•au of ~t11,ll'llt"- nf£1r,•. established the date and year of Dr. DeMolen. A welcome and in­ Serling is also very every night Erasmus' birth that is most gen­ troduction will be given by Pro­ in the College as a whole. He lnll'r,.. ,tf'tl ,11111 <111111i(11•tl i:irh,' arrh.-,rv • fllll1t'r\'i .. or nnd/or in .. tr11rtnr nrrclrCI erally recognized as the accepted vost Robert Davies. for ~[I.\.\ :1r1'111•rr ('ontaet Fr11n nt was especially pleased by the EXOCTIC DANCERS x:16:iO one. great number of students sup­ from N.Y.C. Hyma was born in the Nether­ l>nn 't lrt ,·,,nr !olk,; mif..R Jtharn's mo.qt porting the Moratorium on cam­ 3 Shows - 10, 11, 12 fnmou .. n::.:ht MJ1ot - thr Boxrnr . ~1- lands. After coming to the United Two Ph.D/s Granted wn,·R totH• 111 1•nt<•rtninment nn,t States in 1910, he began his his­ pus. In his opinion, the number (local talent wanted) MPr,·i1·r. Two assistant professor in the torical studies at the University of students participating in this department of modern languages Sundays - Rock & Roll Hill . . C'arr for !-nmr ,.:rmrr r1h,? of Michigan. He is a leading au­ at Ithaca College have been noti­ event shows the end of the apathy thority on the Northern Renais­ fied that they have earned their of students at IC. sance, and is reknowned for two Ph.D. degrees. During one of the classes he books, The Christian Renaissance and The Youth of Erasmus. Willard Daetsch, who has been taught, Serling stated that he was Specializing in World Famous BMC PRODUCTS ... Austin During his forty years of teach­ at Ithaca College since 1965, earn­ worried about the problems of Healy; MG; SAAB and all Foreign Automobiles as well ed his doctoral degree from the ing and publishing at the Uni­ over-specialization on the part of as SU CARBURETORS. University of North Carolina at versity of Michigan Prof. Hyma some college students. He thinks Chapel Hill. He earned his AB has been honored by many out­ that the student must receive a Be sure to stop in with your car standing awards. He has - been degree and his AM degree in in­ elected to fellowship in the Royal ternational affairs from Harvard broad undersanding of the world problems. We are here to help Historical Society and the Dutch University, and his MA degree around him before restricting you. Literary Society; received the in German from the University his studies to one small field. grant of Guggenheim Fellowship of Buffalo. Professor Serling praised the ESTIMATES FREE, ALL WORK IS FULLY GUARANTEED and Carnegie Endowment Lec­ Interested in iternational af. I & E coffee house on campus. tureship at the University of Liv­ fairs, Daetsch was the executive He likes to visit the coffee house erpool; was selected as one of the director of the Buffalo Council founding editors of the Journal of on World Affairs from 1954 to because it offers an excellent op­ PHONE 272-0952 Modern History and was the of­ 1959 and the 1957 recipient of the portunity for free and candid ficial United States representa- University of Bufalo Fronftier discussion with students. Alain Mauboussin ' tive to the 1936 World Congress Award for International Under­ The students at IC arc ex­ standing. of Erasmus Scholars in Rotter­ tremely glad to have Rod Serling dam. He is a member of the Modern Prof. Hyma will speak on Language Association and the on the fac~lty. He offers a vast AM Auto Repair "Erasmus and Scholasticism" at 3 American Association of Teachers professional background to the p.m. on October 27. of German. students of R-TV. And everyone 400 SPENCER RD. Speaking at 8 p.m. on "Eras­ Kevin Schmelter, an assistant enjoys his very interesting and mus the Humanist" will be James professor in Spanish since 1965, often humorous talks to the stu-_ NEW YORK STATE INSPECTION STATION D. Tracy, assistant professor of earned his Ph.D. degree from the dent body. history at the University of Min­ University of New Mexico in nesota. Albuquerque. Prof. Tracey began his teaching Schmelter earned the AB de­ career at the University of Michi­ gree at St. Bernard's College and gan. In addition to the acclaimed Seminary in Rochester and the article "Eramus Becomes a Ger­ MA degree at Syracuse Univer­ ANNOUNCES HIS man", be devoted his disserta- sity. FIRST ANNUAL FIRST AID SALE Buy 2 LP's and Re~eive Box Bandaids COMING 'SOON 57c ABSOLUTELY FREE or 69c Tube First Aid Spray ARMY PEACOATS Buy 3 LP's and $1.49 Can First Aid Spray $8 to $12 For Your Very Own Olive Drab - Government Surplus Buy 4 LP's and feed our parrot a banana! OTHER STYLES TO CHOOSE PLUS BEATLES LP $4.67 Take city bus to State & Corn St. CLUB SPECIALS Complete Stereo set­ GUN & TACKLE CENTER JETHRO TULL $2.67 up under $90. 504 W. State St. MOODY BLUES Across from Barrett's Sunoco THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 4 Editorials -- Guest Editorial Viet. Nam Moratorium Committee The Beginning: October 15, 1969 Sorry But • • • • by Michael Ainsley Last week's ltkacan editorial entitled "The Our main beef in last week's' editorial can Blot" was the target of an emotional flare-up best be expressed as a question - when should I've known the laughter of disbelief before, at Monday's Student Congress meeting. We a Student Congress representative take an is­ on American soil. Do we have the right, here but it's no easier to take now than if was the in the United States, to perform these acts were accused by certain members of Congress sue back to his dorm to be polled, and when should he have the courage to act on his first time. I've put my heart into the words to protect ourselves? All of us should examine of not knowing what we \\-Tote about - we own when time is short? I've written and moreover, the words of men our own consciences on what we are doing wonder instead whether those members under­ - The answer, we believe, is that representa­ who never knew my name. in South Vietnam. I think we're going to have stood what they read. tives should take all major issues back to the We came from one gray battlefield onto an­ a difficult time explaining this to ourselves. Unfortunately, there was an aspect of the dorm. How many representatives actually do other and over, time after time until our The Vietnamese are human beings who love, editorial that was ambiguous. Because we used this? Search your consciences, reps. minds were close in thought and our hearts cry, bleed, and die, just like you or me. They the term "student leaders," many thought that The Moratorium issue was a-dmittedly a were one. There were few of us that believed are people who have been.burned out, bombed we were attacking Kevin O'Brien and Patricia major issue but time was short when it was in this war, indeed there were few of us who out, and driven away from their homes count­ believed the means of this war could in any O'Connell, the president and vice president introduced into Congress. All of a sudden, less times until they resolve themselves to the 1 respectively of the student body. By student many representatives who had never pre­ way be justified in the end. thought of having no real possessions aside leaders, however, we meant the Student Con­ viously consulted their dorms decided that 'It was a time in my life when only reac­ from family ties, and even then death is a con- , gress representatives who had attained a posi­ they could not vote on this issue without tions kept me alive, and if I killed one of the stant thief. tion of leadership by virtue of their election consultation. Search your consciences again, so-called enemy I never thought about it un­ Think about death for a moment. It's some­ to that body. reps. til it was done. Now I will think about such thing one never gets used to. It's the same Kevin and Party themselves were extremely Further, Congress was asked only to ap­ things for the rest of my life. One thing the for the GI and the Vietnamese alike.· Death active participants in the Moratorium. On prove the Moratorium in principle. It was not prof cssional soldier is not taught is how to is the great equalizer of all men. Death-doesn't l\f-day both were put in compromising posi­ asked to decide whether the war was right or sleep at night when the bloody deeds are done. worry about which men are innocent and tions-Kevin's twin brother recently departed wrong but to support the effort of their fel­ Like old lovers and weekend friendships, the which are guilty, for once the breath has gone for Viet Nam as a member of the Armed low-students in the abstract-that is, to sup­ memory of war is there. out of the lungs and the brain is thoughtless Forces, and Patty was attacked by a man port an active attempt to change a stagnant There was that twelve year old girl, three there is no more prejudice, there is nothing swinging a crowbar as she canvassed Wednes­ situation. beds down from mine in the base hospital at but the empty shell of what was once a man. day afternoon. \Ve hold for them the same As we said last week, it is too bad that the Da Nang. She was a napalm victim with burns Death by violence becomes an accepted part admiration that we hold for the other mem­ glorious Camelot of Mday was sullied by the over eighty per cent of her body. She was one of life. For the GI it is not something that he ... bers of the student body and faculty that misdirected responsibility of some members of those innocent people .that some can over­ shakes off just by returning to society. participated in the l\foratorium. of Student Congress. look by saying, "This is war and such things Dateline Sept. 23, 1%9-A one-time close are to be expected." friend of mine shot himself after surviving all The memories of war are that of men with­ the hell of Vietnam without getting a scratch. out legs and arms, men who lose their sight, Why it happened I will never really know, but A Move For Involvement some who lose their minds, and of course last my educated guess is that he came too close Few people know ~,·hat's happening at Per­ University School of Community Service and but not least, some who lose their lives. The to realizing the truth about this war. His kinsville, a much publicized name and place Publbic Affairs, in a recent address indicated ins and outs are being bought and paid for trouble was that he buried the dead in his with the lives of young men; and no one wins, that was in the news last year when the college that the social sciences did little about ap­ heart and not in the ground. I guess my plied problems in times of peace. He states, not I, not the so-called enemy, and not even friend's place in history is alongside of Ira campus united and went Perkinsville "all the 'Perhaps our basic problem is one of commit­ the politicians who bring about these damned Hays and others like him. To me, such men way." Right now, a group of I.C. students have ment to public and community service. We conflictions of war. stand just as tall as Abraham,• Martin, and elected to live in Perkinsville and have been know that the idealism of youth becomes weak America, the most powerful nation in the John. living there doing field work for credit since under the batterings of adult realities and hy­ world, a nation which has brought tangible Post war blues is a terrible thing for a August. This public service situation has been pocrisies. Y ct wars have usually been eminent­ physical power to an awesome degree. A coun­ man to live with at times. I know whereof I the hope and dream of many I.C. students, ly successful in energizing even tired adults. try that is using this power against a people speak, for I carry my red badge of courage , • many of whom arc working now to change the William James long ago called for a moral who seem at best to be mounted on water with me. I'm not proud of it or ashamed of it, curriculum to one of learning in the class room equivalent to war to provide youth an oppor­ buffalo. In most cases they are poorly trained it's more or less a reminder of what an un­ and carrying that learning to an outside meth­ tunity to ·give service to the country and the and equipped and not motivated by deep con­ just war has done and can do to myself and od-using situation. world-service which would be constructive as viction. Rather, they are merely unsophisticat­ my country. A three man committee spent an entire sum­ war is destructive. In these times of decaying ed villagers and peasants who have been en­ Let us begin to do more than wear peace mer studying the feasibility of the field work cities, racial riots, student anarchy, repressive listed by terror or treachery. In some cases buttons and display bumper stickers. If we program in the Ithaca College Community and legislation, brutality and the ever present they are likely to have had only elementary are to reach the people we must go to the this week announced their discoveries. They threat of total annihilation of Humanity, all training in weapons handling and tactics. Their people door to door, selling peace as our best printed their comprehensive study in a report of us arc called on to make educational inven­ equipment is often makeshift, often just what product. which stated that the community has four tions as radical as war in mobilizing commit­ they can capture or fabricate themselves. Only I sometimes wonder how long the Vietnam basic factors which "lend strength to the de­ ment for improving the human conidtion." the leaders and hard core have a strong politi­ War would go on if it was'necessary to tum velopment of a community service program The idea is simple. If we, as students, want cal commitment. The rank and file are their the automobile industry into manufacturers of here.'.' They noted that Ithaca College has "a to go outside of our little world here on cam­ puppets, those who have been bought or in­ tanks, if it was necessary for the supermarkets cooperative group of faculty with wide experi­ pus, we can. \Ve have, as the report indicated, timidated. to give out food stamps. I wonder wliat would ence in service and public affairs areas; a the resources to work with and the people in­ Normally our country supports its wars. They become of the war, if Americans at home had loose, growinJ?; stri.1cture based on a recent re­ terested enough to work with us on such proj­ arc not things to be sought after; but if un­ to sacrifice a few luxuries. I wonder then how location to a new campus; a vitally interested ects. All we have to do now is to show our avoidable, the people will rally around for a long would our freedom fighting survive in student body; and a community with an ade­ interest, to make this campus this coming limited period of time, perhaps because this the months ahead. War is a fine and almost quate ran~c of resources for field work." With Mondav as alive as it was when the kids from is a democracy. But this war has very quickly always profitable thing, as long as it is some­ all these important pros for the program, it Perkins-ville were here. become different. The truth of the matter as one else's playground. seems as if the college communitv would not Dr. Herbert Bisno will be here then to serve· I sec it is simply this-no country no mat­ I believe the "Unfinished Odyssey of Rob­ only be more than ready to establish a work­ as a consultant on the proposed public .. service ter how big or powerful can force freedom ert Kennedy" was in part to bring peace in able and profitable community service pro­ program. The administration as usual will be on a less powerful country when that less pow­ Vietnam. And I also believe if a single man gram, but also a program that would suit the watching and waiting, and perhaps, even erful country doesn't give a damn one way or stands by his convictions long enough, he can needs of each and every individual who cares laughinJ?; at its nice, middle class satisfied stu­ the other about remaining free. The truth of make the world come around. I believe that about people, and who cares about his own cll'nts. Isn't it time we broke down that too the matter as I see it is simply this-we're you, as I, arc sick of the administrations, tricks, dcnlopment as a person. As the report states true image and did something? Or will be sit going in there and we're killing South Vietnam­ gimmicks and peace ·feelers in Paris. We are it, "The narrower concept of public service as hack and wait for another Perkinsville Proj­ ese. We're going in there and we're killing tired of bcinJ?; put clown and put 01£ with token solely welfare-related work and professions is · ect to come to us? children and we're killing women. We're going gestures. And I for one, will stand by this con­ rejected." J can Stillitano in there and we're killing innocent people be­ viction until Hell freezes or Johnny comes Dr. Norman Sundberg, Dean of the Oregon Managing Editor cause we don't want to have the war fought marching home. .... Letters To The Editor C.P.S. the itlaaca1- MEMBER Challenges 11 Blot11 Moratorium. They deserve better personally involved in the Viet­ Vietnam Moratorium as being Published weekly by students of Ithaca College than to be called a "Blot." Editor: nam issue. For this reason, Con­ unpatriotic Americans. We be­ Paul J. Leventhal gress could not pass a proposal lieve we are every bit as patriotic Last week's Ithacan contained Editor-in-Chief Cheryl Gelb which called for group support. as the American who does not Managing Editor Jean Stlllitano an editorial which was both un­ Supports "Blot•• This would defeat the purpose of fair and unkind. The editorial share our views, and we feel Business Manager Richard A. Cohen Editor: the day itself. For this reason that it is. neither just nor right News Sport-- Ellt•n llof!mnn called our student leaders a also, Congress members could not Georgbnnn Glnce Miko Hlnkcl1J111n :ll1kr Kutrz "Blot" upon the October 15 Viet­ After having read this past for others to label us as unpa­ L:u1ra <.oot.1111:111 l>it k Hnl..t•r ''hud, :\fill,•r issue of The Ithac.an, I felt it back a proposal to push for a triotic individuals seeking "peace Aihl•rt firet1 nl!' .\I Bnnm,::urtt.'u 1>nn Harr nam Moratorium. It contained a tir,•,:i:: Linclslny E,l Hndmnnn ,John Sntlw1th no-cut policy for October 15. If a at any price." What distorted ::-:I incomplete picture necessary to write in support of we seek in­ ,lo.Annr ~li~hrl Bob Scnndurrn person felt strongly enough stead is an end to the senseless • S<•th ).I0rr1sun Advertising- of the situ .. tion. The Blot, or the Student Con­ Art-- Bill O'Brien gress action which was grossly about the issues involved, he was and aimless policies our govern­ l"cature&-- J'lm Cutlncllo Stcvo Robinson Kevin O'Brien, Student Body Poa.rl Mruvka ,I l•an li rullt•y Sue Edelstcln misconstrued in your editorial. to take his cut and go out and ment is now pursuing in Vietnam, Knthy Jlurzkr .\ lh<'rl Greeno President, wrote a guest editorial l>n"id Jlu:!li Lay-Out-- Hohl'rt ,lont>M The student leaders you spoke say ~omcthing about it, not just :m end to the killing of American E~ll·lh• Ftnnl,:t•l Carol Bollag H,... nt• Kos:nt in The Ithacan the week before of as being less than admirable assume that his representative boys and an end to the destruc­ lr1R Boodrnnn (:t•or,:C' Carnric.·k 'l'oht• I..e\'in the Moratorium calling upon all Chrr\'] (irl'cra• .\drit•nnl' ,Tnloweky H.1tn J.. inttn were in full support of the Mora­ body had already expressed his tion of Vietnamese villages and llnrrii Uollo,·er :\fnr1lyn :\fuy Stl•11hen Sw<'rn(':r students to become involved in It. Pc,t"r .lo~, ~!nri.:rilt Xn(li;:'('li Phihu Tn\'lor torium - as individuals. If you opinion for him. countryside. .\Inn !'.oH<•worthy I II Chr•"l~ Urrns This editorial was not easy for llick L,•one will remember, Kevin · O'Brien Further, I think it important to We feel that it is wrong for Chris Lynmn .Tune Soycs Kevin to write. His brother is ... Rick llnn:oliuR Copy- wrote the guest editorial only note that the editorial was writ­ the United States to continue Frnn l!nrko\·er Photognphy­ Tina Saxton serving in Vietnam. Wilhnm Huof Barbara Goldberg J.. a \\~n ,·nl' Dnvi('s the week before asking all stu­ ten by someone who was not at support for a regime in South Williurn Stewnrl l!ike Carrol :Snnr:,: Din::-<'r Patty O'Connell, Student Body Cr:ui:- \\"olfo Dou,: Pinck llnrthn .Tones dents to participate. Pat O'Con­ the meeting and who did not Vietnam which, (1) refuses to t:llon Gold IJ11n11 GolthofCer Vice-President, marched down­ nell devoted all her time and bother to consult · anyone who broaden its political base, (2) jails town on M-Day and helped to can­ effort to the M-Day activities, was. That our Ithacan editors Tho Ithn<'nn offi<'e 1e lo<'nted on tho i:round floor of We•l Tower, the political opposition for ad­ l!m. 20:J on the Ithn<'n Coll,•i:-e South Hill Cnrnpua, Itl1nen, N.Y. 14850. vass the town of Ithaca. In the and for her efforts was attacked prove to be such a blot on cam­ vocating the same thing we are, Ad\'crtisini:: call 274,:1207 - 1 p.111. to 5 p.m. course of her efforts, Patty and by a crowbar during the march pus communications is hardly ad­ namely, an end to the war, (3) is I:ditorinl \"it•\\'B reflect the opinion of the Editorinl Boord. Th<'BC the students she was with were ,·i<'WB noither rrfloet the offi<'inl position nf Ithnen College nor nccce· downtown. Many Congress Repre­ mirable. plagued by wholesale corruption, sorily iodicnto tho eon.en•us of the •tudcnt body. attacked with a crow bar. sentatives were out canvassing or Robin Youngs and (4) is merely making a fast All l<>lterR nnd nrti<'les •ubmittr,I to the Ithncnn become tho property of the lthncnn. Thi• Itha<'nn reserns the ri,:ht to correct, or refuse to I, and many other members of participating in the march on this buck on the war as a result of .. 11ubli1h nny mnt<'rinl submitted for pubhcntion. Congress marched and canvassed day. Patriots Speak our presence there, while Ameri­ Subscription: $7 50 JH'r nr111lrmic yenr. Publi•hed weekh- durini: the school ,·enr. on M-Day. Whatever action Stu­ The National Moratorium Com­ Editor: cans are dying in Vietnamese Second Clnss Pni,tni:<' Puid. Jth:arn , !-:.Y. 14850. dent Congress took, Kevin mittee explicitly stated that M­ marshes. There can be no justifi­ Postrno•ter ph•noo send form 357!1 to llusiness llnnni:er. Tho Ithacan. Many people criticized those llhncn Collo,:e. lthacn, :..Y. 1..1850. . O'Brien and Patty O'Connell Day was a day in which individ­ who advocated support for, or cation for continuing support of worked long and hard for the uals themselves could become participated, in the October 15 Continued on page 6 THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 5

.. ·.;;,5::.... • • : ..... ::.-:.. The Misadvelltures of a Student Teacher That Was The Week That Was

by Jean Stlllitano by Wiliam Ruof "Look man, cool it. Peace, or bad, right or wrong, that's was also facing me. She majes­ in the tradition of my father, brother."· irrelevant. ''Relevancy is think­ tically raised a long, pointed fore­ my courageous father who sailed LA PAZ, ·Bolivia - Following hours of police takc-o\'er in The roars in the class subsided ing," I argued inside. "It's getting finger and curled it commanding­ around the world three times in company installations, the Bolivian military government an­ for a moment, and then, when the each and every brain in front of ly at me. the Second World War. He would nounced the seizure and nationalization of the Boli\'ia Gulf sound of my words hit them, they me working and critically think- "Me?" I queried. have had a cannon in this room Company, a subsidiary of the Gulf Oil Corporatwn. Bolivian roared again. My God, I giggled, ing.") · Yes, her white head nodded. by now, I thought. Army t_roops_ ucc_upied oil fi~l~ls and fla,nts near: Santa Cruz and rm reaching them, or maybe it Mrs. White, chairman of the I could ignore the bobbing "Look," the Class Clown was the m~m orf1ce ~1! La Paz._ 1he Gui Corp<"?ratwn. which began was the extension and abduction English department, appeared in­ white head, but the coinciding saying, "Look, let's get three operation!. 111 19:,:,, had an 111vestment rangmg around $J.l0 mil­ of the second and third phalanges side my classroom. "Miss Young," finger hypnotized me. gigantic amplifiers." lion. that did it. The sign of peace. she stormed, "turn that thing Oh God, what now, I thought. His best buddy and companion. CAl\l P PENDLETON, Calif. -The :\larinc Corps will in­ Mrs. Dedicated, my master down." I had rushed to the door and instigator added, "Let's pipe \'·estiP;ate.,, tl~e tr~at~ent (1f prisoners at the Pendleton Corps teacher, crouched in her first What do you care about rele­ had barely managed to give Mrs. Simon and Garfunkel into the base 111 California. 1 he base has been the scene of seYeral dis­ aisle seat and giggled too. She's vancy, I thought as I slowly Dedicated the "White signal" English office." turbances for the past four months. The announl·cment fol­ laughing at me; I thought, laugh­ turned to the fifty year old rec­ when White shOved herself "Hey," Jeff was obviously ex­ lowed an investigation by .1 brig chaplain and a former brig ing at my impetuousness, my ord player and eased the sound in through the door, just missing a cited, "hey, let's turn the player physician, and was made by the chairman of th!.' Hou~e Armed Services Committee. vouth, my position as a practice the room. collision with the glass. (I cer­ on full blast and when White RIVERDALE -The Bronx District Attonwv announced ieacher. So what,· I thought, so Mrs. Dedicated was distressed. tainly wish I could lock that comes in again, I'll wait at the what if I am one of them, they damn door.) In her best Hitler door with a hatchet." rmt Riverdale conducted 3,000 abortions over a t\\~1 n:.1r period I felt that, too. She wrinkled her fur sums ranging from ;:i-HJO to $ I ,500. The town g·rosscd $1.2 :ire mine, my generation, I feel long Italian nose at me and voice she shouted, "I was all the Outside, minature black birds them. And then I pictured my way down the end or the qall" million for its performance. A grand jury handed up four indict­ mouthed the words that Mrs. were splattered against a Fall ments covering 38 cases. The patient~ were from Yanous parts middle-aged Mrs. Dedicated giv­ White is definitely "an old as if I didn't know "and I can sky. I could see them in V forma­ ing the peace sign to the class­ still hear that thing. There's a of the country, and mostly from the middle and upper-111come fogey." For the first time in the tion trailing Moratorium signs groups. room and my . voice became the long month, long eight hour days test in the classroom beside you into the distant blue and white \\':\SHINGTON -This month, the I louse Committee on loudest in the classroom hysteria. as a practice teacher, I wanted to and there's a test in the class­ striped heavens. I should follow lntl.'rnal Security will conduct hearings on the ;1ctivities of SOS "-Oh well." I sighed, "Let's con­ room across from you, now have give Mrs. Dedicated the peace them, I thought. I should pack in five major U.S. cnies. High schools will be included in the tinue with Simon and Garfunkel." symbol. some consideration and turn that up my dreams and my relevancy thing down.'' investigat1011 with tcstimon11:s bq~inning October 20. The cities Simon and Garfunkel is another "Okay c_lass," I nodded. "So and follow them. arc: Columbus, Akron, Detroit, Pittsburgh, and \\'ashington. thing. Now, would Mrs. Dedicated they've 'all come to look for I nodded meekly, gulped, and I turned to the class again. turned to Mrs. Dedicated. She was HARLE:\! - The Congress of Racial Equality will not en­ ever, in her entire teaching America.'" They were banging their chairs d~1rsc _any candida~e for i\layor this year _in Nc,v York City. career of ten years or is it twenty The record player blared: sitting there, in her first aisle in agreement with Jeff's hatchet CORI·. stated that 1t would mount a campaign to chase mavoral (I've forgotten what she's told "Kathy I'm lost, I said, though seat, open-mouthed. My mind suggestion. Silently I observed aspirants- from the streets of Harlem. The national

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FUN FURS, MAIN "FLOOR REAR THE ITHACAN, OCT<;)BER 24, 1969, PAGE 7 Goodell Speaks Moore Talks Physics Takes a Step Ahead TRACKS . ·. On Blacks by Rick Margolius Against war by Laura Goodma~ Plans Non-Majors Course 1 ------~I by Joanne Mishel 'l'he evening of the Viet Nam by Bob Fizer ·- Moratorium October 15, was an The cultu;e that is head-dam played a heavy role in bring- Charles Goodell, Republican impressh·e 'ume lo capture the At Fall registration this year, of Measurement. and one of the ing about Janis' split from Big_Brothe~. Janis Joplin is too good !>enator from New York, high- attention of college students. any students looking for a free questions might IJ,. how do sci­ for the nothing out of the ordmary Big Brother and the Hold- lighted Moratorium Day activities Chuck Moore, a Producer associ­ elective may ·have discovered in enlists know the ,Ill' of a proton ing Company, right. with a morning speech in Cor- ated with WNEW-TV, New York, the course listings Physics 341- or the age of a ,tar Abo to1·ercd Everyone has heard that rap, Big_ Bro an~ Ho Co fo1:1nd nell's Barton Hall. had an enraptured audience as "Why the Sky is Blue and All 1 nthc course \\Ould IJp ;1dmh,1on themselves an integral part of the music s~cne m a large city. In a loud clear voice, Goodell he spoke on "White Man's Indif­ nd That." It was not a mistake. It of the concepts •if rnodcrn The fact that this city was for a short while the undergrou began with how good the crowd fercnce Breeds Black Man's Vio­ was not a joke of Mr. Rcgula's, physics."' Dr. Sadoff P111phas1zed music center of the world catapulted them to fame and brought looked, and "here we are together Jenee." He began his lecture on nor was it a FUSA course in the that within such broad topics, Big Brother's reput_ation as a m~jor America!' group. But, !t in the streets making policy." the thought that it is about time transcendental meditation of the many other areas of study arc was Janis who received the acclaim and credit for. the band s Then he joked about his bringing the Establishment realizes the llig Dipper. It was a real course possible. The course 1s ,omt·· success. So Janis' ego trip lealbum. In her album, I GOT DEM OL' KOZ- laughs subsided, the senator got mediately aligned our personal This seminar course is being the students. 11 ho must all be MIC BLUES AGAIN MAMA! on Columbia, Janis is scream- to the crux of his being in the thoughts with those of Mr. Moore. offered again in the Spring term. non.science. non-math majors, ing, bellowing, ranting and so on, in . her franti,c f n~nzy of a spotlight at -all. He stated that the indifference th Dr. Sadoff of the Physics Depart- Although it i, not a lab ~cicnce voice. She was good before and she s still good. I_t s evident at "One problem prevents us from youth feels today has been mcnt, in an interview with the Janis ~t this point feels more comfort'.1bl~ wuh a s~ul-roc~ solving our other problems" - handed to the blacks by the Ithacan, explained why: "The course, theer may he ~omc very accompaniment. She may soon regret _ch!s· ~h~ album is J~nis designating the war in Vietnam. whites for years. Think about usual way of teaching physics is informal lab investigation. singing and that's fine, but the old magic 1s m1ssmg. On CHEAP "We must get out of that mistake that. giving a low-level physics majors All those studPnts who are in. -THRILLS, you could clo~e your eyes ~nd fc71 the speed of the against face-saving at any price." · And think about the way it whole thing. Janis and Big Brothc_•r, with hair e_verywhcre, lots On the ideology behind the war, course, using what seems to many tercstcd in the ,cminar arc in­ of color acid and a wonderful fusion o f t h e entire roe k cu Iturc. Senator Goodell stated that "we feels to be admonished because of our students some high level vilcd to a film sponsored by the anis has' deprive ' d . us o f t I1at . .,ch e_ st1.·11 aims_· six · ·me hes b c_I ow oppose communism by supporting you arc a college student ... or math. This new course deals with Physics DPpartnlC'nt on October J concepts and problems, not high- b h 1s I h I in lo hear that your best friend was the belt when she smgs, ut somct mg ost _m t c trans au~n. corruption South Vietnam." er mathematics. What we want to 29 aot 8 p.m. in S-202 :'\obcI Sam Andrew, brough t a I ong r_or t h e n d e! I? I ays _a nice Although he claims to favor chased down the street by some- do is give non-science students prize winner Dr. Richard Feyn­ auitar. The blaring horns a dd not h mg, b ut J .~ms is J ams, an d immediate withdrawal, Goodell one with a crowbar in his hand. ...there is only one Janis Jop1· m. If :you can d". ig it, t h en d° so. reminded that we need more time Then think about how it is to be an opportunity to gain some man of the California Institute Spirit in its rat h er s h ort per10 d o f existence h as pro d u C e d for the logistics of ·getting our black, and young, and confused. appreciation and knowledge of of Technology will be shown de. three ' and resu ltmg · I y t h"1s group 1s· one_ 0 f t I1 e mo~ t . re- men out and home. This is where If the black man riots, they say how scientists investigate the na- livering a non-technical disrus. tural world and what they have . . . spected in the music underground. N o_ ot h er qumtct O f m';ls_icians his December, 1970 deadline "What do you want?" This past f d h I. 1 t k" II f s10n of Newlon s Law of Grav1tv has this overwhelming· compre h ens1on o f t h c comp I exitics O f comes in, and where his 'liberal summer there were no incidents. oun , w c no ma mg a o . . . · · them junior physicists. This A d1scuss1011 of till' film and the musical texture as possessed b Y S pmt.· · Th e mo~t rec_e(l t a lbum politicing' has alienated those and the administration wants lo is CLEAR SPi'RIT/Ode Records, and once aga1!1 Spmt creates who want withdrawal now. Sena- know what is up. knowledge is i~port~nt because! course ~or !ho~l' 111tercstcd, stu­ a mood, suspen d s you _m,· it, · ~n d I_caves Y';)ll f ceI mg b e tt er tha. 11 tor Goodell puts the responsi- Mr. Moore sajd that there arc so much of our lives 1s controlled dents will be hl'id afterwards. before. Randy California s gmtar 1s as lyrical_ and full of magic bility of halting the war with two things the black man wants by the implications of science and · technology, although I emphasize as ever. i rea II y d1g. t h e coII ect1vc· h ca d O f t h is gro up · They say Congress, who must "stand on from the white man-equality that this is not a course in so­ Patronize Your nice things. . . it's own feet and end the war." and respect. Aren't these the two ciety and technology." "Give a Life Take a Life" is a beauttful song written by The senator then discussed basic things that any man would C ·r · d ' d L Ae1"l ( l\'fam s & Papas) expect? The ~·outh of this coun- 'One of the possible topics in I Advertisers ah ornaa an pro ucer, ou er a · . "conscience politics," and that J this course would be the Theory I ______S pmt · · 1s · one o f t h osc rare groups t hat c a n tread water m America today can either "curse try have taken a step toward un- most any stream. They_ flirt with hard rock, put _out som_e ac- the darkness or light a torch to derstanding. They have not been cepta bl e Jazz,· b ut most o f a II pl a y s wect . • plcas1n<> • t-: music • If guide the people." Through an willing to accept the preJ·udices vou haven't already, give CLEAR SPIRI r_ a _long listen ~tart- effort such as the Moratorium, which their parents teach. ing with side two. Spirit breathes fresh air mto a chokingly the people have chosen to make a The trouble with the education crowded rock world. . "better country and world, in is not only at home, but in the Jack Bruce's first think since bye-bye Cream 1s_ SO~GS which we can live, in peace, in schools, where we are pro­ FOR A TAILOR on Atco. Bruce ~as long been a musical giant the time ahead." grammed, rather than taught to on the British scene. Besides dom~ most of the vocals for Thus ended Senator Goodcll's think. Mr. Moore believes that 2027 Slaterville Rd. Cream in addition to his bass play!ng, Bruce has played for speech. Those who favored his we must realign our educational SANDWICH MENU Manfred Mann, John !Vlayall and Graha'!' Bond. On the _nc,~. tactics cheered and flashed the system. Today is our world, not OPEN: Daily at 4 P.M. album Bruce plays gunar, bass, or~an, p1an_o, ~cllo an_d s1!1gs. 'V' sign for peace. Some were our parents'. Closed Sunday Everything is done well, _but c?'citcmcnt is ml on this thmg., unimpressed by the rhetoric. The Bruce would do better to f md _hims~!£ somt' other sul?erst~rs hundred-odd protestors flanking s1,.....'-*"•"", and form another super-group like his ex-teammates did wnh Goodell's stage still held their WELCOME I.C. STUDENTS -...... Stevie Winwood._ . . ~igns high. This group's mood on TO OVERDUBS: Baff Rose 1s ~ool · · ·. It :,vould be nice if all the the 15th was summed up on their heads would support Ithaca s c~ntnhution to the undcrground placards, two reading "NEVER music scene, Boffalongo, ~t Bailey Hall · · · The love album. TRUST A LIBERAL POLITI­ disappeared, some ot~cr time !llarbe · · · For a _laugh, look at CIAN" and "WHERE WAS pictures of Jack Cassidy on his first two Jeff Airplane albu!lls GOODELL IN 1965?" JUST RECEIVED AT ... Led Zeppelin is way overdue ... "Rolling Stone'' dc~troyed A brief question-~nswer period the Santana thing ... Lennon, McCartney and Hamson to followed the speech, in which make an album with Dylan and Mick Jagger. .Goodell re-stated his position on the war, and on the surtax exten­ Specializing in Italian Food lion, which he favors. Finally, Double Breasted New Neapolitan Chef someone asked about further U.S. FUR COATS ...... 48.88 DeAguero to Exhibit Art committmcnts, in places like SPECIALS ON Thailand, Loas, etc. Goodell nell University and, in the sum­ DINNERS • LUNCHES An exhibit of the paintings oI thundered "We tell them 'NO'." British Styled 32.88 mer of .1966, he studied under PEA COATS ...... Eduardo de· Aguero will be shown Loud applause met the above CARRYOUTS Picasso. in the Lounge of the Egbert statement as the senator slipped TAKE RTE. 13 Union from October 27 to Novem· Paintings by de Aguero hang backstage. U.S. Navy Style ber 8. The Union is open from 8 in the Museum of Modern Art in PEA COATS ...... 14.88 to 18.88 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. This is de Santiago, Chili, the Museum of Aguero's third one-man show at Contemporary Painting in Costa Used Army 5 88 the College where he is an as­ Rica, the Rockefeller Collection, FIELD JACKETS ...... • sistant professor of Spanish. and in the Eisenhower Museum De Aguero spent the early in Abilene, Kansas. Unlined & Pile Lined years of his life in Costa Rica Having built his reputation as C.P.O. SHIRTS ...... where he studied painting at the a water-color painter, de Aguero 7.88 to 22.00 School or Fine Arts of the Uni­ is now doing oils, some of which versity. He has also studied paint­ he will show at the current ex­ A FEW LAND-LUBBER BELLS LEFT ing under Kenneth Evett at Cor- hibit.

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r THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 8

STU DENT AS NIGGER . the high schools, you can forget a need which also makes him that spondeet" Even to discuss a Irina Arkhipova World of Saki it. Stillness reigns. cling to his "white supremacy." good poem in that environmen~ Continued from page 2 1 "The World of Saki" a Read- Ideally a teacher should mini­ grade is torture, who. stammer Forces A Split is potentially dangerous because Concert Date crs Theatre production of the mize the distance between hjm­ and shake when they speak to a the very classroom is contami~ drama-speech department, will be I'm not sure why teachers are self and his students. He should professor, who go through an nated. As hard as I may try to B k presented at 8:15 pm on Oct~: so chickenshit. It could be that encourage them not to need him Moved ac emotional crisis every time turn students on to poetry, I know academic training itself forces a -eventually or even immediately. The Ithaca College Artist Series ber 30, 31, and November 1, 1n they're called upon during class. that the desks, the tests, the · Arkhipova the Arena Theatre of the Per- split between thought and action. But this is rarely the case. Teach­ concert b Y I rma . . "Id" . You can recognize them easily at mM cards, their own attitudes It might also be that the tenured ers make themselves high priests previous!\' set for November 6, I forming Arts Bui mg.. finals time. Their faces are toward school, and my own resi­ security of a teaching job attracts of arcane mysteries. They be­ has been ·changed to Tuesday eve- The Saturday night perform- festooned with fresh pimples; due of UCLA method are turning timid persons and, furthermore, come masters of mumbo-jumbo. ning, No\·embcr 4. ance (Novemb~r. 1) has been their bowels boil audibly across them off. that teaching, like police work, Even a more or less conscientious Miss Arkhipova is the leading added to the or1g1~al schedul~ to the room. If there really is a Last Another result of student slav­ pulls in persons who are unsure teacher may be torn between the of the soviet accommodate the influx of v1slt- Judgment, then the parents and ery is equally serious. Students mczzo-soprano d f p ts Week of themselves and need weapons desire to give and the desire to don't get emancipated when they l,nion's famed Bolshoi Opera. ors expectc or aren - teachers who created these and the other external trappings nd hold them in bondage. There is graduate. As a matter of fact, we Her recital is being offered by e - · .,. wrecks are going to burn in hell. of authority. a kind of castration that goes on ' the School of Music as a bonus "The World. ?f Saki , d~a~n So students are niggers. It's don't let them graduate until 1, At any rate teachers ARE short in schools. It begins, before they've demonstrated their wil­ for subscribers to the 1969-70 I from the wntmgs · o! ~r~tish time to find out why, and to do on balls. And, as Judy Eisenstein school years, with parents' first lingness - over 16 years - to series, which includes concerts by 'I humorist H. H. Munro_. 1s d1~1ded this, we have to take a long look has eloquently pointed out, the 0 encroachments on their children's remain slaves. And for important the Pra"ue Chamber Orchestra on . in three !?arts, entitled Par­ at Mr. Charlie. classroom offers an artificial and free unashamed sexuality and !'-iovember 21. the Netherlands j ents", "Children", a~d "Other jobs, like teaching, we m:11te The teachers I know best are protected environment in which continues right up to the day them go through more years, Just Choir on February 11. Israeli : Oddit!cs". These . subJects seem they can exercise their will to college professors. Outside the when they band you your doc­ to make sure. What I'm getting pianist Daniel Barenboim on Feb- , especially appropriate for Parents classroom and taken as a group, power. Your neighbors may drive toral diploma with a bleeding, at is that we're all more or less ruarv 24, and the youthful Kore- Weekend. a better car; gas station at­ their most striking characteristic shriveled pair of testicles stapled niggers and slaves, teachers and an \:iolinist Young l!ck Kim on tendants may intimidate you; is timidity. They're short on balls. to the parchment. It's not that students alike. This is a fact you Just look at their working con­ your wife may dominate you; the April 8. sexuality has no place in the want io start with in trying to State Legislature may shit on Subscription tickets for the i B h ditions. At a time when even classroom. You'll find it there understand wider social pheno­ migrant workers have begun to you; but in the classroom, by God, series will be available at the I Sports roe ures but only in certain perverted mena, say, politics, in our coun­ fight and win, college professors students do what you say - or School of :\Iusic in \\'alter Ford I H d and vitiated forms. try and in other countries. Hall only until next Friday,: OnOre are still afraid to make more else. The grade is a hell of a wea­ October 31. The price of S7 to Ithaca College's sports bro- than a token effort to improve pon. It may not rest on your hip, Bleeding Brains Intimidate Or Kill IC students and faculty for the chures have again been honored. their pitiful economic status. In potent and rigid like a cop's gun, How does sex show up in Educational oppression is trick­ th California state colleges the facul­ but in the long run it's more school? First of all, there's the ier to fight than racial oppres­ five c\·ents. and _SlO to o ~rs. This time the National Wrest. ! . represents a considerable saving ling Coaches Association has ties are screwed regularly and powerful. At your personal whim sadomasochistic relationship be­ sion. If you're a black rebel, they over the single- admission charge judged Ithaca's brochure seventh vigorously by the Governor and - any time you choose - you tween teachers and students. can't exile you; they either have r-, Legislature, and yet they still can keep 35 students up for That's plenty sexual, although the of S3. among 109 entries. The College to intimidate you or kill you. But won't offer any solid resistance. nights and have the pleasure of price of enjoying it is to be Wl­ \' was entered in the University in high school or college, they They lie flat on their stomachs seeing them walk into the class­ aware of what"s happening. In I'· Division and was topped only by can just bounce you out of the A with their pants down, mumbling room pasty-faced and red-eyed walks the student in bis Ivy the Universities of Maryland and fold. And they do. ·nebel students catch phrases like "professional carrying a sheaf of typewritten League equivalent of a motor­ COMPLETE I Oklahoma, California Polytechni­ and renegade faculty members dignity" and "meaningful dia­ pages, with title page, MLA foot­ cycle jacket. In walks the teacher MUSICAL SERVICE cal Institute, Waynesburg Col- get smothered or shot down with logue." notes and margins set at 15 and - a kind of intellectual rough devastating accuracy. In high lege, and the Universities of trade - and flogs bis students • Nebraska and North Carolina. Professors were no different 91. school, it's usually the student when I was an undergraduate at The general timidity which with grades, tests, sarcasm and who gets it; in college, it's more The College's sports brochures HICKEY'S UCLA during the McCarthy era; causes teachers to make niggers snotty superiority until their often the teacher. Others get are edited by Phil Langan, Sports of their students usually includes very brains are bleeding. In tired of fighting and voluntarily Information Director, with design it was like a cattle stampede as Music Store they rushed to cop out. And, in a more specific fear - fear of Swinburne's England, the whip­ leave the system. Dropping out by Miss Margaret Gibson, Publica­ the students themselves. After ped school boy frequently grew 201 South Tioga St. tions Director. Brochures for more recent year, I found that of college, for a rebel, is a little all, students are different, just up to be a flagellant. With us, like going North, for a Negro. I: football, baseball, and hockey by being arrested in sit-ins Ithaca 272 - 8262 brought from my colleagues not like black people. You stand ex­ the perversion is intellectual but You can't really get away from ,______j have also won awards this year. posed in front of them, knowing it's no less perverse. so much approval or condemna­ it so you might as well stay and that their interests, their values, tion as open-mouthed astonish­ Once A Nigger . raise hell. and their language are different ment. "You could lose your job!" So you can add sexual repres­ How do you raise hell? That's from yours. To make matters Now, of course, there's the sion to the list of causes, along a whole other article. But just worse, you may suspect that you with vanity, fear and will to for a start, why not stay with the Vietnamese war. It gets some op­ yourself are not the most en­ power, th@t turn . the teacher in­ analogy? What have black p~ople position from a few teachers. gaging of persons. What then can to Mr. Charlie. You might also done? They have, first of all, Some support it. But a vast num­ protect you from their ridicule want to keep in mind that he was faced the fact of their slavery. and scorn? Respect for Authority. ber of professors, who know a nigger once himself and has They"ve stopped kidding them­ That's what. It's the policeman's perfectly well what's happening, never really gotten over it. And selves about an eventual reward gun again. The white bwana's are copping out again. And in in that Great Watermelon Patch pith helmet. So you flaunt that there arc more causes, some of which are better described in in the sky. They've organized; authority. You wither whisperers sociological than in phychologi­ they've decided to get freedom with a murderous glance. You Donohue - Halverson cal terms. Work them out, it's not now, and they've started taking crush objectors with erudition it. ' Inc. and heavy irony. And, worst of hard. But in the meantime what we've got on our hand is a whole Students, like black people, all, you make your own attain­ PLUMBING AND HEATING lot of niggers. And what makes have immense unused power. ments seem not accessible but They could, theoretically, insist awesomely remote. You conceal thh. particularly grim is that the student has less chance than the on participating in their own edu­ • your massive ignorance - and cation. They could make academic Estimates Cheerfully Given parade a slender learning. black man of getting out of his bag. Because the student doesn't freedom bilateral. They could "White Supremacy" even know he's in it. That, more teach their teachers to thrive on • lo\'e and admiration, rather than 602 W. Seneca St. The teacher's fear is mixed or less, is what's happening in higher education. And the results fear and respect, and to lay down 273 • 3393 with an. understandable need to be admired and to feel superior, are staggering. their weapons. -Students could For one thing damn little edu­ discover community. And they cation takes place in the schools. could learn to dance by dancing - How could it? You can't educate on the mM cards. They could :El"'V'":E~""!Iii?"' D'.:C>:n.l""ll:>..&..""!Iii?"' :EJ"'V'":El::aTX:n.l""

! l ······~················ f THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 9

ing to build students who see ship, and special events commit­ The faculty includes Eugene people, not merely patients." tees, in which the students have Arnold, administrator, Tompkins The World ofWheels New Program The demand for Health Ad­ voting rights and make decisions County Hospital; Walter Lalor, ministrators in the professional on matters such as course assistant professor of Health, / by Richard Leone - Attracts world is very great. Many hos­ changes, granting of scholarships Ithaca College; D. S. Motsay, pitals and health care centers and the setting-up of programs !\I, D., president, Guthrie Clinic; The image of the Ultimate Street Machine is finally have done extensive recruiting on for the coming year. The pro­ Frank Musgrave, assistant pro­ changing. Most recently, just about the coolest thing around 28 Majors college campuses. The starting grams for this year include a fessor, economics; and Franzika would have been a super-clean Chevy-II, jacked up about 6 feet by Gregg Lindsay salary is around $13,000 and series of lectures dealing with Racker, M.D., director, Rehabili­ in the back and complete with a. set of Don Garlits slicks on Twenty-eight students have en­ sometimes as much as $18,000 a the various phases of health care, tation Center, Tompkins County chrome-reverse rims in back, skinnytires with mags up front, rolled in a new bachelor of sci­ year. and field trips once a week. Dr. Hospital. ladder-type traction bars suitable for overhead support trusses ence degree program, Adminis­ Dr. Schneeweiss feels that stu­ Schneeweiss feels that since stu­ By the time a student com­ on the George Washington Bridge, a tube front axle suitable for tration of Health Services. dent participation in department dents will be making decisions pletes the four year program, he nothing, and mean bubble hood covering the very loud 283 if when they reach the professional ' The program, designed to train policies is important and will will be ready to hold a legitimate 1, you didn't have enough bread for the 396 or 427. people to manage the complex rely on student feedback. The world, they should start making place in any health agency that Now, anything with super fat treads, loud glass-packs, and operation of hospitals, state and curriculum, scholarship, intern- decisions while in college. needs management. gray-spoke mags is considered cool. This new road-racing look is Federal health agencies, nursing having a hard time divorcing itself from the rear-end lift kit homes, and other health care crowd, however. This is all well and good as far as handling facilities, is the result of long goes, but anybody with the money can make a Falcon look research. Besides overcoming fi­ "cool" with fat tires and map;s, and we all know that a clean nancial and establishment prob­ Falcon with wide tires is not the Ultimate Street Machine, right lems, the program had to be gang? approved by the Federal Govern­ What I would like to propose would be, I think, a good ment. - contender for the title. We'll start with either a Hemi-powered The courses are designed to Charger or Road Runner for two reasons: One, I'm a MoPar provide ·in-depth training in man; and Two, Hemi MoPars are just about the quickest cars health services and business ad­ you can buy from Detroit, as well as offering the best handling ministration, with strong support­ chassis around for under $4500. ing courses and electives in the Then, you must make a f cw changes, Southern style. Re­ liberal arts and sciences. Two successive summers of profession­ I. move the entire interior-everything; padding, seats, dashboard, rugs. Next, lower the body about 4 inches, and replace hood and al internship, lasting eight weeks r-, deck lid with fiber glass items. Gaping hood scoop and acid­ each, of various institutions such dipping are optional. Next, throw on a set of F60 Gqodyears as Albert Einstein College of \' along with some plain black rims, very wide. Remove the side Medicine, and the Bronx Munici­ I'· marker lights and fill in with putty. Paint if desired. Install two pal Hospital in New York City, racing bucket seats ( remember, this is a street car) and a NAS­ are required before graduation. CAR-type roll cage. Make a custom dashboard with large black­ General course openings are be­ faced Stewart-Warner instruments, a very large IO-grand tach, ing made available for everyone and toggle switches, located in front of the driver. Don't forget on campus. the racing safety harness, and wind about 6 rolls of electrical Dr. Stephen Schneeweiss, Direc­ tape around the steering wheel. Since this is a street car, make tor of Administration of Health sure the heater-defroster works. Be sure to place the fire ex­ Services, commented, "The rea­ tinguisher on the floor next to the Hurst shifter, and make sure son this major was developed is that has a T-handle. because we care about people and ..' we are trying to produce someone Now, give the old King Kong a little super-tuning. Install beyond the ordinary administra­ a set of headers, and bolt up some large-bore low restriction tor. We want a humane admin­ mufflers. Behind those, go to 3-inch O.D. pipes all the way back istrator, someone who really be­ to the bumpers. Please-no tailpipes. lieves in 'the joke', that TLC And that's it-the Ultimate Street Machine. Weighing in equals Tender Loving Care. That at just over 3000 lbs., it's got to be just about the quickest is a pretty big task. We are try- thing on the block-or in the hills. A noteworthy addition to the rather meager racing facili­ ties of the Finger Lakes region should make its appearance in September of 1970. Watkins Glen Dragway will be located just a couple of hundred yards west of the Grand Prix course, and Continue the 11uest for peace. will be a modern strip fully sanctioned by the National Hot March on Washington No\'cmber Rod Association. Darwin Doll, Director of the NHRA's Division 15. Bus sign-ups Monday in the One, said that the plans promise one of the most modern strips Union Lobby. around, so we should see some fine drag racing next fall at the I Glen. . ~,,- r--- .. / . ' : ( )I 'f. ·-- -· ART'S ' I ''1 ' HI-Fl TV REPAIR \ \.._ __ ' , i I' "--.' ; 'I TlfANSMISSION '-...__/, ,,. '-, ' - . '.rr SERVICE USED T.V.'s FOR SALE (~ ;1 ·-. ;\ (.,~_ ,,1: / CAMP ELECTRONICS CLEANING CENTER. Inc 1 156 E. State St. (Across from Rothschild's, 1 flight up)

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WARE ROUSE TONITE ~t ,:~ jli -! THE BRASS BUTTONS Also "BIG DADDY1 S SOUL INDUSTRY" Come early and enjoy Dime Draughts 8 - 9 273-1333 Doors open at 8 p.m. $2 · .. :.~.-.. ·_·:--·· ··~ ,_: ----~ ,.. 11,, 't THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 10 \, Student Congress Tal~ott Hall Livilig -- ~~--- I ' . . Reviews Frosh .,.,-· -=-----,--·-- . ~ ----;,,-.,,,...,. Curfew Bill A New Idea In Language -- ,.:;__ . --....,-. by Kathy Banler by Marnie Holober --- The Modern Language Depart- Delmar, California which places have all students speak Spanish or ""··-..... The proposal of the Women's ment of Ithaca College initiated· students or teachers from foreign French in the dorm-to trans­ House Council Association that a new program this fall at Tall­ countries to work as language form Tallcott into a real language freshmen women no longer have aids in just such programs as the house." Isabel can see that the --- cott Hall. Under the direction of curfews was presented to Stu- one at Tallcott Hall. Fran~oise program has succeeded already dent Congress Monday night. The Dr. Anthony Taras, department Lindecker, one of the French in the improvement of the girls' chairman, and Jane Pyle, instruc­ language aids, enjoys working in prOJ\Unciation, and she tries to proposal for abolishing freshmen tor of French, both wings of the the language program because she help them with the "little things curfews was arrived at after a All those interested in bua first floor and the odd wing on thinks the students "can learn they miss in class." All the aids campus wide poll of both upper­ the second floor at Tallcott are so many things about France be­ commented that the language transportation to "March on class and freshmen women was being used as a language dorm. cause they know a French girl." teachers have been very helpful taken and several other alterna­ The idea for a language dorm Fran~oise hopes that the French and interested in the program, Washington" for November 20th Century-Fox p...is tives were considered, according developed when upperclassmen group will be interested in doing but because it is new there is a new things and she plans to give need for more organization to to Alice Prerau, vice-president of language majors expressed an in­ 15: there will be sign-ups In .. lledazzled" terest and a desire for such ;. lessons in French cuisine soon. make it "really work." PANAVIS10N° rm l7f Deluxe ~ Women's House Council Associa­ program. In addition, letters were Roselyne Tourame is a Latin The housemother at Tallcott the Union Lobby Monday, tion and Student Congress Rep. sent last spring to incoming major from Marseilles, France. Hall is Mrs. Debbie Smith. Mrs. A no curfew system was favored freshmen who might also be in­ Roselyne feels her main job as Smith and her husband, Pete, Od. 27. EUB FILM· ~ERIES a language aid is to converse as and recommended to Student terested. This semester, approxi­ found the response to the pro­ Sunday, ·November 2 Congress as opposed to a curfew mately sixty students, both upper­ frequently as possible with the gram varied. They too, admitted for eight weeks, one semester or classmen and freshmen, are par­ girls in French, help with their that the problem was that some UNION REC lteJOM two semesters, as it is now. Two ticipating in the Spanish and the pronunciation and introduce them of the girls in the language wings basic reasons for this decision French programs at Tallcott HaJl. to French customs and ideas. could not speak the language, and 7 & 9:30 Roselyne would like to teach the were cited: 1) that each individ­ The participating students en­ their interest could not be as :======----:------­ ual, as "a member of a free think­ joy a number · of advantages girls some French songs and per­ great as those who could. Mrs. ..-... ing society should be capable of through living in either the haps produce a· French play in the Smith commented on the excel­ NARDl'S determining her own academic French or Spanish wings. There dorm. lent job the language aids were and social obligations," and 2) are conversation hours, usually Both Roselyne and Francoise doing in cultivating an interest COCKTAIL LOUHGE ')' that freshmen curfews is a case on Tuesday nights, when the stu­ commented that "some of the among the girls. of two-fold segregation, for there dents discuss the. customs of girls speak French very fluently," Miss Jane Pyle, advisor to the is a segregation of classes as well France and Spain and the other hut the problem is that not all program, said "We think we have I as segregation or sexes. Stressing Spanish countries with their the girls living in the language generated an interest." The re­ that the motives underlying this language aids. wings are language majors or sponse of the students seems tes­ Pitcher of Bud - $1 decision did not include the con­ An opportunity to learn the can speak the language. Because timony to this. Shelley Stoll, a venience of time, Miss Prerau language on an informal and of this problem, any rigid rules freshman French major, makes 4 to 6 Mon. - Fri. stated that a "recommended" cur­ idiomatic level is also available to speak French or Spanish are known her feelings: "I like it few would be suggested. Dorms at the language tables where the impossible. Both the aids and because it gives us an opportuni­ FULL COURSE DINNEIS would close at this time, although students eat their meals with the students hope this problem ty to use our French, have weekly SPECIALIZING IN STEAKS freshmen would have keys. their language aids, conversing will be solved in the future so conversations with French girls." ALSO SUVJNG SANDWICHES ON HAID IOLLS The possibility of initiating a only in either French or Spanish. that the program may grow and Shelley was a little disappointed, . ACCOMMODATIONS FOl • OFFICE PAITIES • IANQUffl public service curriculum was Many of the students frequent become a real advantage to lan­ though. "I thought we'd speak discussed by Kevin O'Brien in the the French or Spanish table in guage students. French more than we do." But, Executive Report. Last spring, J. the Terrace Cafeteria two or Isabel Marc from Rosario, Ar­ Shelley speaks for a great many $5,000 was allocated to the Arts more times a week. On Thursday gentina is a very enthusiastic lan­ of the girls in this last enthusi­ 273-9947· \· and Sciences Curriculum Com­ evenings, there are movies or I guage aid to the girls in the astic note: "It could be some­ JOI ILMlltA U At,..... a.• Rt9. II ITNACA, N.Y. mittee to investigate this matter. lectures. Spanish wing. Isabel would like thing really good-if everybody The purpose of such a program Amity is an organization in the progams "to really work-to tried." would be to provide a sufficient background for students plan- ning to enter public service er­ ganizations such as CORE and VISTA upon graduation. Prof. Chester Galaska and Peter Or­ Now Two of ville have been working together to determine how IC might set up such a program, and how present courses might tie in with ITI-IACA'S OLDEST CARDS the program. One possibility would be to have in-training serv­ ice for juniors and seniors, with credits received for the training. Are Also Two of The preliminary report of Galas­ ka and Orville will be presented Tuesday. Monday, October 27, at 8 p.m. in the Rec Room, a guest ITI-IACA''S NEWEST CARDS speaker from New Jersey will further explain public service --, programs. _ r------r- --, Other business included the ap­ ----- proval of George Carnrick, Bruce I I I Geller and Connie Wood for the I Library Committee. The Campus I Place your I I Place your Life Report included two pro­ posals that are being investi­ CORNELL ID I I I gated: seating student and facul­ I ITHACA COLLEGE ID ty representatives on the Board I I of Trustees and obtaining a copy I here. here. of the Budget for Congress. The I Grievance Committee announced I 'I I that many complaints had been voiced concerning the high price l- .J· _J of books in the bookstore. Two ---..... L------alternatives were mentioned; that --- the bookstore be student-run and to sell books at cost on a non­ profit basis. Both will have to be investigated. In closing, the outcome of the Moratorium was commended by President O'Brien. PIZZA HUT, OCTOBER

Traditionally, our college ID card has admitted you to school athletic events, dances and rallies. Other than that, it's really pretty useless. (Especially that picture). Well, not any more! In this age of "anything" cards, CORNER OF GREEN & PIZZA _HUT, 430. Elmi~ Roa~, has decided to give·. CAYUGA STS. you a httle- more Just for having a valid college ID. From 7 to 10 P.M. weekdays, your ID will get you a SOc discount on any large PIZZA HUT pizza. So, • break with tradition and take advantage of Ithaca's two newest cards! ! · After the game ... Meet and eat at 272-8233 GEORGE'S STUDENT DISCOUNTS: ··- THE ITHACAN, OC.'TOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 11 LETIERS dents wishing to support the First, Congress is a non-parti­ Continued from page 4· Moratorium had ample opportun­ san, a ·political organization and the Thieu-Ky military dictator­ ity to sj.gn petitions, attend the therefore, has no right to take ~ ship. No longer will the Nixon rally, and canvass for support. stand, ~s a representative body, Administration be permitt~d to As pointed out in an article also on the 1Ssue of the Vietnam War. dupe · our people with the stale published in The Ithacan on Oc­ Second, the national Vietnam political rhetoric that we are in tober 17, "Approximately 450 Moratorium Committee empha­ South Vietnam for the purpose students drifted in and out of the sized that they wanted an in­ 1WAREHOUSE f of upholding freedom, democracy, rally area." It seems that the dividual commitment to October · etc. ones who should be weakly com­ 15, as they asked for "concerned Moreover, it is clear that we fended are those students who citizens", and not organized have achieved our limited ob­ did not 'Support the Moratorium groups, "to spend that day partici­ jective in South Vietnam: we rather than the Student Congress pating in anti-war programs in have prevented a North Viet­ members whose purpose it is to their local community." As you namese conquest of the South. reflect the attitudes and protect will note, they didn"t ask uni­ Having done that, the time has the rights of the students. I hon­ versities to close their class­ come to ship out. We can fool estly believe that few, if any, rooms for that day, rather they Wednesday, October 29 ourselves if we wish, but no coun­ of the 15 members voting against desired that those concerned cut try regardless of how powerful the Statement were against the their classes. it may be, can impose stability Moratorium. At any rate, 15-14 is Thus, as I supported the move­ externally on another country if a much closer ratio than 3500- ment personally, I was forced to that nation refuses to take steps 450! vote against the motion .. on its own initiative to attain You accurately cite the fact David Klein that goal. In the final analysis, that many members felt that it it is their war; it is the Viet­ was wrong to act without consult­ Holmes Hall namese who must win it or lose ing their dormitories. You say it. The U.S. has paid the price we should have voted for it be­ Editor: Get Blasted Halloween Special cause, "No senator has ever with 40,000 dead and countless Holmes Hall is not in turmoil billions of dollars. Now, the time polled his constituency on every as stated by The Ithacan in last is long overdue for us to extricate issue before Congress." A com­ week's article. It was quite an ourselves from this war, with mon complaint against our pres­ exaggeration to use the head­ as much expediency as possible, ent system of government is pre­ line, "Holmes in Turmoil," and so that we can then rightfully de­ cisely that Senators and Con­ the article under the headline did WITH vote fuller attention to the vast gressmen do not consult their con­ little to clear up this mistake. problems and ills that beset our stituents before voting on issues. There has recently been some ')" own country. Defeat of the proposal by Con­ tension in Holmes over the rais­ All we ask is that America gress is considered by you to be ing of some issues, but the term show its pride and honor by ad­ a weak commendation for its "turmoil" is extreme and mis­ mitting that it has made a mis­ members. On the contrary, I feel leading. I take. Why should we simply con­ it is strongly commendable that Craig Wolf, President tinue to perpetuate war, when students can put aside their per­ we could train, educate and pro­ sonal biases and vote in a man­ DIRTY BAND" vide the Vietnamese people with ner they consider correct. One of Down on Bouscaren "THE OLD the greatest complaints heard needed food, medical aid and Editor: homes. People must eat, but not concerning the educational sys. It is unfortunate that the stu­ all people want to kill or be tern is that there is no longer dents who distributed Professor • Just returning from unsuccessful tour of Dryden and killed. any individuality. Other people Anthony T. Bouscarcn's article did Whitney Point As for the Paris Peace Talks, are always deciding what you not see fit to do a little research all that has been decided has want and don't want, what you on the author. The handout been the size and shape of. a worth­ support and don't support. All appeared to be designed to leave • Billb~ad Mag sez "Absolutely terrible." less table. Nothing constructive Congress did in defeating the the impression that the author a has been accomplished, and little Moratorium statement was to professor of Political Science' at progress has been made. Why not give back to the students a chance LeMoyne College, was presenting give peace a chance? This is to make his choice for himself. Is a "scholarly" analysis of the • Fillmore East - "Get them out of here" what we are for, and if we are this immoral? Is this unethical? backgrounds of the leaders of the unpatriotic for advocating all of Is this a "blot"? October 15 Moratorium. A close this, then surely we can justify Jacqueline J. McGinnis reading of the article, of course, and revel in our un-patriotism. quickly dispelled that view. The • Mad Mag - "Fantastic" Michael Hinkelman '70 article read to me very much like Jeffrey S. Richman '70 Voted Against M-Day some of the works of anti-com­ Editor: munist, super-patriots of the Student Congress It might be advised that when early 1950's. Guilt by association I Editor: you choose to write an editorial, is an old political tactic and one -;·· As a member of Student Con­ you take the time to investigate that is not worthy of distribu­ gress who voted against the state­ the facts on which you base your tion by Ithaca College students. ment of the Moratorium Commit­ opinion. Members of the Ithaca College ~ tee, I feel that it is necessary To say that those members of community may be interested to to respond to your editorial of Student Congress voted against know that Professor Bouscaren is October 17. the supporting of the Moratorium also the author of The Last of the Apple Smash 50c All Nite First of all I doubt that few "in principle" because "they felt Mandarins: · Diem of Vietnam, a people, least of all the members that it was wrong to act without highly favorable biography of the of Congress, question their au­ consulting their dormitories" is late President Ngo Dinh Diem. l! thority to speak for the entire an inaccurate interpretation of This book was reviewed in The campus on most issues but rather what actually occurcd in Con. American Political Science Re­ their right to do so when it con­ grcss on October 13. In addition, view (December 1965) and the cerns such an issue as the Viet­ I sincerely doubt that any repre­ following is the first paragraph nam Moratorium. The role of sentative fails to recognize that of that review: Student Congress is to express the Vietnam War is a "national "This book simply cannot be Witches Brew 40c All Nite the desires of the students when issue." taken seriously as a work of it is not feasible for the students I cannot state why others voted scholarship, even though it surely to do so themselves. This was against the proposal, but the rea­ purports to be one. Sometimes it not the case on October 15. Stu- son that I did is two-fold. Continued on page 12

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LETTERS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ComingUpNextWeelc Lucille·_ Baker·_ To Sing· 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 Continued on page 11 Fall Weekend - 1.F.C. Carnival outdoors is comical; sometimes pathetic, 8:30 to 12:30 a.m. -Tennis Courts sometimes merely banal; but it is In ·Concert- October 29 DELICIOUS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25 never scholarly. However, it may ~ All of the perfonners are mem­ FOOD AT deAguero Art Exhibit - Union Lounge have other uses. It has some pass- A song recital will be presented in Ithaca College's Walter Ford bers of the Music School faculty THE RIGHT :\1 ENC Student Convention \.. ing interest as an event in the Hall by Lucille Baker, soprano, at Ithaca College. Mrs. Baker PRICES Fall We:ekend - I.F.C. Concert - Friends of Distihction developing public debate over at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, October and The Buddy Miles Express has taught voice at the college our role in Vietnam. Students 29. Mary Ann Covert will be the 8 to 11 p.m. - Ben Light Gymnasiu_m since 1960. She attended the accompanying pianist. Evening Supper I.F.C Rock Dance featuring the Sounds of Music of public opinion may find it Westminster Choir School, Fre­ 11 to 2 :30 a.m. - Carnival tent useful as an instance of propa- The free public concert opens donia College and Juilliard, and Menu with "lhr Volker, Hort" by G. P. ganda-by-monograph; instructors holds undergraduate and grad­ 8 p.m. - 1 a.m. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 Telemann, in which assisting in­ uate degrees from Ithac!J College. of English may use it as an ex­ deAguero Art Exhibit - Union Lounge strumentalists are David Berman, She studied voice with E. Evans 2 ample of how not to write. Its flute, and Einar Holm, cello. Mrs. and Serge Kagan and is con­ 0 :\lONDAY, OCTOBER 27 professional utility, however, Baker will sing "Marianlied," tinuing her work with Josephine 2 dcAguero Art Exhibit - Union Lounge "Hat dich die Liebe beruht" and Antoine at Eastman. would seem to be seriously Erasmus of Rotterdam, Quincentennial Symposium "Und gestern hat er mir Rosen In addition to numerous per­ D "Erasmus of Rotterdam in Profile" by Dr. Richard L. limited." gebracht" by Joseph Marx, and formances in the Ithaca area, she R DeMolcn - Textor Lecture Halls B-102 - 1:30 p.m. Needless to say, many of the "Chansons de Belitis" ·by Debussy. y has appeared in concerts and Welcome to Erasmus participants and introduction of sp~akers reviewer's comments are applica- The final group will be songs radio in New York City. Mrs. D by Provost Davies - Textor Lecture Halls B-102 - 2:45 0 blc to the handout distributed on . n Swedish texts composed by Baker has also sung in the Chau­ E p.m. . Jan Sebelius, with English --ver- N "Erasmus and Scholasticism" by Sr. Albert Hyman th1s campus. sions by Maria Pelikan. The tauqua and Provincetown Opera Textor Lecture Halls B-102 - 3 p.m. Robert Kurlander Swedish songs include "The First companies and with the Chau­ R D. ''Erasmus as Humanist" by Dr. James Tracy Assistant Professor of Kiss," "Lost" and "The Night.' tauqua Symphony. Textor Lecture Halls B-102 - 8 p.m. Political Science Come In and See Us I THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30 Happy Halloween deAguero Art Exhibit - Union Lounge To Keep Your Spirits Up CCFL Lecture - EUB presents Northrup Frye Music Educators Baseball PHONE 272 - 2111 8:15 p.m. - Union Rec Room "The \Vorld of Saki" Drama and Speech Department Conference Set Continued from page 13 H& HLiquor & Wines 8: 15 p.m. - Arena Theatre - Performing Arts Building The New York State conven­ Pirates,. were brought up from with his fine speed and accurate W AA Pumpkin Contest tion of student members of the the freshmen team, which com­ arm. Other fine stickers during 218 E. State St. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31 Music Educators National Con­ piled an 8-3 record, to make the the Bombers campaign were tri­ southern swing. Patterson was the captains Keith Kurowski .383, Ithaca, N.Y. dcAgucro Art Exhibit - Union "Lounge ference will be held at Ithaca FUSA Film - Two Daughters leading pitcher for the freshmen Rich Miller .372, and Dale Dirk College, Saturday, October 25. team with a 5-0 record, and also .370. Junior Jerry Gardner batted Your Closest liquor 8 p.m. - B-102 Local arrangements are being EUB presents Jacques Loussier Trio - PLAY BACH led the team in home runs. Skip a fine .364 and young sophomore Store to Campus 8: 15 p.m. - Ford Hall made by David Russell, president Borowicz, the highly sought after catcher Dom Gaudioso, who bat­ of the Ithaca College student shortstop who impres~ed many ted .340, took charge of the chapter of the MENC, and Prof. major league scouts with his varsity nine with his strong arm tremendous fielding and "shot and spunky determination. CLASSIFIEDS Russell Falt, faculty sponsor. gun" arm, batted .286 last year As far as Ithaca's fall baseball lOt per word - no minimum. Submit The convention program will AD TO THE ITHACAN OFFICE (Bale· and may have earned himself a is concerned, the Bombers now BUSINESS AND mcut West Tower) or Call 274-3207 - feature demonstration rehearsals starting job with the varsity team stand at 4-1. Led by head mentor .... Mon· Fri. 1 · 5 P.M. by Prof. Edward Gobrecht and this spring .. Rich Miller, the Bombers have MATH MAJORS ! the Ithaca College Symphonic Tony Vizzie did a stellar job on defeated Cornell three times, Band, the Horseheads Concert the hill for the Bombers as he While splitting a doubleheader WRITERS! Choir under the direction of compiled a 6-1 record. To~y with LeMoyne. New faces in the Where are you? Joseph Crupi, and a stage band practically carried the club on IC lineup are found at second Salaried Position The Ithacan needs you. led by Stephen Brown. his back as he was on hand for base with John Timmins, the Call George at X 3260. Interest clinics and workshop all the important games. His seventeenth draft choice of the open next semester on sessions will be conducted by col­ gutsy attitude is counted on most Detroit Tigers. Timmins is cur­ lege faculty. These include: heavily for this coming cam­ rently hitting at .461 with two The Ithacan audio-visual aids, John Covert; paign. triples and 5 RBI's. Kent Scriber, ITHACA FLOOR Kodaly-Orff methods, Helene There was no one superstar in one of last season's leading fresh­ COVERING Wickstrom; reed clinic, Robert the IC lineup, which recorded an man hitters, is hitting at .383 Schmidt; brass clinic, Clayton impressive 25-5 mark, which in­ while handling the centerfield • Lee's Carpets Weber; pre-school music educa­ cluded victories over such power­ duties. Geoff "Hawk" Wright, • Floor Covering tion, Sanford Reuning; and, class houses as Penn State, Springfield, the switch-hitting third baseman, Colgate, University of Buffalo has hit two home runs while bat­ For an interview appointment contact Richard • Paints piano methods, Ronald Regal and Russell Flat. and C. W. Post. The leading ting at a .416 clip. The right field Cohen weekdays lrom 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Factory Trained Installation Principal speaker of the eve­ sticker for the Bombers was jun­ duties are being handled by ior Bob Borowicz who batted .403 FREE PARKING ning session will be Pultizer Prize Ralph "Carter" Overton, who is 274-3207 or X 3207. with six doubles, three triples, hitting .323 while leading the 272-5696 winner Karel Husa, who will lee. ture to the conferees on con­ one home run and twenty two team with nine walks. The fall 407 Taughannock Blvd. temporary music. RBI's. Borowicz, the sure handed baseball team is rounded out with I first sacker, who is being scouted Bob Borowicz .393 in left field, I ·------~~~ "------' by the Baltimore Orioles, has Skip Borowicz .354 at shortstop, I I been doing duties this fall and Dom Gaudioso .557 catching, I,------, I has impressed Coach Carp Wood Dick Goodwin .352 at first and John Speich, the versatile second base.third baseman is hitting at .363. The IC pitching rotation finds Paul Patterson, Rick Vogel, Kurt Wolfgruber Paul DiPrima ! Where doea the taste i and Jay Schwartz share the I I .... ' lllllc1 IIU mound duties. Other members Aurora•oa-C.Jliaa Lake of the IC nine arc catcher Bruce Home.al Bohlander, first baseman Jeff Wei,. ColJ.119 Werley, centerfielder Jack Ciri­ 1100.. e l'OOD e LOUN9• ani, and second baseman George i of great beer begin? i Salida., 1-10. 12:~:30, &::to-I I I . •••kdlna11.a-,acn l-~~·12-2. 1-1 Diamond who was injured in a I I o.111c111y_,fi11a cau, .. collision at second base last year 1 You've got to get off to a good start to end up • while completing a doubleplay. : with a great beer. And barley malt is where beer : : begins. So we make all the malt for Genesee Beer : ROBERT S. BOOTHROYD : in our own malt house. No other Brewery does : AGENCY, INC. ..

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May. The other three teams selec­ W.A~A. Act-vity -In .. Fult .Swing I.C. Booters Win Over St. John Fisher and ted wer1: Florida Southern, Up­ sula, and Springfield College. by Chris Fla!l•Y St. Bonaventure; Drop Heartbrea~er to Cortland As far as success went for the IC nine, they won an impressive It was a busy week for the out the Cortland goalie, in the This week it's a single game varsity soccer team, winning face. So instead of a 2-0 lead, IC against - Scranton (Wednesday, victory over Springfield College ' games against St. John Fisher lost its momentum and settled for October 22), a new team to the (5th ranked in the nation), by a and St Bonaventure before los­ a 1-0 halftime lead. IC schedule. Pennsylvania plays score of f?-2. In the second game ing a beartbreaker to Cortland in In the third period, as Cort­ a rough and tough brand of soc­ of the double elimination tourna­ land's right outside obviously, to cer and Scranton should be no front of their homecoming crowd. ment, the Bombers lost to the The Bombers defeated St. John everyone but the official stand­ exception. Fisher on Monday, October 13 ing next to the play, tripped and The varsity scoring pace is con­ number two ranked team in the in. a come from behind victory pushed fullback Ward Silva, Cort­ siderably ahead of last year's. country, Florida Southern, 14-4. which saw Ithaca score first Ott a land scored the goal that tied the With 24 goals in 7 games they The final appearance for the IC bead ball by Gerry Gardner from score. Then the game began to should easily surpass last year's Bombers was warred by a loss to a · Mike Bome cross. Mike is a get out of hand as both -sides total of 31 in the remaining 4 Springfield College, 4-2. in over­ freshman playing in his first committed numerous intentional games. whelming heat. varsity game. ·As the Bombers fouls until the refs had to stop suffered a general let down, St. the game and told both team IC SCORING Two outstanding freshmen ball­ John's capitalized for two goals captains to warn the players that Player G A Pts players, "Paul "Stretch" Patter­ ·on scrambling plays making it the next player to commit an in~ Baumgarten 8 5 13 son, the tall, lanky right-hander 2-1. IC dominated play in the tentional foul would be ejected. who was the sixteenth draft second half as Al Baumgarten On the persuing play, Leo Yaeger Jean-Louis 6 3 9 choice of the New York :\lets, and crossed the ball to Rusty Flook was tossed out for supposedly Flook 1 5 6 Photo by Barb Goldberg who headed it in for his first pushing. I say supposedly be­ Marino 4 0 4 Ray "Skip" Borowicz, the twelfth W.A.A. Gymnastics Competition Underway; Anyone Interested? varsity goal and a 3-2 IC lead. cause to me there appeared to Gardner 3 0 3 draft choice of the Pittsburgh be no violation of ·any sort and The final score developed as a Borne 0 2 2 Continued on page 12 semi-breakaway as Baumgarten knowing Leo, he wouldn't inten­ Klingman 1 0 1 •...:::; ;;•-:, .::~·· Tennis, golf and field hockey and every one of you for all your picked up a loose~ball at the 18 tionally foul anyone as he proved finished their respective seasons efforts. and managed to slam it off the earlier in the game. On one play Yaeger 1 0 1 THE DERBY this past week. On the whole, the Cortland and Brockport both partially screened St. John goalie he was illegally kicked a num­ Barmonde 0 1 1 fall sports season was highly suc­ wound up behind in their con­ into the right corner. The 4-2 ber of times only to get up and Murphy 0 1 1 cessful. frontations with the Ithaca field win upped the varsity record to play on. At this point Cortland Tennis wound up with a 2-1 hockey team. Kathy Minich and 5-1 and raised their ranking to had everything going for it; since 24 17 41 record. The team took a tough loss Sara Jane Werner each scored 7th in the state. Yaeger is an intricate part of the to Cornell with a score of 2-3. Barb once. The team had to come from Oil Wednesday against St. Bon­ Ithacan defense and starts the COCKTAIL LOUNGE Gier won her singles match 2-6, behind after Cortland opened up aventure, the varsity put on a IC offense. With 8 minutes to • 6-0, 6-2; but Nancy Rodenfels the game with a goal. It was a dazzling display of passing and play, Cortland scored the decid­ Recap of I.C. Come with your and Val Lerner lost 1-6, 2-6, cold day, but· the performance of ball handling as they completely ing goal on a shot off the right dates and dance goal post. and 0-6, 2-6. In the doubles com­ play was not impaired. It :was the monopolized the play. Bruce Baseball to a smooth band petition, Roseanne Gizzarelli and most competitive and exciting Marino was the big hero as he It may sound like sour grapes every Saturday night Leslie Parker lost 0-6, 8-6, 2-6 game of the year. Brockport also scored the only two IC goals, one and many people would argue by Del Insko that the officiating doesn't make Under new •management while Melinda Vaughn and Elaine lost to IC 6-0. Anne Bretnall in the first period as he beat the The IC varsity baseball team Goldband won 7-5, 4-6, 6-1. How­ scored one goal as did Chris goalie from 12 yards out and the a team lose, but I contend that at MOSE NORMAN, Prop. least one official was incompetent was one of four teams selected ever, the team bounced back Holden, while Kathy Minich second in the third period again by the NCAA Baseball Committee against Cortland. Results: Singles­ pushed in four. The season ended from 12 yards out. The final in his knowledge of the rules and • neither had any feeling for how to attend the Eastern Regional Ithaca Shopping Plaz:a Barb Gier won 6-3, 6-3; Roseanne with the team compiling a 5-0 score, 2-0 represented the Bomb­ the game should be run or played, College Division baseball tourna­ Elmira Rd. 272 • 9715 Gizzarelli lost 2-6, 3-6. Doubles­ record. er's first shutout of the year as thereby hurting Ithaca. ment at Fort Eustis, Virginia last }felinda Vaughn and Leslie Park­ all three goalies-Ken Swalgin, ... er won 5-6, 6-2, 6-4; Elaine Gold­ COMING EVENTS: Joe Lapierre and Ernie Palmieri· band and Val Lerner won 6-2, Synchronized Swim Club -worked in the IC nets. FRATERNITY JEWELRY 4-6, 6-4; Michele Dexter and Nov. 11, 7 pm Saturday, the varsity traveled JANDA Kathy Kunz won 4-6, 6-3, 7-5. The Basketball Intercollegiates to Cortland to take on the 12th by L. G. BALFOUR CO. final score for the match put Nov 6, 7 pm ranked Red Dragons. The Bomb- FOR Ithaca on top of Cortland 4-1. Al­ Bowling lntercollegiates ers scored first as Mike Bome ITHACA COLLEGE CLASS RINGS though three matches were can­ Nov 6, 3 pm lofted a lead pass which arrived THANKSGIVING celled because of rain the team Volleyball and Bowling Sportsday at the Cortland goalie the same wound up on the plus side for the at Oneonta Nov. 8 time as Al Baumgarten. Baum­ CARDS & SUPPLIES· Ray Robinson with Rothschilds 1st Floor season. Volleyball Officials Club began garten recovered the ball ~s the The golf team went undefeated on October 21 and will run until goalie mishandled it and tapped 304 E. State Badges, Favors, Mugs - Sportswear for the season as they beat Cort­ December 3. Volleyball, competi- · it in for the score. The Bombers 272-7338 Phone 272-5959 lant 4-0 despite the uncomfort­ tive swimming and gymnastics controlled play in the first half able cold weather. Considering have also begun. And, bowling until late in the _second period the golf team is a relatively new and volleyball intramurals started when one play s-eemed to fore­ one on campus, all the girls and this past week. If you are sin- shadow the IC downfall. On a 11 their coach, Miss Eleanor Harri­ cerely interested in any of these corner kick, Gardner headed the WICB "NOW 30 SURVEY ger, did extremely well for them­ activities, you are still welcome ball for an apparent goal only to selves. A special congrats to each to become a part. hit Mike Bome, who was to take Week Beginning October 24, 1969 This Last IC Golfers Unbeaten In Week Week Title Artist 1 2 Wedding Bell Blues Fifth Dimension 2 6 Something/Come Together Beatles Du~l Meet Competition 3 3 Delta Lady Joe Cocker by Dick Baker 4 Can't Find The Time Orpheus 5 10 Echo Park Keith Barbour The Ithaca College golf team the IC team to a victory over na­ Looking forward to the spring, closed out the fall season on tionally recognized RIT. John al­ the Ithaca College team will 6 26 Leaving On A Jet Plane Peter, P~ul and Mory October 11 with a disappointing so had a fine 76 in Rochester to compete in a tournament in performance at Colgate Univer­ lead the team to victory in the Florida over spring vacation to 7 13 Here Comes The Sun · Beatles sity. The team failed to qualify Brook Lea Invitational Tourna­ prepare for another undefeated 8 17 And When I Die/Sometimes In WinterBlood, Sweat and Tears for the Eastern Collegiate finals ment. season. 9 4 Suite: Judy Blue Eyes Crosby, Stills and Nash as they placed fifth in a thirty 10 23 Anw Way That You Want Me Evie Sands team field. The tournament was won by 11 Smile A Little Smile For Me Flying Machine St. Bonaventure, as Oswego State GO 'BOMBERS ! 12 8 Was It Good To You Isley Brothers and RPI tied for second. The 13 21 Turn On A Dream Box Tops fifth place finish for the Ithaca 14 7 Everybody's Talking Nilsson College team continued the five year jinx in which the team has 15 Going In Circles Friends Of Distinction placed in the top five each year but never made the top two 16 5 Dismal Day Bread qualifying positions. _ 17 18 Ballad of Easy Rider Byrds Except for the ECAC tourna­ EVERYTHING- THAT'S FUN PHONE 273-3030 18 Fortunate Son Creedence Clearwater ment the season was highly suc­ 19 9 No One For Me To Turn To Spiral Starecase cessful one for the team as they 420 EDDY STREET ITHACA, N.Y. 20 15 Jean Oliver were undefeated in individual 21 Eli's Coming matches and won an invitational FRATERNITY & SORORITY CHARGE ACCOUNTS Three Dog Night tournament in Rochester. Out­ 22 25 Try A Little Kindness standing individual performances Ithaca's oldest and most reliable Ski Shop, were turned in by first-year man 23 14 Living In The U.S.A. Wilmer/Dukes John Marshall in two matches in 24 29 Make Your Own Kind Of Music Mama Cass I Rochester. John had a 74 to lead 25 27 Beautiful People Melanie SKI SALE STILL GOING ON 26 Tracy Cuff Links 27 ,24 When I Die Motherlode BARNETT'S Last year's Langes 28 Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You Bob Dylan 29 Take A Letter Maria R. B. Greaves ~ 30 Love Will Find A Way Jackie DeShannon

Created by and for the "Big Six" listening audience I 1 1 • ~ Special Group of Sw.eaters.. STATE & CORN STS. Ron Kobosko Music Director Ithaca, N.Y. 272-9881 50% OFF WICB/6 THE ITHACAN, OCTOBER 24, 1969, PAGE 1.C I

------Sports Milre ------. IC's 13 - 7 Victory Snaps W~es Win Streak by Mike Hinkelman

. , .. . ' •" ' ' '. ..,,. Ithaca 13, Wilkes 7. It's all r ·,·~ .' . .,_. ·-~- . to go, but a Larry Nevil inter­ Bill Kleinfelder filled in admir­ over. Last Saturday, before a 1 · ception of a Zakowski pass at ably for an injured Rod Howell highly. partisan crowd of 6500 in ! midfield sealed the Colonels' (bruised shoulder), carrying 20 windy South Hill Field, Ithaca doom. IC indeed had achieved times for 109 yards .... Howell's College snapped Wilkes' 32-game the impossible. 3 carries against Susquehanna winning streak, and they did so AFTERTHOUGHTS broke his own record which bad in convincing fashion. It took a previously been 31 against Tufts superb effort to knock off the in­ At the conclusion of the game, in 1967 ... Tomorrow afternoon, vaders, and the Bombers gave the scene on South Hill Field was IC hosts C. W. Post, a 7-0 victor this and much more. They were reminiscent of Thursday's scene over Kings Point last week and a simply sensational, phenomenal, at Shea Stadium. In their own 3-2 record including a loss to and truly super. Never before right, IC was even greater than Cortland. IC's victory last week had so much inspiration been the Mets. The defense was simply was the greatest one in the his­ manifested by an Ithaca College the greatest. No less than three tory of IC football. Indeed, they times did they thwart the visitors football team. Never before had are No. 1, and that bears re­ inside the IC 20-twice in the an IC team been so psyched for peating. . . a game. Never before, in the en­ last quarter. They intercepted tire 37-year history of intercol­ three passes, and they made big, SUMMARY: legiate football at Ithaca College, crucial, decisive plays all after- noon long - just fantastic and Wilkes O 7 0 0-7 had one game had so much mean­ unbelievable. But it really hap- Ithaca ...... 6 7 0 0-13 ing and important for the Born. hers. Ithaca was determined to pened. It was one of the finest IC-Campbell 5 run (kick failed) walk away from this one victori­ performances by a defensive unit IC-Polimeni 1 run (Brooks kick) ous, and their dedication to I've ever seen. W-Langdon 23 pass from Zakow- achieving that objective was in­ Wilkes had come into the con- Iski (Kaschak kick) tense. Ithaca Grabs Lead Ithaca won the opening toss for Photo by Don RoU the fifth consecutive week and I.C. quarterback Doug Campbell (14) prepares to throw as Ithaca's Abbott (54) blocks Wilkes' Bill Kleinfelder returned the Hoover (74). I.C.'s Tom Schoen (68) alertly stands by. kick-off 27 yards to the IC 37. The Bombers wasted little time juncture they were more than , point, it appeared as though 20 mostly on the running in getting on the scoreboard. equal to the task. Ten plays later, Ithaca was going to run Wilkes passing of Campbell and the Quarterback Doug Campbell sur­ the Bombers had advanced to the 1right into the ground. However, running of John Westbrook. At prised everybody in the house IC 44 mostly on the running. of Wilkes was riding a 32-game win- this point, Westbrook fumbled when he connected with tight end tailback Rod Howell and fullback ning streak and was made of aud Wilkes recovered. Fumbleitis Gary Meierdiercks on a down­ Tom Polimeni, although two sterner stuff. They refused to fold would plague the Bombers \ and-out pattern at the Wilkes Campbell passes also figured under. Kaschak returned the kick- throughout the entire second 49 on Ithaca's first play from prominently. The Ithacans could off 23 yards to the Wilkes 23. half, breaking the backs of many j scrimmage. On the next play, advance no farther and were Mixing his plays beautifully, drives and compounding the 1 Campbell raced 16 yards to the forced to punt. Jim Bell's punt Zakowski employed Gennaro on problems of the defensive unit. , Wilkes 33. Five plays later, rolled dead at the Wilkes 27. power smashes up the middle and Again, the IC defense rose to 1 Campbell scored !C's initial Kissel Intercepts connected with short passes to the occasion and stopped Wilkes i touchdown on a 5-yard run on Quarterback Joe Zakowski l\farascio and split end Bill Lazor. cold. The Bombers drove to the : what appeared· to be a quarter­ came out throwing, and perhaps Suddenly, Wilkes was knocking Wilkes 11 only to lose the ball · back draw. The Bombers nego. the southpaw passer should have on the door at the IC 17. On on another fumble-this time by I tiated the 8-play, 63-yard drive thought better of it. On the ini­ fourth down-and-sixteen at the quarterback Campbell. The visit- I in only 2:09. tial play from scrimmage, Zakow­ IC 23, Zakowski heaved a desper-1 ors, however, could not generate i Wilkes' Dave Kaschak returned ation pass to the goal line and the anything resembling a cohesive i ski's pass to flankerback Jim 1 the ensuing kickoff to his own Marascio was almost intercepted Colonels' reserve split end Neil offense, so impregnable was the 40. However, after notching a by cornerback Dan Parsons. On Langdon gathered in the aerial IC defense. IC got its hands on I first down at the Bomber 48, the the next play, tackle Wes Kissel for the touchdown, in spite of the the ball, drove to the Wilkes 34, ' Ithaca defense stiffened, as they pirkcd off an errant pass an·d re­ fact that three IC defenders were whereupon Campbell saw his I were prone to do throughout the turned to the Colonels 25. On a "draped" around him. For the pass picked off by Moser. Unable · course of the afternoon. Charlie third down play from the Wilkes next four minutes neither team to understand why things were Hill took Bill Staake's booming 10. Campbell wisely overthrew a threatened seriously. However, happening as they were, this ob­ punt two yards deep in his own well-covered Barry Smith in the with IC in possession deep in its server wondered just why the end zone and elected to run it end zone. Subsequently, an Art own backyard, Campbell's un- Bombers couldn't hold onto the out. He was lucky that he ad­ Brooks' 26- yard field goal at­ wise pitchout to Kleinfleder ball-in actuality, it seemed as 1. went awry and Wilkes recovered though the lthacans were playing vanced as far as the IC The of­ tempt was wide to the right. Photo by Dou,: Finck fense found themselves in a most at the Bomber 17. In what might a game of hot potato. After some spirited runs by Ithaca College tight end Ed Syron (88) is behind Wilkes' safety precarious position, but at this halfback Ted Yeager and fullback well have been the turning point IC DEFENSE SUPERB Dave Kaschak (48) to haul in a Campbell pass. Ilcb Gennaro and a Zakowski of the game (although there were Following an exchange of completion to Marascio at mid­ so damn many of them), Dave punts, Wilkes received excellent field, the Bomber defense again Reed picked off a Zakowski pass test ranked No. 1 in the Lambert STATISTICS field position at the Bomber 44. rose to the occasion to blunt the intended for l\farascio at the goal nowl ratings, No. 15 in the AP w IC Two Zakowski passes to wide re­ visitor's drive. Ithaca quickly line and returned to the Ithaca Small College Poll, and riding First Downs 13 20 ceivers Marascio and Lazor, and started a drive of its own. Poli­ 30. The Bombers chose to run out the crest of a 32-game winning Rushing Yardage 83 345 a slick 13-yard scamper by the meni and Kleinfelder alternated the clock to end the first half, a streak, Ithaca shattered all of Passing Yardage 126 62 speedy Yeager put the ball on the on the carries for the most part half which Ithaca clearly domi­ that. It was just icing on the cake Passes 11-28 6-10 Ithaca 10. For four consecutive until JC had advanced to their nated. when Merle Harmon of ABC Passes Int. by 1 3 downs, the ball remained at that own 40. On the next play, Klein­ Sports College Football Score­ Punts 7-35.4 3-34 IC FUMBLES TWICE point. A spirited pass rush led felder burst up the middle, turn­ board said last Saturday: "Wilkes, Fumbles Lost 2 3 Although neither team was able by the interior of the IC defense ed on the speed, and was finally which· had won 32 in a row, was Yards Penalized 30 65 to score in the second half, there and blitzing linebacker Al Cihocki dragged own from behind by cor­ finally beaten today 13-7 by were nevertheless many scoring completely hounded a con­ INDIVIDUAL LEADERS nerback Jerry Moser on the Ithaca." Enough said. opportunities for both teams and fused Mr. Zakowski. The Bomb­ Wilkes 16 after a nifty 44-yard • • • • Wilkes Rushing-Gennaro 17-39, much pulsating excitement. The ers took over, but not for long. advance. The Bombers drove to BOMBER BITS: When it was Yeager 14-32. fart of the matter was that the They again lost possession via the the 4, l ut there found the Wilkes holding onto the ball, the awe­ IC Rushing-Campbell 24-116 and IC defense was so superior in its fumble route at the 23. The defense too formidable and the some IC ground attack rolled up 1 touchdown, Kleinfelder 20- overall play that Wilkes simply llhacans again coughed up the ball went over on downs. 345 yards ... Sophomores played 109, Howell 14-48, Polimeni 18- couldn't cope with it. The Bomb­ baII; this time, at the 27, and a big role in the Ithaca offense. 59 and 1 touchdown. BOTH TEAMS SCORE ers got a big break early in the the stunned partisan crowd was Quarterback D o u g Campbell Wilkes Passing-Zakowski 11-28 On Wilkes' second play from SC'cond half. After holding Wilkes disbelieving, wondering whether gained 116 yards on 24 carries, for 136 yards, 1 touchdown and scrimmage, halfback Yeager was at bay following the second half their hearts could withstand any­ his fourth consecutive 100-yard 3 interceptions. hit at the 5-yard line by a host kickoff, the visitors had to punt more of this kind o! pctivity. The plus rushing effort. Campbell has IC Pasisng-Campbell 6-10 for 62 of Ithaca tacklers, and the Bomb­ into the teeth of a strong wind pass defense was more than equal now gained 545 yards rushing on yards and 1 interception.· ers' Andy Lambie recovered at and the boot "sailed" only 9 yards to the task, repulsing this threat the season and is a cinch to crack Wilkes Receiving..:...Langdon 4-65 that spot. Three plays later IC with IC getting excellent field with s p e ct a cu I a r efficiency. teh seasonal rushing mark of 679 and 1 touchdown, Marascio 4-38 had scored for a second time on a position at the Wilkes 44. The Wilkes got one last chance with yards set by Paul Giroux in IC Receiving-Meierdiercks 2-24, I-yard smash by Polimeni. At this Bombers drove to the Colonels' slightly more than two minutes 1967 . . . Sophomore halfback Syron 2-14, Smith 1-9.