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The thI acan, 1974-75 The thI acan: 1970/71 to 1979/80

4-24-1975 The thI acan, 1975-04-24 The thI acan

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ITHACA COLLEGE ITHACA, NEW YORK . APRIL 24, 1975 VOLUME 48/N0.'2a ") .

·,:):·:.~,,'Open Me,,ti11~ To11il{/,t Concert Coniniission )?acuity Group Questio11s Collective Bargaining

Sues Booking Agent implies that some of the chamws by Mark Engstrom collective bargaining has brought An open meeting is being to other schools ar<' either by Paul Stern get a Bruce Springsteen concert. held tonight (Thursday) at 7:30 alrC'ady in exist Pnt"l' or arP not Once Katcher was informed PM in the union cafeteria to needPd at ltha<·a CollcgP. As the Spinners were per­ of the fact the College had discuss how collective bargaining Barry Sheridan, a profPssor forming in the gym Saturday spoken to Plattsburgh directly could possibly affect Ithaca Col­ of busim•ss administration and night, the colleges' booking a­ without. going through him, he lege and the community-at-large. onp of the group organizers, gent, who brought the Spinners got upset. According to Student Representatives from the fears collectivP bargaining t·ould here, was handed a summons Activities Program Director - American Association of Univer­ substantially increasP the backstage to appear in court Jackie McGinnis, Katcher felt sity Profes~ors (AA UP) and the School"s operating t·osts. lie regarding $3,000 the Concert "we were checking up on him", AAUP Chapter President Ashur New York State United Teachers noted that should thP fa!'lllty he Commission claims he owes Baizer (NYSUT). which are the two represented by a union. it would them. labor unions currently trying to hecom(• nl'cessary for th<• admini­ According to Chairman of win the faculty"s support, will be stration to hir£> ;1 full-timl' the Ithaca College Concert Com­ Disaster Drill Set present to answer questions. as attorney. requiring offi1·p spa, missiiI} Brook 4shby, the college will a group of professors urging and a secretary, Sheridan <·sti­ booking agent Barry Katcher that collective bargaining not be mated thl· ll'gal costs of col\C't'tivC' owes the Commission $3,000 For Weekend accepted by the faculty at this bargaining rould run as high as they paid him as a deposit for time 35,000 dollars. Litigation fl'es Bruce Springsteen, a group that A major disaster drill will curity for all belongings of people Both of the unions desiring could add as mul'h as :10,000 never did come to Ithaca College. take place in one of the dorms on ·who live in the dorm selected for to be the faculty's collective dollars to this figur1>. Katcher received the deposit on campus sometime this weekend. the drill, and no fireman will be bargaining agent have been February 3 but has not yet No other information has been or entering any of the student's active for the past several weeks Instructional Costs returned the . money to the will be released as to when or . rooms. A Safety car has been attempting to solicit faculty College. where, since the main purpose of reserved to respond to other support. Their platforms offer Anolh<·r factor cited by Primary Contracts the drill is to test the School's campus emergencies during the the faculty economic and job Sheridan that could raise instruc­ and community's response to an course of the drill in order that security in matters involving tional l"Osts in the event of erriergency situation. . the other students will not be left tenure, academic freedom, teach unionization dealt with tcaehing Katcher informed the Com­ The cause of the disaster unprotected. ing loads, and input into CoRege loads. Ile mentioned that cur­ mission in mid-January that they will be a mock fire that is to The rescue capabilities of goverance to name a few issues. rently a numhl'r of profl'ssors would be able to get Bruce engulf an entire dorm. Emergen- the Fire Department will be donate lh<•ir time frePly to the Springsteen here on February School h-y teaching an overloadt•d cy crews will be responding from given a stern test during the Feasable Goals 23. Katcher was then sent the a number of area towns, includ- drill, as there will be a number of schedule. or hy l'Oal'hing particu­ $3,000 as a deposit on the group. ing a large part of the Ithaca Fire victims trapped in the dorm. The unions regard these lar sports. Ill' ft'lt. collectivl' At that time Katcher. was to send Department. Once rescued, these victims will issues as feasable goals, hut they harg-aining would t;aUSl' a more the primary contracts to the Director of Safety and Secu- provide a test for a first aid are under serious question by an rig-id rnntral'l to go into dfect College. However, because of rity Lou Withiam outlined some center, and will then be sent to informal - faculty group. This whit·h would n•quin· th(• Sl'hool what Ashby termed "scheduling of the drill's goals as testing either the Health Center or group has recently started a to pay any fal'ulty mt•mhl'r for hassles" the concert was forced dorm evacuation procedure, test- Tompkins County Hospital by 1·ampaign to discourage the facul­ anything- hPyond a normal !.(·al'h­ to be cancelled. ing the medical facilities on the ambulance. This is to check the ty from voting for eithN of tht• ing load, an\ goverant'l'. In fad, t.h1•y the same date. Ashby ap­ hie to similar emergencies that to last apP.roximately an hour decision on the matter. They fl•ar <·olll•t·t.iv<' hargaining- <·ould proached Plattsburgh _with the might occur throughout the and a quarter, with the work in have issued a statement which , <11111111"·(1 l'II Magruder Compromise Reached m,t'P-li11g will Ju,ftJ UI 7::JtJ by Cathy Doyle present was needed to override speak on campus. speak. Lyons stated, "I am very the- Executive Board. It was Howe.ver, it was disclosed sorry that S.A.B. is not allowed thi.-.. ,~v,1 11inf..( tll Student Congress caught defeated by only a fraction of a Wednesday that Ms. Haas did to bring MaGruder on campus, themselves in a tangle of parlia­ vote. Chairperson Haas did not have the legal right to vote. even though 23 voted for Ma­ mentary procedure Tuesday - vote then. Parliamentry procedure accord­ Gruder on campus and 12 a­ tlu~ Vnio11 night. The confusion ~as a At Tuesday night's meeting ing to Roberts Rules of Orders . gainst." . resl,)lt of last week's special Ms. Haas stated that as chair­ gives her that right. Also, Jaffe Tom Howard who is strong­ (;aJ,~t,,riu lo meeting to discuss the contro­ person she had the right to cast does not have tbe legal right as ly against payment to Magruder versy surrounding Jeb Stuart the deciding vote. Since the · parlimentarian to overrule the with student funds put a com­ McGruder. - meeting had not been adjourned chairperson as he did Tuesday promise motion on the floor. It :Us cuss t'o/1,,t"ti Ut' MaGruder is a convicted and Ms. Haas stted she had night. called for Student Congress to participant in Watergate whom never formally announced the Those individuals, including urge S.A.B. to contact MaGru­ S.A.B. had scheduled to speak on results she could still vote. Jaffe and Perialas, who stated der and offer him the opportun­ l1argui11i11g. the I.C. campus last nigh_~ but Chairperson Haas proceeded Haas could not vote were wron_g, ity to speak on campus and he the Executive Board of Congress ta vote for payment to Magru­ according to Roberts' Rules of paid through an admission fee. refused to pay for his lecture and der. However, her vote was Order. Ms. Haas was correct. A Howard explained, "I am All students the event was indefinitly cancer challenged by parliamentarian member of Congress said Wed­ still opposed to seeing McGruder led. Bill Jaffe. He cited "that the nesday afternoon that if l.he profit from a ~rime. But, just us Cliairperson Sharon Haas meeting adjourns when a quor­ chairperson had cast her vote, I don't think Student Congress -and j'flculty announced. at the Tuesday night um is no longer present." Gus which she had the legal right to has,..the right to impose on me Congress meeting that last - Perialas, Vice-president of Stu­ do, Cbngress would allocate the _paying part of my money to weeks meeting had not officially dent and Campus affairs, agreed money to pay MaGruder's fee .. 'Magruder, I don't think anyone members are been adjourned. It was at .that with Jaffe's statement. Russ Lyons, chairman of on Student Congress has the meeting a vote was taken to Chairperson Haas withdrew S.A.B. expressed his distress right to impose the oppos~ urged lo override the Executive Board her vote and announced, "the with the failure to override the morality on anyone else." and pay: MaGruder to speak on vote is as stands." Student Executive Board. He presented The compromise proposed campus. Congress will not allocate funds 1400 signatures in favor of by Howard was passed.- If attend. ' to pay Jeb Stuart Magruder to Two th~s vote of those programming MaGruder to - continued on page 12 Thorne To Discuss The Black Hole Of Space Library Undergoes Annual

Is it merely ~truction of evidence for the existence of the human mind, more fantastic black holes in space, aJJd name by far than the unicorn or the certain constellations· which are Spring Heat Wave griffith? Or does it really exist in believed to contain these stellar space, the st.rangest object in the relics. universe?, - Thorne was graduated from The black hole, the most Cal Tech in 1962 and received his by Chip Underhill other buildings? The answer, bizarre phenomenon ever con­ master's and doctor's degrees again, points to the structure:s The heat trouble encoun­ faulty design. Besides having an ceived, exists only in theory at from Princeton University in tered in the Ithaca College present. Kip S. Thorne, profes­ 1963 and 1965, respectively. insufficient air intake, the library library "is a problem we've been has a lighting system that sor of theoretical physics at the "Eighteen months ago," fighting for years" says Physical California Institute of Techno­ Thorne said, "my brother and my contributes overwhelmingly to Plant Director Emil Policay. the building's over-all tempera­ logy, will discuss these celestial wife built a small cabin on College Librarian Lee Rift ech­ objects in a public lecture, "The -l. ture. "The lighting is so intense Palomar Mountain, a mile and a oes Policay's remarks: "Every Search for a Black Hole in Space" half from the nearest habitation. it sends out enough heat to fall and spring, it's the same overheat the building" according at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 24 in I have spent much of the past thing." i, room 202 of the Science Building year there, amidst the solitude I., .~, -~ to Policay. The library lights are For the past few weeks, the - on the Ithaca College campus. - and beauty of the wilderness, also recessed into the ceilings, central complaint of students and z building up heat which is stored "Like the unicorn and the reading, thinking, calculating workers in the library has been gargoyle," Thorne has written, and writing about relativistic Librarian Leo Rift in the concrete ceilings and the heat inside the building. The walls. . "the black hole seems much more 'stars, gravitational waves and "Every fall and spring, it's the time of year suggests annoy­ The fountain near the front at home in science fiction or in Cygnus X-1. Once every few ances might instead be voiced same thing" ancient myth than in the real days, in the evening, I walked entrance has even drawn some over final exams and term consequently, dollars). The main criticism. Rich Taubman, Bio­ universe. Nevertheless, the over to the Observatory to papers. "The heat," however; laws of modern physics virtually consult a few books and recharge problem with the heat situation logy '76, says "The pool of water has been so intense that anyone in the Ithaca College library is makes the air humid and even demand that black holes exist. my electronic calculator. It was a serious enough to go to ~the In our galaxy alone there may be great year!" not the temperature itself. It is more unbearable than the heat library might easily fall asleep the inability of the college to do already is. Especially for the millions of them." Thorne's lecture concludes under the drowsy effects of the A black hole is a dead star, Ithaca College's 1975 C.P. Snow anything about it. (Sign at people sitting near the front door building's high temperatures. Circulation Desk · "RE: THE of the first and second floors." one that has exhausted its Lecture Series, named in honor All entrances except fire doors internal supply of nuclear fuel. of the British scient'ist, author HEAT- IF WE COULD DO are occasionally tied open to SOMETHING ABOUT IT, DO Some Provisions Colh•psing under the crush of its and lecturer who hated to see the permit some kind of draft to own gravity, a star of two or academic world split into the YOU THINK WE'D WORK ON enter the building. IT?). Plans for the proposed three times the sun's mass can "two cultures" of science and fourth and fifth floors of the It Seems Physical Plant Director Pol­ shrivel into a burnt cinder only a human"ities. In the past 10 years, library will undoubtedly carry few miles in diameter, dense the C.P. Show Lecture Series icay explains the majority of the At a time when tuition costs library's temperature. problems some provisions for dealing with beyond imagination, possessed of has brought to the campus man} have risen and LC. has been the heat problems now encount­ a gravitational field so strong distinguished scholars who pro­ are in the building's design. forced to look into money-saving "Back when the structure was ered. College Librarian Leo Rift that nothing, not even light, vided insight into the realm of ideas· and programs, it seems says that although "the fourth could leav\~ its surface. the sciences and the relationship built, this type of design was particularly wasteful to lose so popular-everyone thought they floor is to be like the present Thorne will describe the of science to other academic much heat and energy (and three floors, and the fifth will be fields. were experts at controlling in­ terior environmental condi mostly concrete, the system will tions." (The architects of the certainly be made more flexible. I library were Tallman and Tall­ We are learning the hard way." man, of Ithaca, who have since State regulations now re­ become Thomas Associates). quire windows that open and ANALV~I~: Shortcomings in the library's close, so the new floors will have design are now obvious. No to be somewhat modified from windows that open and close are the design of the existing floors. found on any of the three main Rift adds that he'd like to see the PlngiarismAtl.C. floors, and the air intake is not second and third floors re­ sufficiently large enough to han-· modeled with the buildil'lg of die the heat·generated by either additional fl90rs,_ but funds are understandably scarce~ "Library by Laurie Costa the heating system or the collective body temperatures of improvements are of course With .only two weeks left in the semester, large parts of books. What they don't know is that several hundred people . .,_.. competing with other improve­ students are beginning to feel the pressure of if a student changes words slightly and keeps the ments for other buildings, and finishing up or just starting resource, term or same sequence of idea,;, he has not adapted the Also Warms there is only so much money creative writing_ papers. If you have been information; he has plagiarized. Some Freshmen available." considering borrowing a paper from a friend who right out of high school feel proficient in writing A second major reason for last semester had the course you're presently papers, but they don't know how to use resources the library heat lies in the nature enrolled in, or using the ideas of an author without responsibly; they don't know how necessary giving him credit, i.e. plagiarizing, you could end footnotes and quotation marks are. of the heating system itself. The up beinr, the victim of .some severe penalties. library temperature is controlled "Plagiarism means presenting, as ones own, by a system that also warms Job the words, work, or the opinions of someone else. "Even if a student were ignorant of what Hall, Friends Hall, The Perform­ It is dishonest since the plagiarist offers as his own, plagerism was, I would flunk him on the paper and ing Arts Building, and Muller for credit. information for which he deserves no not give the chance, for a rewrite because at the Faculty Center. _If Physical credi_t; it is dangerous since penalties range from start of each basic writing course, students have Plant wishes to raise the temp­ failure on the paper to failure in the course to received a handout on plagiarism. Some students do it once out of desperation. This is .a kind of erature in any one of these dismissal from school, depending on the discretion buildings, they must also raise it • of the professor. betrayal; if a student is desperate, most teachers will give him an extension, let the assignment go, in all the others. "Plag1ar1sm occurs when one uses the exact or give the option of dropping the course. But why is the library so language of someone else without putting the "There are also paper writing services and much hotter than any of the Director of Physical Pl.ant Emil <1uoted material in quotation marks and giving its student writing services. These are especially Policay source. It occurs when the writer presents, as his insidious and dangerous because anyone can have a own, the sequence of ideas, the arrangement of paper written on his own level of sophistication; it material, or the thought of someone else even is sometimes hard for a teacher to determine this though he expresses it in his owri words. type of plagiarism ... Sum~er Study In the careful research paper. credit is given-in "A teacher assumes she and the students are foot-notes for every idea, conclusion, or piece of playing the same game by the same rules. If information that is not the write.r's own. The they're not - if a student plagiarizes - this makes writer is careful not to follow closely the wording of the teacher's serious commitment (her work to the To Be Conducted in-Italy the sour('es he has read." (from "A Note on student) seem foolish. Yet, students who I . Plagiarism", Birk and Birk 1958) plagiarize seldom realize that in different ways, their own integrity and the teachers' is being The Ithaca College depart and fascinating experience. Just Daniel Hanavan, Assistant Professor of undermined. ments of F'oreign Language and the simple, eve_ryday things a English. feels there are two degrees of plagiarism. History will be conducting the person does took on a new "To use someone else·s paper is patently dishonest. "One legacy of the 60's activism has been a summer study in Perugia, Italy perspective ... ! think th~ real Paraphrasing or copying parts'of books could be an fundamental disrespect for the institution. So, this year. All undergraduate or proof of whether the trip was _ error if the student was unaware that what he was students may feel they can act amorally regarding graduate students at Ithaca a success or not lies in the fact doing was wrong If I found that one of my it: they fail to see that individuals are involved." College or any other colleges of that if you ask any of the people students had plagiarized, I'd call him in for a Bruce Strom, professor of Psychology, would universities are eligible. who went whether they would conference. speak to him, give the paper back and deal with a case of plagiarism by "confronting the The courses that will be like to return someday. you have him rewrite it. It doesn't make sense to apply student and telling him to rewrite the paper. If the offered are: Italian 101-102; undoubtedly will receive a smile the letter 01 the law the first time a student is student denies he has plagiarized, it is time to tak Italian 201-202; -Italian Litera from them which can only .mean, cau~ht plagiarizing; one should explain to him the e take severe action. ture in translation; Renaissance "Of Course!" basic ignominy of the situation: copying anothers Many students don't know how or when to Italian History; Independent . The total cost for the six work without giving the author his due credit is footnote. In this case the non-awareness is haivae study: Machiavelli, 499. The ·week program will be $1,000.00 dishonest; the student's own critical insights are - not plagiarism. This problem could be alleviated teaching of the courses will be per student. It includes; l)round ignored. The professor must make it clear that if there were a writing requirement for all done by Dr. S: Maglione and Dr. trip air transportation from NY plagiarism can't be tolerated; it is important not to Freshmen. J. Tempesta. Students desiring to Rome and return; 2)student give the student the impression that he has become Dr. Baizer, Professor of English, responded to other courses may enroll for accommodations-a)three meals a an inferior persqn in the professors mind and that the issue of plagiarism in this way: "Plagiadsm credit at Perugia Italian Univer day; 4)nine credits; 5)weekend the action is irrevocable. A professor must be calls for a serious penalty such as a zero on the sity for Foreigners or at the excursions to Rome, Florence careful not to exacerbate what is already an paper and the requirement an additional assign­ Academy of Fine Arts organized Siena, Ravenna, Assissi, Spoleto unfortunate situation." ment be J)erformed. However, this penalty should by Pietro Yannucci under the and Urbino. not crush the student." Dr. Baizer went on to say supervision of Dr. Maglione. If interested in participating Barbara Adams, instructor in Applied Wri­ how cheating and plagiarism was stopped at Mike Raho, one of the in this program contact either ting, had this view on plagiarizing: "Students Rutgers U., there, a student who was caught students who went on the trip Dr. Tempesta, fourth floor Mui know they're plagiarizing when they ask others.to plagiarizing made the front headlines of the school last year had this reaction: !er Faculty Cen~r or Dr. Mag write a paper for them or when they copy verbatim newspaper! "Everything we did was a new lione, third floor of the Center. The_ ltha_c~n, _Ap_r~ 24~ 1975, . Pag~-3 Meeting On Traffic O~tea~s ·C~n-ce~t~ Revisions Held Pla~ned For May 4th by Toni Somma The Traffic Policy Commit­ Most of the meeting consist­ One of the specific rules Orleans is expected to play they will agree to terms shortly. tee held. an open meeting Tues­ ed of specific gripes aired by the which was discussed was fire an outdoor concert at Ithaca Orleans, who are originally out of day night concerning recom­ students who attended. Each lane penalties. Many present felt College on Sunday, May 4th, it Woodstock, N.Y., have been n•ccntly on tour, playing upper mendations for revision of the charge was openly discussed by that the penalties for parking in was learned last night. The present traffic rules and regula­ the committee members with an event will be sponsored by the New York State and ConnecU- fire zones were too rigid. The 1·ut. tions. The reason for the attempt to show justification for committee expressed deep con- Ithaca College Concert Commis­ meeting was that at the end of the committee's stand. sion. The preliminary agreement each year-the committee submits cern over the need for strict '.'Jo final contract has yPt calls for the group to be paid new recommendations to the rules. However, Pritt agreed hpen signed by the local rock bPlwPen $5,000 and $6,000 for Community Council to be insti­ the present penalty ''is much too group, but it is anticipatC'd that the pC"rformancP. tuted the coming year. At t-he conclusion of the Only a handful of students meeting Pritt stated he would attended the meeting which was consider the problem areas men­ chaired by J. Fred Pritt, faculty tioned by the students, manv of member to the Comrr,ittee and which coincided with his ~wn Senior Class A wards Cancelled Dennis Hopwood, administrative complaints. member of the committee. President of Student and Cam­ t.1•t• that the awards he abolished. Europeon Summer Jobs by Andy Friedman pus Affairs Gus Perialas. He f1•lt it was unfair to single out Last year's senior class only a fpw peopl1• and allow so The President's awards to president Robin Ka\ik was re­ manv others to go unnoticed. Available for Students .. outstanding seniors have been portedly upset about the awards. ·The senior class officers The only requirements are abolished. She thought it was improper and A Summer job in Europe is w1•n• al.:;o asked for two out­ willingness to work, an open Normally presented at that "There are so many stu­ available to any college student st anding faculty awards. "If we mind and adaptability. Applica- graduation each year, the a­ dents who do so may things one willing to wor_k. Paying jobs are can't choos1• thC' kids. how ran we tions may be obtained by writing wards were to honor up to five never knows about, it's difficult. available now through the sum­ choos(' tlw tPa1·her, to reePiVl' to Summer Jobs, SOS, 22 Ave. seniors considered to be out­ to honor any one person." ~er and applications may be t ht> ,l\v;1rds'.'" hl' questioned. de la Liberte, Luxembourg, standing in their contributions to stiomitted by mail. Jobs in l'niala!-o said much of thl' Europe. Requests for app!ica- Ithaca College. The seniors were Not Best Time Europe are filled by the Student SCA staff honors lhP students tion and latest available jobs chosen by the Student and Overseas Services (SOS) on a individually and in their own must include name, address, and Campus Affairs (SCA) staff, ways. 111: rnt•nli()ned that ,John first come, first served basis and Perialas polled his staff for a $1 or the equivalent in stamps or which include Housing and -the Brown. dPan of sludl'nls. takPs a interested students should allow consensus and discoven•d they international postal coupons, to Office of Campus Activities. 2 to 4 weeks for processing. basically felt that commence­ 1·ouplt· st udt•nts out to lun1·h at cover the cost of overseas_. SCA staff members could thP l'nd of !ht• year, paying- for it SOS arranges jobs for stu­ ment was an academic assPm­ i,ostage. nominate as many seniors as out. of his own po1•kpt to show his dents in resorts, hotels, restaur­ blage and perhaps it was not the Students Job Cards for they liked. A list of the appn•<·iation. Others, h<· ,1rldl·d, ants, offices and factories - best possible time to honor the Europe, valid for one year, are candidate's activities as well as mak1• similar i:-i-sturPs. fl'C'ling throughout Europe.' Temporary studl.'nts. also issued to students who do the staff member's reasons for that it. i~ a morl' pNsonal positions include general helper, This year's senior class -not have definate plans for this the commendation had to be "award" and l'an r1•:wh many buffet server, receptionist, kit­ president Lloyd Ecker reported coming summer but who may included in the nomination. morl' dPsPrving studPnls. chen helper, waiter, waitress, he also made a recommendation want to work in Europe later in Names were voted on and bakery worker, groundskeeper, to the Commencement. Commit- the year or next summer. the award then given to those and clerk-typist. Wages range Advantages of a temporary five seniors who "showed to be from $250 and up plus room and job in Europe include an oppor- an outstanding service to the board is arranged and provided tunity to experience Europe on College through various assorted free -with most jobs. Volunteer an earn-as-you-go basis and activities that were not part of work in summer camps and on having overseas job experience meeting academic curriculum community projects in France, to list on any future job applica- requirements or that they were Germany and other countries is lion. compensated for," said Vice also available. Open Letter to I.C.: SUNY-Buffalo Addres~es Attica

We are writing you concern­ ings has prompted our Student 2. Assist in setting up a ing a matter of urgent impor­ Assembly to pass two related showing of the award-winning tance to those of us in Buffalo. resolutions on this matter which document..iry film ATTl(:A! on For the past two years the State include Attica defense action your cam.pus. of New York has been prosecu­ proposals designed to inform the 3. Provide speaker~ for ting former Attica inmates with general public and State officials, campus meetings. charges stemming from the as well as agencies, who bear 4. Assist you in sponsoring September, 1971 Attica prison responsibility for these proceed­ an Atti<'a defense fund-raising, rebellion. ings. ('Vl'11l. Becaus.e we have been able The lthacaq will be paying B1·1·aus(• of printing dt·ad to observe these proceedings We have been mandated by 5. Providing eampu,;; news­ tribute to dt'scrving seniors this our most recent resolution (April papPrs ..ind local papPrs with Jinp--. all nomination.., rnu~t tw firsthand, we have had the year. n·1·1•iv1•d hy n~,on on Monday, opportunity to develop a full 8th) to inform other schools copy relating to Attica and April Because the discontinuation throughout New York State of 28th. April :!.8. In ord1·r to farilit,tl<' understanding of the issues of the President's Awards ha!-> tlw 1·olh·<-tion prot·ps..,, four drop involved in these proceedings. the issues posed by the Attica · While we are aware or thl· met with divided rPactions, The prosecutions and to encourage faet that there arc many 1ssu(•s . off point.., havP ht•1•n ..,t·lt•l"I.Pd: We therefore have a special Ithacan would like to pay tribute The Ithacan ollil'P. has1•m1•nt obligation to inform others of this student participation in activites whi£'h we, as student~. must to thl' ten seniors the college which would bring these sense­ eonrcrn oursplves with - such as llorrn Ii; Lil'kil. ha!-o<·rnt•nt W°'•"t matter. This is particularly the community feels have contrihu- Towt•r; Terra<"(' Iii\. room :107 A; case, since it is our opinion that less trials to a speedy and just the• imminent 1·ut-hacks in fund~ . ted most in the area of servicP lo conclusion. for our edu<'ation and the lack or and Th<· It ha<'an Box al t h1· .Joh what is at stake is not merely the the eollege in the Senior Com­ llall po~! ,,rrin·. Th(· ... 1udPnt lives of individual defendants, On April 28th, State As­ meaningful employment oppor­ mencement Supplement of the semblyman Arthur 0. Eve and tunities upon g-raduation - we 1·0-op I('<' ( :n•am ..,ton• i~ O{)l'll but basic standards of human May" 1 issue. The Ithacan would Vrida_v :!. p.m. ti p.m. and K p.rn. decency ~nd justice. Senator Vander Beatty will be feel that the'ic issues are rdatl'd like nominations from the l'ollegt· a to I a.m .. Saturday K p.111. I Ttie Student Association at introducing resolution into the to Attica on th<· {'ommon ground eomrnunity (adminbtration, fa legislature in Albany calling on of guar:mtc<•ing <;ocial justicP and a.111.. and Sunday !I [>.Ill. 11 p.m. the State University of New cultv, staff. and student\), to Hol h Tht· lt haran ;111d l{oom York at Buffalo, representing the Governor to grant amnesty 1•qual opportunity. 'iel1·~-t these st udent'i. Thcsl' to the current Attica defendants. A strong and united student :11)7/\ will haVP lal'ililil'.., lor '!.·1 over 12,000 undergraduate stu­ IPtters of U·..,timnny .... hould in hour drop oJI..,_ No111111at1on.., dents, has concluded that the We invite you to join us in rP~ponsl· in opposition to the dude the naml' of lh1· ~t udent getting behind this resolution l'Urrl'nt onp.,;ided Atl1£'a pro,1· ..,hould not h1· ..,,.n1 by int1•r ,·au; current Attica prosecutions are and a brief de-;cription of what [HJ.., mail. tu•1·.1u..,1· ol I h,· t l!ll<' not being conducted in a manner and to help us provide students l'Ut1on and 1·ovl'r-up will aid u_.., 1n di~tingu1•hes thi.~ o-;enior ao-; on<· with the opportunity to exi"i'ress organizrng ..,t udents around othl·r 1•l1•r11Pnt involv1·d. No ph .. 111· - which is in the interest of the to h1· honored for '-,(•rvw1·. All l<"e called in l

on Collective Bargaining ... payed by the college; yet he Trustees, uqder the auspices of gives over 30 work hours a week Job Hall. operate t_he Crew to I.C. Crew. I am not asking for budget. and· Nobody Came? To the Editor: sympathy from the J.C. commun­ The Crew is half way ity, for that can be found in the through its season, and the The Ithaca College faculty is currently For the past two years I dictionary between shaftin~ and Varsity remains undefeated and involved in the complicated process of deciding have had the honor and privilege syphillus; All I am asking 1s for they hav:e the strong possibility whether they want to use collective bargaining as to row for Ithaca College Crew. some understanding. No one, of going to the Dad Vails (Small means of negotiating their contracts with the But my teamates and .I have and I mean NO ONE in the Phys. College National Championships) administration. Three choices are open to them. worked too hard too long to ED. department knows anything undefeated. But if the trend They can either vote to reject collective bargaining remain silent any longer on the about Crew, yet they make continues in the Phys. ED. and remain as their own, independent bargaining gross injustices and 'screwing decisions about our sport every department by padding our agents; or they can choose between the American around' that the Department of year. The Director of Athletics budget with fhony bills for Association of University Professors (AAUP), or Physical Education has put upon · has never once come down to maintenance o the boathouse, the New York State United Teaches (NYSUT) as the team. I can no longer watch us practice and find our ,the team might have to hitchhike their bargaining agents. rationalize in my mind why the what Crew is all about. But you down to Philly since we can't Whatever the outcome, this is a decision that school wants to place a 22 man can always find him out watching afford a bus. students should not ignore. The election will take limit on the size of our squad. the other sp(!rt,S. We just want a place for all full-time faculty on May 2, and a great Could Butterfield ever have fair shake, if we can't get it from MICHAL T. WILLIAMS deal of information on the subject is being made made it to the Stag~ Bowl with. the Physical Education Depart­ VARSITY, HEAVYWEIGHT available in the meantime. During the next few just 22 players on his freshman, ment, then let the Board of CLASS OF '75 weeks several informational meetings will be open J.V. and. Varsity .teams? NO. I to the entire community, and each of the three cannot understand why we are groups involved in the election will be distributing· allocated only $1.00 per man £or information explaining the need, or lack of need, dinner on an away trip_ Would for collective bargaining. Carp Wood's baseball boys toler­ Collective bargaining has meant different ate this type of garbage? NO. I things to different" campuses across the country. In can't forsee why our coach has Inmate R~quests Pen-Pals some cases, such as at Rider College in New put more of his own money into Jersey, collective bargaining brought a faculty the team than the college pays strike to the campus and has created a deep and him in salary. Can anyone name bitter schism among the school's professors. In just one other coach here who To the Editor: ,.. other schools, however, this system of contract can make that same claim? NO. I student activities bulliten board. negotiation has been highly successful in protecting am upset that this fall, the t,eam I am writing you in hopes of Stating, that "poor me" is in the faculty's rights and in promoting such things as had to pay $13. 75 per man to race finding some assistance in obtai­ Attica and could really dig academic freedom: It is too soon to tell how it will in fall regattas under the J.C. ning some correspondence. I am writining some together people. affect Ithaca College, but it is definately not a · colors. very much interested in striking I'm a twenty-two year matter to be ignored. Crew is a demanding sport, up a friendir relationship with old white .male from Buffalo, Both students and faculty owe it to thamselves not only in time, but in dedica- · some "funky' people via the U.S. N. Y. and havt lots of time to to become as aware as they possibly ca·n about the tion. The guys that row for J.C. mail. write. pending collective bargaining decision. Everyo~e work seven months a year just to Serving time sure enough who is connected with the educational process m prepare for six races. We race in gets to be a drag! (sigh•) fve got shells that are over TWENTY two years down off a ten y~ar Address letters to "me": any way should make it a point to attend tonig~t's years old. Does any other team sentence. So perhaps you could DAVID E. FRIEDRICH meeting and learn all they can about col1C'ct1ve on campus have such antique do me a favor and run a-small add 73-c-141 bargaining. This is an election th_e f:i~ulty cann~t equipment? NO. Our Freshman · in your student newspaper and/­ BOX 149 afford to take lightly, the viab1hty of, this and Lightweight coaci\ isn't even or post a small notice in your ATTICA,.N.Y. 140:..1 institution may very well rest in· its balance. Students should also make every attempt to become aware of the issues collective bargaining raises. In the long run it is the student's education that is being bargained for, and they should n~t Whalen and the White Knight Syndrome hesitate to make their professors aware of their feelings towards unionization.

To the Editor: scholarship, community respon­ the man attempting to take over In reading the · editorial sibility---as it were, a better and the leadership of Boston Univer­ (4/10/75) entitled "New Admin­ more relevant education "for the sity was, after all, only a man. MagrudeL lntimid·otion istration: PresideJtt Whalen", I dollar." What is more, he was a product was struck by the singular Nor was our optimism for a of a totally different system. · similarity of rhetoric .to the brighter future solely founded on At the risk of sounding like The entire Magruder issue was handle,p special issue put out by the the "new start" theory. Dr. and incorrigible snob, it is a fact sloppily and more important, unconstitutionally. Boston University daily in De­ Silber had been ousted from that what was revolutionary and Confusion reigned Tuesday night at Congress cember of 1970, when Dr. Silber, Texas for some very revolution­ liberated in the University of and Robert's Rules of Order was consulted ex of the University of Texas, aryz )for Texas) words and Texas system, was not necessa­ numerous times. Yet it was peculiarly interesting Austin, was appointed president, tactics. rily of the same magnitude in that Student Congress parliamentarian Bill Jaffee after a Jong period with only an We felt confident that a Boston, where literally the Ge­ acting president to play guardian knight inwhite armour was going orge Sherman Union had to be turned to Vice President of Student and Campus angel to B.U.'s reputation. We to sweep B. U. clean of the grime scrubbed clean of blood after Affairs Gus Perialas for The Final Word. Worse too had high expectations (I was of patronage, apathy, bureaucra­ 1968. ' still, Jaffe (who has taken a course in parliamenta­ then a freshman), and we spoke tic tangles and corruption. ·What I think the point of compar­ ry proceedure, accepted as Truth what Perialas of free@m, a higher level of we neglected to remember that ison is this: Dr. Whalen is not a said. So did the rest of Congress. god, he is- a man with human And he was wrong. failings and limited power. Sec­ The main points; whether the special meeting ondly, the dollar value of educa­ the previous week was officially adjourned, tion is not determined by the courses available, the prestige of whether the people who came in this past Tuesday the guest speakers, or the night had the right to vote, (if the meetingwasstill celebrity status of the faculty. in progress) and whether the parliamentarian can It is determined by the overrule the Chairperson. individual, for him or herself, Whether: it was because 'perialas wa!l the only and the amount of commitment adult present or whether it was because he was a Ed1tor·1n-chlef . Andy , Friedman he or she has to academics, to a member of the administration, he was turned to for Business Manager . R. Scott Mallory career future and to his own advice and his advice heeded without question. Senior Ed it ors dignity. In a school where only . . . Leah Fackos fifteen per cent of. thtLstudent.. Arrording to Roberts, unless a specific motion is ... John P. Klumph and Mark Engstrom, made to adjourn the meeting, it is not adjourned body votes to elect their repre­ Contributing Editor ...... Paul Stern sentatives---the students's only whether the quorum has left or not. So the meeting real source of power-~-criticism was still in session. Perialas said it was not and that News Editor Sanr ,\ tilgri11r ..,, Layout Editor Mike Reecll,•r of university leadership ought to C'nded that. Cathy Doyle Tcnn Hv11<1rd Sports be cautious. In order for a member to vote on a motion, he l,11111 Co.\r<1 Advertising Manager Editor Boston University is floun­ U.,n· /)011,·11,· Jeffrey Sal kin Dave Rives h,1d to he there at the time the motion was brought U,uhl1,,1 ,..(J\ Charles Collar dering is a morass oL apathy, l.arry , I hrt1i'11<'/11" I ('\l'I\ ('uro/ Frc1rrali vation. Personally, I do not think /0111 I ca11d,·1 and came down only to cast her vote after the A<1t111· Sfri:<·I John J','furphy that Silber is the president that L"111d1· St·Jt\\u, r= 1 Photo Editor Dave Ph eiffer" the University needs. Neither do voting had started and after the motion had been 10111 S11111uw Ginger Flook Production I think, however, that the introduced. She voted against the motion, which H" '1 \'(' "'" 0 ldl"lt'lllll' l/11At>r l/etsey Pritclutt student body has devoted and Entcrta1nment and made the twelfth vote and prevented the motion's /a1) /la111gd;, [._\"111/l' Splirgerber time or effort to making B. U. the Fc.stures Editor .\'adi11,• supporters· from obtaining their majority. JJ, Ill'(' Hdd.HL'III IIC'rr= Fred R~ker Cres,e11 sort of university they want. /),111 Ret'l't'S Freil And the parliamentarian can never overrule .,,,,· U,,1,/1111 C/<111did Rossi ., Ithaca College has the same­ Art Director the Chairperson, according to Robert's, which is /),111 I St•11rl<' Jt.•I.,._\' S11ur11 choice before her now. Do what what Congrt>ss is supposed to be operating by. C111d1 S, hu,,rf; Robert L. Don you want with it, but • for Nothing can be donw about it now. Congress, , r,e 1tP1.ac1n ,, puo111h•d _...,kl)' dun.,t tfl• coil.. • r••r. heaven's sake do not retreat 1 ~ .. ,eotlnt u,e tnud •., .... 1n Nowember, rhe t.econd week ot behind that ridiculous idea that you should have learned from your mistake. If you O.ctrnO.r, U1e ,.,,, .,... 1n M11cll 1nd the Mcond .,...k ot Dr. Whalen is gQing to be the ~re going to operate by the book, then read it, and "-'.1) ~one1 C11u oott•t• 'paid at llhac•. New York Po,tm.,1.,. pl•aM Mnd torm JS11 tc. Cu11neu M1nater, I'1te one who. will determine Ithaca's know it. And stick to your convictions ... you were ''r.J ·"' ea,em•nt, Oo,m ~. lth.1:1 Coll•... ll'!K.a, ff•• future as a valfd academie right the entire time. vo,. 1415,0 T.,•phon• •• (60il 274•l207, tutHcrlphon1 co,1 $ID 00 ~· y .. i. •' •00 101 two yuu 1no S25 00 •or institution. Academic su~riority Magruder was prevented from coming here Utr•• y11n. E.illlton•• ••••• • ,eflecl ,,.. 011,&"'"" OJ Ille is the·province of. the stud~nts.. not because of a moral issue, not because of a tight £dllo ••' 110:rd TP'ley n•,U,er ,e,1ec.t tlle tt9inton of IU11c.a "": cu ... nor n.C•H•rttY .nt1l-c,1t• lh1 conNn•u• of Utie 11&1dent budget, not because twelve people voted 'no'. Dody J',r ,'1'1.1, Jl'I te-14"'9, 01, rrthl~to c.one.c:. -.Oi!, or Nfvte Ellen Cutler Magruder was prevented from coming here •o ..,.,,,., ,.,y m11.n1t ,u11m11, ... for ..-,ic.11""· · Ithaca~:'!\: London Center through ignorance. AClvertlllnf - '

~ .',. - The lihacan, April 24., ·19.75, Page 5·

/ Doubts on the Death of Kennedy

"My God, they're going to kill us all!" (which in both cases would be involunt~ry, the be answered. Until then, it looks like we will have Texas governor John Connally utered those reaction time must necessarily have been instanta­ to accept the fact that for every John F. Kennedy words when he was struck by a bullet on November ~eous, thus Thompson placed the hit between Z234 and Martin Luther King anc~ Malcolm X. and 22, 1963. Before striking Connally, that bullet (exactly the fram chosen by COnnally) and Z238, Robert Kennedy there is one lonely and deranged reportedly entered the back of President John F. where the reaction becomes obvious. sniper whose bullet is going to find its mark. Kennedy's neck, exited tbrought the lower portion Since the time interval between the Kennedy of the front of his neck, entered Connally's shoulder hit and the COnnally hit was too great for a single Peter J. Friedman, Independent Researcher blade, shattered one of his ribs, exited through the bullet, the COmmission theorized a delayed front of Connally's chest, entered his wrist through reaction between the time that Connally was hit Sources: ,x Seco'lds in Dallas, The Warren the back side breaking the wrist bone and exited· and the time he "realized" that fact. However, if Commissio,,"s Report, Life magazine, November through the palm side where it continued on to Josiah Thompson's seemingly accurate interpreta­ 25, 1966. enter his left thigh. The third and final bullet (the tions of the "realization" is valid, then it 1s not first one missed the motorcade altogether) hit the possible for Governor COnnally · and President President's head and fatally wounded him. All this, Kennedy to have been injured by the same bulet. according to the Warren Commission's report. In this case, it is also impossible for them both to' Did Connally know there was more than one have been injured by the same weapon. Tests asassain when he cried "They're going to kill us performed by the FBI disclosed that an absolute Fraternity Probation all?" Perhaps. But more likely he will attribute it to minimum firing time of 2.3 seconds per shot a common vernacular expression plausible enough (minimum amount of time required by experts to Last night (Wednesday, April 16) it wa, to think or say when one has been s}lot at. You operate the rifle without aiming) was required to brought to our attention that Delta Kappa and Phi won't get any other answers from the Warren operate the weapon Oswald allegedly used. E. K. have been placed on probation by thP Commission either. After ten months of investiga- According to the Zapruder film, which was Intrafraternity Council tion, the Commission fully supported a five volume photographed at 18.3 frames per second, the ft's too bad that people living in the Terrace' FBI report (this five volume FBI report-investiga- second shot could not have occurred until Z252, area have had to suffer this long because of thest• tion was concluded a miraculous 17 days after the long after Connally had obviously been injured. fraternities' disrespect, lack of consideration and asassination!) which concluded that: Lee Harvey The wounds inflicted by the first shot are ··overall mistreatment of the Ithaca College Oswald, a "deranged Marxist" had fired three shots described in the report as marked by a hole in the Community. The actions of these fratcrnit1es from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book · back of Kennedy's jacket 5 and 3/8 " below the top leaves question in our mind a~ to_wha_t a fraternity Depository and had murdered the President and of the collar and a little more than an inch to the is and should be. The social 1mphcatwns of a that he had done so without assistance in the act or right of the middle · seam. The autopsy was fraternity are to provide a unified brothl'rhood in a involvement in any conspiracy. performed at the National Naval Medical Center, constructive manner to its· members as well as thP Bull; Bethesda, Maryland. A document concerning the community. Mor.e than 50 files dealing with Oswald's results is quoted in Thompson's book as follows: Our observations have shown us thal the!:

. revealing evidence- that does not quite prove who The holes in Connally s clothes corresponded 2. Throwing of bottles and rt•t·ords from (or how many) killed President Kennedy, it does evenly with his wounds, but they could give no residents windows onto parking lot. This consti­ prove that th~. ~arren Commission is sadly fu~ther clues, as his_ cl?th,es _had bl;en laundered tutes a violation of protection of student property mistaken in their fmdmgs. prior to the Comm1ss1on s mspect1on of them. (l.7.1) and a violation of the college's preservation If the Commission was looking for the truth Laundered. Someone saw fit to have crucial poeces of property (1.7.3) . concerning military agencies' involvement with the of l;viden~e cleaned and pressed before they could 3. Boisterous and rowdy conduct while asassination, there is great doubt that truth would be mvest1gated! intoxicated disturbing residents' in the same have ever been made public. F'?ur of the seven The b_ullet allegedly. r~sponsib_le_ for killi_ng vicinity. This is a violation of section 1.6.2 of the members of the Warren Commission were then, or Kennedy 1s called Comm1ss10n Exh1b1t 399. With I.C.J.C. formerly, related or involved with military the ex~eption '?fa very few missing fragment, the agencies in our country: · bullet 1s practically m perfect shape. The actual A. Vomiting in adjacent dorm stairw(•lls in - 1..Congressman Gerald.Ford, who.was said to murder w.eapon was used to fire a bullet of the their own residence building whi<'h is shared by have been the CIA's best friend in the House of same type into the wrist of a cadaver. The nose of independents. Representatives. the cadaver's bullet was flattened substantially, 2. Allen Dulles- Head of the CIA, until while Commission exhib~t 399, w~ich supposedly B. Physical destruction of their own rcsidenct• removed by President Kennedy after the Bay of had passed through not only a wrist, but a neck, halls(holes in walls, etc.) and in specific instances. Pigs disaster.,· throu~h a che~t and into a thigh as ~ell, is other college property. 3. Senator Richard Russell- Chairman of the practically. und1storte~. The bullets wh1c~ DO Senate· Armed Forces Subcommittee. appear sirrular to the Smgle Bullet (399) were those 4. Emptying containers of trash into.stairwells 4. John J. McClory- Assistant Secretary of the FBI fired into long tubes of cotton in order to creating a dangerous and unhealthy environment. War during WW2 head of-the Office of Strategic preserve their shape! Services, the top ~ilitary agency during WW ?, it Accred~ting the sh~ting to Lee Harvl:y w~ could go on with the list but think our was out of the OSS that the CIA came into bemg. Oswald )S perhaps bestowmg more marksmanship message is clear. The Commission's case for a lone asassain, ability·on him than he deserves. While Oswald was Despite their notification of probation yester­ although including many factors, was dependent in the Marine_s,. his last firing recor~ing ~ust barely day, last night proved to be a continuation of their upon: the bullets, the amount fired in what they pa~sed .the 1;1l1Illmum score for quahfic~bon b,v two negligence of responsibility. There are a lot of concluded was the time interval during which the pomts. Yet m under seven seconds durmg which all conscientious people living in these fraternities shooting took place (4.8 to 7 seconds) and the t~e shoot~ng took place, 9sw~ld would h~ve had to who do not deserve to be labelled as the offenders. direction(s) from which they had been fired. . aim and fire the bolt a_cbon rifle three t!mes. It appears that it is the majority who violate the There exists many reasons to doubt the official If the fatal shot did come from behmd, as the standard of conduct which we all live under. theory of the single bullet the greatest source of Commission asserted, why was Kennedy thrown Gus Perialas, Vice President of Student and these doubts being the ab~ndance of photographic back against the seat of the car? He should haye Campus Affairs recommended this situation evidence taken during the course of the _actual been thr!Jst forward. But hi: was not. The official should be handled between the administration and asassination. The most important of this evidence explanat10n was that the driver had heard a shot thespecific ·fraternity houses. As independents, is a motion picture taken by Abraham Zapi:uger, a and stepped on the gas and Kennedy was thru~t this has directly affected us to the extent that we man whose mild interest in photographing the backwards wh~n the car lurched _forward. This would like to participate in the settling of this President as the motorcade passed through Dealey does not explain w~y no or~e else m the car was situation l!-lso . . Plaza cause immeasurable consequences. Ill> thrown back. And m the Nix filr!J (another home There have obviously been many complaints to immediate relevance is that it enables a fairly movie':Ilak~r w~o ~ad unsuspectmgly film':!d the justify this probation. We are writing this as an accurate estimation of the position _of_ ~he assassma~1on) 1t 1s very clearly shown that presidential· limousine at the times the mJuned Kennedy 1s thrust backwards and the car does not attempt to make the Community more aware of the were inflicted. Kennedy's reaction to the first hit spped up fo~ several seconds! . situation, because it affects all of us either directly initiall becomes apparent at the frame numbered After ~1s arrest, _Oswald wa~ given '.'- paraffin or indirectly. 225. ~js means he was hi£ somewhere in the test to see 1f ~e had mtrate dep?~1ts on his. cheeks; We ask the fraternities to read section 1 of th(· interval from the 210th frame to the 224th, since nitrate deposits ca~ed by the fmng of a rifle. Th~ I.C. Judicial Code (Standards of Conduct), and to from "Z166" (Zapruder film frame number_ 166) to t~sts proved negative,. and sup1;>orted the propos1- ask themselves if they heed to these responsibili­ Z210, the ·view from the alleged firing pomt (the t10n that Oswald _had fired no rifl~ that day. ties. It appears to us that they have not. sixth floor of the Depository) was obscured by an Although this 'Yas hardly its pu~pose, the Thanks for the two minutes it took you to read oak tree Warren Report raised many quest10ns. The .Gov~rnor Connally testified before the Com- identities of the assassins are still ui:i~nown, though this--really. Sincerely, mission that he was hit in the interval Z231-234. there ~a':'e been nu':Ilerous suppos1t_10ns as to t_he 2 concerned Terrace residents His reaction is obvious at Z238, so it is a realistic '.'-5Sassms a!1d motives. .A question of maJor assum tion that he was hit between Z231-238. The 1mpo~tance _is why the Umted State~ go~ernment, Gover:or and his wife testified with certainty that certamly with enough resources at its disposal to President Kennedy had been hit by the first shor s?lve a murder ~ase when there were more ~ban and Governor Connally by the second. The five hundr~d. witnesses present, and especially Governor was positive that he had heard the first when the v1ct1m was ~he leade_r ~f the governm~nt, Poetry Contest shor and had begun to turn around to see what had put ~o ~uch ef~ort mto pac1fymg the American ha ened when he felt the second shot. Connally pubhc w1~h an 1mproba~le sto_ry of a lone man w!f aware that the velocity of any rifle bullet (C_ommumst, of course) wit~ a rifle and~ der~nged exceeds that of sound, which was a fundam~ntal mmd :,vho gunned down their leader while v1s10n of One thousand dollars will be In addition to a prize, each basis for his insistance that he and the President Marxism danced. t~rough his. head. \YhY was ~he awarded as grand prize in the winning poem will be included in were hit by sepJll"ate bullets. Not only did he h~ar govirnment so d1smterestE>d m pursumg consp1ra- First Annual Poetry Competition the WORLD OF POETRY AN1 THOLOGY. The contest will be the shot but he· had· time to react by turning tors. . .· . . sponsored by World of Poetry. around 'before h sically and then mentally , Jim Garris.on, d1str1ct at~or~ey of New Poems of all subjects and styles judged by an independent panel realizin that hf .bad been hit. The physical O~leans at t~e time of_the_assassmat1on con~uc~ed are eligible to win the grand of the Chaparral Poetry Society. "realizafion" ccording to.Professor Josiah T-hon_ii>- a controv!lrs1al 1~vest1gat1on of the assassmatu?n prize or any of fifty other cash or Rules and official entry forms are son (Six Seco!ds in Dallas) was the reflex reaction and he 1s convm~ed that. agei:its of _the . US merchandise a\lards. available by writing to World of of the colla se of the shoulder, the puffing of. the governmept were d1r~ctly responsible. This ~heory According to contest direc­ Poetry, 801 Portola Drive, Suite r.heeks, anfhair displacement whfch first beco_mes offers som~ ~xplanat1on of the strange actions of tor, Joseph Mellon, "We are 211, San Francisco, California b. · · Z238 Since this reaction was partially the Comm1ss1on. looking for poetic talent of every 94127. The contest closes June 1 kind, and expect 1975 to be a 30, 1975. ih: ~::u1~ of th; transfer ·0 £ momentum from the 11;1 anoth_er 64 years when the vault is opened \n bullet to :his body and partially a reflexive one Washington, at least a few of these questions wdl year of exciting discoveries." -Law Suit... --=---- The_ Magruder Compror11ise continued from page I· with Katcher over the $3,000 for Strutt. The school then provided the Bruce Springsteen concert, the second $6;250 to supply the To the Editor: and "accused IC of tampering." Katcher was also holding nearly SfJinners with the $12,500 fee for Ashby explained Katcher $8,000 of the Commissions'funds. their performance. Comprimise. It's proba,bly a felt the College was "meddling Tuesday night will allow Mr. According to Asnby, that is Katcher claims the College dirty word to most all of us. Yet Magruder to speak here if he in ... his affairs" by attempting to why the College did not take any owes him an additional $750 to by "'an overwhelming vote that is negotiate directly with Platts­ agrees to base -his fee on an sort of legal action against the meet the payments for Strutt, what the Ithaca-College Student admission price. Admission will burgh and he was holding on to agent until he turned the check however the Commission has Congress did Tuesday night. the $3,000 because he felt he was be charged to those who wish to for the Spinners back over to the said that money won't even be hear him. "entitled to damages." discussed until the $3,000 issue is I proposed that comprimise. College. Once Katcher gave the I'd like to tell_ you why. I remain opposed to helping In the meantime the Com­ Commission the money for the resolved. mission had booked the Spinners For more than a week a man profit through a crime Spinners he was immediately Katcher has 20 days from geared toward subverting our through Katcher for their_ ap­ served with the summons by the last Saturday to reply to the student congressmen and a great pearance last weekend. To many others have been locked in American system of ·govern­ College attorney. summons. If the case goes to ment;·-! urge you not to pay to secure that concert the Com- At the Saturday night con­ court the ·commission1 will have a bitter debate. A debate over mission sent Katcher a deposit of whether one thousand dollars of see Mr. Magruder: But the final cert Katcher gave the College a to pay for the incomed legal fees juclgement, a moral judgement, $7,912.50. The check was sent out of their budget. student body funds should be check for $6,250, which is the has to be made by you. on January 14 of this year. So deposit minus his commissionand Concert loses money used to hire convicted Watergate --.. while the College was dealing the payment for the first group, - Although the· entire costs of conspirator J eh Stuart Magruder Neither I nor any other th~ concert have not yet been as a speaker. Opponents, includ­ member of Congress has the fully totaled the College will ing myself, feel the student right to impose our morality on definitely lose money. According body's money should not be used - you. We leave the decision. From Your Registrar... to McGinnis the loss will be to profit this man or nay other "nothing too dramatic" and ad­ that participated in that crime. Respectfully, ded it would not top $1,000. The Propponents believe Mr. M&g­ ALL BACHELOR AND MASTER'S DEGREE ruder should be allowed his right candidates that will be attending commencement Commission·brought in between TOM HOWARD $15,000-16,000 from ticket sales to free speech, and students MEMBER OF STUDENT CON activities should obtain the information sheets at their right to hear him. the Union Desk or Registrar's Office. and initial · estimates of the GRESS concert budget were in the The proposal I. submitted REQUESTS FOR TRANSCRIPTS showing May, neighborhood of $18,000. Now 1975 degrees posted must be made in person at the the Commission faces the possi­ To The Editor; offering a "compromise" to an Registrar's Office. A $2.00 charge per copy is bility of losing another $3,000 Last Tuesday on the 23rd of issue he felt had caused a accessed. plus arly legal fees incurred. this month I had the dubio1.1s polarizati9n of opinions - thus Faced with this loss, and the pleasure of attending an aut.Jien- this "compromise" seemed, to Any questions or information relai1ve to "CREDIT fact that Katcher was also ,tic Student Congress meeting Mr: Howard· at least, the only BY EXAMINATION" and/or "CREDIT FOR LIFE holding another $8,000 of the featuring the debate concerning possible and equitable solution. EXPERIENCES" should _be directed to John Colleges' money, Student Body allocation of funds, to pay Jeb Mr. Howard's proposal suggest­ Stanton, Registrar, Centrex 3127. The testing Vice President for Business and Stuart Magruder to speak at • ed tht the Student Activities dates for CREDIT BY EXAMINATION programs Finance Josh Leonard has been Ithaca College. Aside from an Board finance Magruder's fee by which-the College may extend academic credit are extremely concerned about ex­ impressive .attendance, which is charging admission to the lee­ also available from him. cess spending in the Student not typical, Congress carried on ture,. and not guaranteeing Jeb . . Congress budgets. He has ; in their customary fashion. :r.fagruder any fixed fee i.e., Incompletes for May 1, 1975 BACHELOR AND cautioned the entire Congress From the outset the meeting was Magruder's fee would be deter­ MASTER'S CANDIDATES must be submitted to that the budget was getting very characterized by continual talk- mined entirely by the success of the Registrar by May 1, 1975. Grades received tight, and termed the situation ing, joking, bickering, and in ticket sales. Tom Howard after that date may prevent graduation and "a yellow alert." general a sense of disorder and seemed confident that Magruder students degrees cannot be posted until September Leonard reported the out­ misconduct pre~ailed. To the would find these terms accept­ 1. standing $8,000 was fully re­ frequent outside observer every- able and be willing to run the . covered and "the yellow alert is thing as it should be. financial risk. .- Student practice teaching Fall, 1975 that did not fill off', but commented the Con­ Thirty minutes into the Once again members of out the applications in the Registrar's Office should gress are "very close to exhaust." meeting Tom Howard utjtiated · · do so at once. the Magruder __,,discussion by continued on page 14

24 HOUR l('L nu:AM ( ()~ 1-:~*

al UNIVERSITY DELI COLLEGETOWN

. * ,,111 ... v a r i o 11 .., o t Ii r r ,I r I it· i o u.., r u rt· ~ l or tlH· 111 1111 t· Ii it·!:>. WTKO 1470AM .. 24- HOURS A ... DA Y _, a "Mame" Debuts at Cornell ~1\1)? On_ Thursday, May 1, the Cornell Broadway disagree ~bout the type of education the boy should. 'i ·, i Stage will present it's first performance of the well have,~while Patrick wants to stay and learn with :.;,ii -". ~ ~ loved musical "Mame". Although only on it's first his Auntie Mame ...and does. Surrounded by . 't legs, tbe Cornell Broadway Stage hopes to prove a Mame's zany friends the boy receives a most ,- . - · succttss with this upcoming show. unusual education. Mame virtually opens new tf·,f·- ·\ · 'l'he madcap adventures of Auntie Mame have windows on the world for Patrick as they romp · ,~ · amused <"artoons think of her always on his mountain. Playing the part of Beauregard Burnside is Jerry Smith from Ithaca College. Jerry is also a 8:30FREEZE FRAME-with Star Trt·k·,-. Gene Roddenberry he points to shrubs and drama major here and has several musical and theatrical credits behind him. Southern aristo­ 9:00(Monday /Wednesday only)MONTY PY• the many constellations cracy is an acting style different than what Jerry is used to, but he feels that the major role of THON'S FLYING CIRCUS (Tuesday/Thursday only) THE TON!Cl!T SHOW­ (she kriows just two by name. Beauregard is a good learning experience for him. i The chic Madam Branislowski is played by Sue FrPd Raker's fint•st hour she says which she thinkgs the brightest star Paetzold. Sue was seen this year in the Greenroom production of Lysistrata. She also plays one of the 9:30RETTf':R NEVER(Monda,v/W<'dnPsda) onl.v) a p('l'ping- Tom bn•aks in on ClaudP and Lu1·_v and gets it wrong.) chorus members and does a fine job as a main dancer. Sue is a Drama major here at LC. Sweet, southern, sickening Sally Cato is 10:00NEWS SCENE she's his arrov.:s' quiver played by I.C.'s Tracy Donohue. Tracy was also seen in Lysistrata this year, and the southern as he aims straight and sure sweetness she delivers is no new thing for her. Tracy is also one of the chorus members, and WICB-TU she fumbles with compliments Studios Drama here at LC. Pretty Pegeen is played by Donna W aszner THE FOLLOWING IS Till-: BHOAl>('i\:-;T SCIII·: and wavers on her course. who studies voice and Drama here at LC. Donna's I>l:I.J,; FOR SllNDAY E\'I-:NIN<;. ,\l'HIL :~7. personality _and great talent has proven to be more J!ITi. than valuable to the show. 7:00 NE\\'S SCENE. .l1wal and national rww,-. for the strangest thing can make her sad: Gloria Upson is played by Michele Pocaro who is a TV-R Major at LC. Michele whistled her way to 1•vpr_von1·. ~ she thinks ahead to endings fame this year as the nightengale in Once Upon a 7::m SPORTS SC:Ol'I<: ... Tl'd \\'illi,1111, and th1· Mattress. Alaskan Salmon not wanting to leave though he pierces her through Alsc> supporting the chorus and dancing is Neil Harding, a voice major here at Ithaca. He also H:!IOl•'REEZE FHJ\ME. .. g-11Pst ho,-.1 I >wk Srrnt h and Lloyd E1·kpr talk with (;('Ill' Hodd(•nlwrrv. c:-!'ator she's his arrows' quiver plays the part of a Lithuanian Bishop in the opening of ''Star Trt•k'", in this l'XelusiV(' intl'rvu·~· party scene. always on his mountain. Showtime is May 2 and 3, Thurs., Fri., and H::IO Il/\l'l'F:NJN(; WOl{LI> ... VOY A(;1-: with .Jim Sat., with the curtain rising at 8:15 p.m. The Place Todd. an <'ig-ht. pi('<'(' band fpat unng jazz rork. joins elisa meredith nazzeley is the Cornell Alice Statler Auditorium. Tickets are hosi l",s Sui• Kant•. · · april the fourth, 1975 $1.50, $2.50, and $3.00, and they're on reserve at the Willard Strait Ticket Office, or at the I.C. !l:00 CONSlJMEH INSIGIIT ... Larry llowman. Record Store. l'r!'sidl'nt. of l.h1· ltharn Anti-Shop lil't.ing /\,,-.oria Poems are selected weekly by Jay Shinder and t ion. 101ns hm,t('ss I )anni Carp<'ntn Prof. John Ogden. Send poems to Valentin_e Box !l::10 llETTEH NEVl•:IL .. a JJ('t'ping Tom 1-r1·a11•s 1:_hao, for Claudt· and Lucy in thl' third show ol' thi,-. Shoemaker, Poet, Music Box l1v1· part ,1•np, Choral music of five centuries will he 10:00 NEWS SCENl•: ... a wrap up 111 nirr1·nt Appears At - performed by the Ithaca Collel!P Concert Choir l'Vt•nt, ..·, under the baton of Roland Bentley Tuesday, April 29. The public is invited to attend the concert, !Oz: l:i ALI. KINllS OF l'l•:Ol'U: ... gu1·,h SlPv1· X-Roads scheduled at 8:15 p.m. in Walter Ford Hall. <;rl'l'nspan and I )!'bhy Saml'lson l'ro111 01'1-:~ by Jay Shinder IIOl!SE join host .Jl'i'f S1·hp11f<'l'kn On Thursday, April 24, 8:00 p.m. in the "Two Weeks Notice (this is Music)" is the Crossroads, Lynn Shoemaker, poet and teacher . speculative title of one of the works by Ithaca will be reading from his works. Mr. Shoemaker's Collge student composers to be presented to the poems have appeared in numerous magazines such public at Walter Ford Hall Monday. April 28 at 8:15 WICB as "The South Daltota Review", "The Gegenschein p.m. Quarterly," "Epoch", "Abraxas" and many others. "Ol'EllA VH;NETTES" His latest book of poems Coming Home has received a wide and favorable response. A variety of undergraduate musical programs Bellini', "Norma'". an opPra in thrt·I' a1·t~. will Brought up in the farmlands of South Dakota, will be given during the final week of classes at he later went off -to Harvara, and as he says Ithaca College. All, at the School of Music, Walter h<' fpatured on Opera Vig-ncttes on Sunday. April "taught and worried in the movement." Something Ford Hall, are open to the public. '2.7 at :i:OOl'M on WJCB-FM ..Jorn hos! .lo(• from the farmland followed him, as his poems often Kappa Gamma Psi fraternity has scheduled its T(·mrH•\La and .Jim I>rak!· as th(•_v wili play t.h(• speak of the impressions it left on him. final recital of the year for 8: 15 p. m. Monday, April hig-hl1g-ht arias a" interpn•ted h_v l hi' 1·1·nl ur_y", Now residing in Ithaca, Mr. Shoemaker writes 28. g-n·al<'~t ~ing-Pr~ and "teaches" poetry as a member of the New York At 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. Alexandra Rodgers State Poets in the schools. will play her junior oboe recital. She is a pupil of "COMEllY TOr--:H;IIT" The reading is sponsored by the National Prof. Peter Hedrick. Ensemble chamber music will be presented at Council of the Arts, who will also be sponsoring Thi' <·omcdy ol the Marx Hrot.hPr~ will bt· ft·al un·d another poetry reading on May 7, 8:00, in the 8:15 p.m. Wednesday. 0 on WICB-/\M \ "Comedy Tonight" on Satu1·dav, Crossroads, with Dick Lourie. Music for basson will he played by Dona 'Lee in April 26, al 8:00PM. Even though thl· Ma~x her senior recital at 4:30 p.m. Thursday (May 1). A Brother~ havl' he('n around for ov(•r 50 years. th(•_y The Icicles pupil of Prof. Edward Gohrecht, she will be heard -..till ar<· om· of the most popular comedy t1·am~ ./ in works by Mozart, Balay, Solomon and Poot. today. ,Join host Gary Bettman for "Comedy Lined up like an old farm family having their Tonight'" a~ h(• will feature th(• best cut" from thl' picture taken. :\llarx Ilrot her\ film. ' It's been a lean year. A number of graduate students will present recitals at Ithaca College in partial fulfillment of the The melting show pulls them into finer and finer "ITIIJ\CA IIAPPENIN(iS" points requirements toward their master's degrees. At 8:15 p.m. Thursday, May 1, Byron Conner yet they cling to the eaves Phillip Berrigan, a controversial figure of thl· late the tired roof of their house. will play a program of music for oboe. An oboe They feel embarressed in ,front of the camera. major working with Pro(. Peter Hedrick. he will be 60's and early 70's will be the featured guest on this All tl\ey have to show are .their rough'knuckles a5.sisted by student instrumentalists in performing week's Ithaca Happenings. This show is a repeat of and the transparencies betwe~n. Concerto in G minor by Handel, Koke No Nowa a program originally broadcast in February 11nd is· (Moss Garden) by Hovhaness, Quartet in F Major, back by popular demand. Join host, Roger K. 370 by Mozart, Lamento by Leroux and Chiqcchi, and co-host Paul Stern, with Philiip selections by Celerisse, lbert and Barlow. Berrigan on Friday, April 25, at 6: 15PM on Lynn Shoemak~r WICB-FM.

-':'."-. Tli'e lthaean,:-~prll -2~ ~- 'ts,-.,,P.age -8;-~;- :-n~~--:· -:, ·-:--~-- -·- ·- -~ -~- ,- ..... , lfil]'iJl]l]'il(D(Ull.W'i] ·orleails: "Tomm3/" LetTliere On the Screen Paul Nicholas is absolutely despicable as BY Jay Bobbin Tommy's cruel cousin Kevin, as is Keith Moon, by Michael Beecher _.portraying Tommy's mean uncle. A lot-0fthe film's fun comes from seeing some of today's biggest America has finally discovered Orleans. Six "It's BOY, Mrs. Walker, it's a boy," chant the months ago, if you were to ask someone from nurses to Nora Walker (AnnMargaret) as she movie and record stars in cameo roles: specifically, Elton John as the Pinball Wizard (in three-foot­ Dubuque, Iowa if they'd ever heard of Orleans, the cradles her new-born son ... and what BOY! He's answer would most probably be "No." Now, the Tommy, the hero of Ken Russell's film currently high boots, no less); Tina Turner, who literally long awaited new by Orleans entitled Let showing at the State Theater. '!:he movie is, of burns the screen up with her devastating There.Be Music is high on Billboard's album chart course;based on the immensely popular rock opera performance as the Acid Queen; Eric Clapton as a and the title song has been released as a very by Pete Townshend (of The Who), and director­ singing preacher; and Jack Nicholson, singing--yes, successful single. Rolling Stone magazine even screenwriter Russell has done a fantastic job in Chinatown fans, singing--his way through the role went as far as to ~ Orleans "probably the best of a medical specialist who can't help Tommy but live band in America." Funny thing ... we knew transferring it to the screen. sure likes his mommy. (Pardon the rhyme.) Last t~at all along. Who could ever forget the dozens of Being a rock opera, Tommy !!Ontains no spoken live performances that Orleans has given in the lines--everything, including some television com­ but not least, there's Roger Daltrey as the hero of the piece. Daltre) acquits himself handily in the Ithaca area. And who can forget that amazing live mercials in one scene, is sung. The story, if you concert given- by Orleans last spring outside the role (most effectively in the "I'm Free" sequence) don't already know, is easily divisible into two ~3:del!'. il!art~ents, without hopin~ deep down parts. In the first, young Tommy is struck deaf, and is really all that the character should be. ms1de I wish 1t could happen again.' ? I have only one complaint about the film; dumb and blind after he sees his mother's lover (an Let There Be Music possesses all of the oafish Oliver Reed) kill his father (Robert Powell), unfortunately, it's a big one. At several points, qualities of the first album: The band is tight, the particularly during the opening sorfJ, the harmonies are perfect, and the songs are not an airplane pilot presumed dead in a World War II • especially complex in nature. It's just simple good plane crash. Both mother and lover shout (or, synchronization of the voices to the actors' mouths is extremely-poor. This is the sort of error that time rock 'n roll w.ith a touch of class. But rather, sing) at Tommy, "You didn't hear it! You something is missing. For some reason, I don't didn't see it!" He doesn't see, hear or say anything drives me crazy, especially when I'm watching a musical movie. I can forgive· bad synching in a think "Fresh Wind" will ever have as strong an else, either, for many years. As a young man effect as "If' and there isn't anything on the album (played neatly by The Who's Roger Daltrey), Japanese hortor movie, but not in a major that could ever match up to "Please Be There.'' Tommy is taken to the voluptous Acid Queen and to production like this. Perhaps the weakness lies in the lyrics: stuff like To enjoy Tommy to its fullest, one must like a specialist, both of whom fail to cure him. He soon "I'm _as happy as a man can• be" doe§;n't exactly develops an affinity for pinball machines, and the music of The Who ... and it's not too hard to like, reqmre a great knowledge of poetry to write. But either. Howiwer, it should also be seen for its · then, we don't really expect intense poetid!llages becomes so skillful at racking up the points that he from Orleans. Something as simple as "If you were dethrones the reigning Pinball Wizard. Finally, outstanding special effects and performanees. The Robert Stigwood production for Columbia Pictures a queen and I was a king, our throne would be love Tommy's mother, in a ral!e. pushes him through a and the song we sing," was all we ever needed from· mirror, and ZAP! he's cured ... or, as he sings, is being ptesented in five-speaker "Quintaphonic" sound at the State. Tommy is an unusual story, and Orleans. :"I'm Free!" The second part of the film shows the Ken Russell is an unusual director;- the union of Perhaps the problem with this album is a lack these two elements producing. a cinematic reawakened Tommy as a deity ... a hero who is of variety. But like the first album, there is a solid worshipped by all. (The masses used to pay homage experience which is likely to go unrivaled for some combination of funky music and softer, more sublte to a statue of Marilyn Monroe.) Tommy's time. (By the way, "that deaf, dumb and blind kid music; the only difference with "Let There Be sure plays a mean pinball!") Music-'' is what seems to a simple occurence that popularity becomes marketable--Tommy vacation any writer suffers from (and which I can testify to camps, Tommy T-shirts and Tommy records are right this very moment) known as the "dry spell.'' pitched to the all-too-gullible followers of the young There just ain't the something (don't ask me what it messiah. The conclusion comes as a pessimistic and is) that made Orleans' first such a memorable, revolutionary note to this hero1-worship parable ~trong album. (actually, this ending saves the story from being So if you run into your friend from Dubuque, too incredible to be relevant). and he tells you he's heard the new Orleans-album, __ There is definite satire in the film, perhaps Movies put your hand on his (or her) shoulder and shake - more than author Townshend originally placed in yourhead with a knowing smile on your_face. Then play him the -first Orleans album. . He'll probably the story. The added punches are undoubtedly the say something to the effect of "How come I never contribution of Ken Russell, regarded as one of the in.Ithaca heard. this album before?" And you( still-wearing most unconventional directors. today. (He has your all-knowing smile) can shrug your shoulders - displayed his unique style in Women lo Love, The and dream of a day last spring you had Orleans all Devils, The Music Lovers and Savage Me;iah.) I to yourself. can't really put Russell down for adding his messages to the story, because they are delivered STATE- "Tommy" with dazzling visual accompaniments which can't be (PG) 7 and 9 p.m. done justice in mere words ... they have to be seen. The performances in the film deserve quite a· TL.I.IVBR.r bit of mention. First of all, Ann-Margaret is CINEMA- "Emmanuelle" TAVMRH sensational as Tommy's mother. She proved a few (X) 7 and 9 p.m. 2097 .., ...... years ago in Carnal KnQ.wledge that she• could be more than a run-of-the-mill sex symbol, and she Tuesday thru Saturday S ,P.m. ,a 1 a.m. TEM~LE- "Shampoo" Dinners s.rved 6:00...1:30 . electrifies every scene of Tommy in which she's (R) 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. featured. Oliver Reed. comes across as a greedy Reservations Requested- SJ9-772• brute of a man, which is exactly how he should be in Ga~aOUSCOCIITAIU the role of Tommy's stepfather. (Incidentally, Reed G ..aTFOO• starred in director Russell's first major film, WAXING A'l'IIOUlll8a Women In Love.) Re<·ord Store Hours Mon-Fri I Oam-Hpm RIP-OFF WICB-AM Sal I Oam-6pm S1111. ~0011 HE(:OHI) PHU:J·:~ CERRACHE .\ =~.99 I) .~.:~o CABLE H 1..~0 E :-).'J9 61 I05.9FM C 1.99 F 6.10 EVERY Hour All Next Week You Can Rip Off WICB-AM. But Y()u Will Have To Listen To Win. So Listen In This Week. And Find Out_How You CanWin_O-ne Or More . Fr~m-LED ZEPPELIN To !BESTPH-1(:Es I GENESIS, BTO To JOHN PRINE, ! iu I L _1J.:.IL\~_:_-L __ I DYLAN To B_AD CO., MARVIN GA YE To -AEROSMITH And Many More • ALL NE~T WEEK;ONLY ON WICB-AM. . I\ CENrfREX 3216 Keep Us On And Rip Us Off!!!. 274-321~6 \ rt• ,. our Ht>

A record crowd turned out last Sattll"day, April 19, to see a concert by the populac. recording group, The Spinners. The appearance of the artists was a highlight of the Black Weekend activities. According to the Ithaca College Bureau of Concerts, who co·sponsored the event with the Afro-Latin Society, approximately 3500 people were in attendance at the Ben Light Gymnasium for the concert. '.Phe Spinners were preceded by a group from New Jersey called Strutt. Then, the top-billed quintet opened its segment with a soulful rendition of "Fascinating Rhythm." This was followed by other Spinners hits such as "I've Got to Make It On My Own," "I'll Be Around" and "Sadie," their latest hit single. The Spinners are, Billy Henderson, Bobby Smith, Henry Fambrough, Pervis Jackson and Phillippe Wynn, who only recently joined the other twenty-year singing veterans. The group hails froni Detroit, Michigan and in the last three years, it has been nominated for three Grammy awards. The Spinners are also the recipients of gold records for their albums "The Spinners", "Mighty Love" and "New and Improved." A member of the group revealed that they are being considered for roles in the forthcoming film "Number One With a Bullet," to be produced by Francis Ford Copp<'ia of Roddenberry on "Godfather" fame. WICB-TV Gene Roddenber"ry, creator, writer, and producer of "Star Trek", visited Ithaca last week. Hypnotist To Only in town for the day, Roddenberry took time from his busy schedule to appear on the WICB-TV program, Freeze Frame. · Along with guest host Dick Smith,_ and IC cinema student, and Lloyd Ecker, IC Semor Class Perform President (and representative for the "trekkies"), Roddenberry expounds upon all the aspects of "Star Trek". The discussion includes why the show Gil Eag:!es, "tht> entertaining psychic," will be went off the air, why the reruns were brought appearing Friday, April 25 at 8 p.m. in.the Main back, and many other "behind the scenes" activities Theatre of the Performing Arts Building. In this that occurred. Roddenberry also talks about the free program, Eagles will be demonstrating his possibility of "Star Trek" becoming a f,rill-length well-regarded powers of hypnotism and extra motion picture. sensory perception. Eagles has appeared at many Freeze Frame, with special guest Gene Roddenberry, can be seen Sunday night, April 27, colleges and on several major television talk shows: at 8:00 PM on WI CB-TV, cable channel 7: Ithaca College Record Store Year End SA.LE

Every Alhuni Sale Sale Starts Friday April 25, 1975 - Will Be .Open Ends The Following Thursda'y MONDAY 1 :00 - 5:00 ApriJ May 1, 1975

Red Sticker Album Other reg. now E3.74 - 3.45 E - 3. 7 4 - 3.50 F4.25 - 3.88 F - 4.25 - 3.99 EE 7.75 6.75 EE 7.75- 7.00

All Others Drastically Reduced

( I Cut-outs 1.75

.....:...-...,,__ .... --··. .,

Alias Smith & Jones -··~ Lou Conte & Jim Dorhety

by Marcie Gorman Jim also enjoys taking his Lou went on to say, "When I bases slow after hitting a home hit a homerun it's a good feeling. If Butch Cassidy and the run. He says, "I feel pretty good While I run the base~ I think Sundance Kid had been athletes when I hit a homerun. I try to about being able to do it again: rather than cowboys they'd get at least one a year." . The best ;>leasure I get out of probably be named Lou Conte "I don't get nervous in front hitting a homer is running the Short Stop and Jim Doherty, two exception­ of crowds," Jim continued, "but I bases real slow because a home­ Jim Doherty... al baseball players on the LC. feel like an idiot when I walk run is the all time accomplish­ Baseball Team. back to the dugout if I have ment for a baseball player: Both of them began playing struck out." baseball at the age of eight and now they stand together, Jim as Jim and Lou agree that the shortstop, Lou as second base­ From Vestal New York, Jim teams success is due to Coach man for the Bombers team plays two sports for I.C., base­ "Carp" Wood, "He knows what hoping to someday be profes­ ball and basketball. He prefers - he's talking about" they said. sional athletes or phys-ed teach­ baseball and takes it more They also agree to the Red Sox·· ers. seriously than basketball. being their favorite team. LoH is from Springfield, Both players view the I.C. The teamed duo of Conte Mass. and baseball is his only baseball team as one of the best a~d Doherty will be greatly sport at LC.. He admires the in the country. "! would consider rrussed next year not only on the team as a whole though he feels it equivalent to a low minor baseball field: the victory parties ... Second Basemen that baseball is just as much an league team" said Jim. "The just won't be the same. Lou Conte individual sport as it is team baseball program here will cer­ sport. tainly give you experience espec­ Itis thoughts are, "It's you ially because of the coach." against the pitcher and that's where the competition lies. The player tries to outdo his own goals though at the same time he ~ plays for the team." • Trackmen Lose Senior Mike Donnelly _won By Dave Rives SESSIONS: the javelin, while IC scored well Pole Vaulter Ron King and in the weight events with junior June 9th hurdler Bob Fahy pac~d Ithaca Jim Szczerba winning the shot, June 23rd College's track team in a losing and Little Red graduate Doyle effort up at Oswego State Chatham winning the discus July.7th yesterday. The final sco're was throw. Freshman Joel Thomas 99-42. placed second behind Chatham in July 2:Jst King, former Trumansburg the discus. Aug. 4th star vaulter, smashed the college Freshman Dave Cross added va~Iting mark as he soared 14-6 a second place finish in the 440 topping the-old mark by two yard dash, while · Little Red Social Science inches. He had to settle for a graduate Jack Mazza placed second place finish as Oswego's third in the 100 yard dash. Fine Arts · Steve .Wark cleared 15 feet. Freshmen Kevin Downey and Sophomore Rick Eggleston Rubin Burns placed 2-3 in the placed third for IC as he clea?ed long jump while Downey and Radio-TV the bar at 14 even. sophomore Carl Haggerty went Fahy, the trackmen's leafing 2-3 in the triple jump. Drama career scorer won both the 120 Ithaca travels to Alfred this high hurdles and the high jump. Saturday to compete in the fifth Natural Science Bob's hurdle win was the only annual Independent Collegiate track event win IC- managed Athletic Conference (ICAC) track and field meet. The against the Lakers. 1 Music Ithaca was &ible to beat Bombers finished fifth last year Oswego in the field and weight in a six team field, and are events, enjoying a 33-30 advan­ !~king toward an improved Athletics tage in that.p¢ of the meet. showing this year. Film Humanities

Exhibits

Theatre

Cinematography

Health Recreation Work Shops ·n:; Communications Arts Your ow~ oft-campus Pad? Business Administration 1 through 7 bedroc;,m apartments ALSO ava!lable Summer for th~ 1975-1976 school year. Repertory . \.__ . Theatre * Su1nmer Re~r,eatioll at its Finest. EVENINGS ONLY -272-3389 5:00 TO 8:00 .. · . lntramura/,s

·Bo:rnber Bats Conie Alive ... Floor Hockey The top scorers before the final play-off werP. · Wendy Munder A new women·s intramural with 11 goals and Nancy Booth sport began this term--Floor with IO. The final game will be Six Straight Wins Hockey. It is played similar to played this week sometime. Field Hockey and ice horkey with Teams competing will he "The a few changes in the rules. Game Clicks" led hy Capt. Nancy were played in Gym 2 and the Biledeaw and tht• "Flying Pucks" Starting Shortstop Jim Do­ by John R. Murphy Doherty and third baseman entire gym, walls, bleachers led hy Capt. Sally Scatton. This herty, also a starting guard on Kevin Van Remmen are current­ were in bounds. Major rules sport is playPd for the Fall tpis years basketball team, has The Ithaca College Bombers ly batting .500 to .lead the were no high sticks. rough play season np;,.,t vear lwcause of lhP become the Bombers' all time - focreased their winning streak to Bombers. Second base Lou or checking. There were six suecPss it w;;s this year. leader in Doubles and Runs. six in a row with a 20-3 thrashing Conte .464, Center Field Pete teams in the competition. each Doperty doubled against Le­ of East Stroudsberg yesterday. Crandall .433, Left Field Ed playing fivt' games helore the moyne to give him a career total The Bomber's, who have 12 Onisk .417, and Right field Bob tournament. Statistics were of 18 to break the old mark of 17 _ players batting over .300 with Disbury .409 are the other kept on the goals and assists. six of those over .400, have won set in 1963 by Dick Rockwell. Bombers hitting over .400. their last six games by an His two runs against E;st average score of nearly 13-3. Stroudsberg pushed him past The most impressive victories Keith Kurowski's career total of were against_ Rochester, King's 71 to become the all-time Bomber Designated hitter Tom - and in two games ·against East leader in runs with 72. Jim also Welch and Onisk lead the club in 0 Stroudsberg. The scores of the holds four other Bomber records: RBIS with 11. Welch also i1as games were 14-1, 15-2, 18-7, and he has played · in more games two homers to lead the team in 20-3 respectfully. (77), had more At Bats (320), and that important category. In yesterday's home game rflore hits (103) than any player against East Stroudsberg, the to wear a Bomber uniform. Jim losers were out slugged - out hit - also holds the season mark for and outpitched by the Bombers. 126 at bats and he needs just· 11 Hickey's Music Fred Kowalik, Tom Welch, Ke­ more total bases to surpass Rich vin Van Remmen, and Bob Miller's club mark of 148 career Store Disbury cracked homeruns as total ~ases. "Mu~.c 1\1\a•leo t.i You the Bombers outhit the warriors 20-7. Freshman pitcher Rande Records - Guilau - 8onjos Pierce allowed just seven hits in Reco11h · going the route for his first victory and complete game of the . 20 s. Tioga St. 272-8262 young season. . - Downtown During this unbeaten streak • 6-- :~1;1°::tft~ !~v~3 ::::a~~ -)""ti' --·------..·------,-s·-,-.----~-"---.---,···1 game while putting together a . Q 1 whopping .408 team batting 1 , ,-..~ I average.· The Bomber's pitching I . ~- Jhe lest Ult 1 staff also shined during this ~ I streak, the combined staff allow- ....._...... 1 of Coffee I ing just an average of 3 runs per .,...... ,.. 1 1 game. Clark Small a sophomore . a.aa1see,- in Town : starter contributed more than WQ ~ JH SOUTN IHANW I his share when he added a Doflut, •II tlae VILLAGE a&• : complete game victory in a close •• CO-UNITT CHIIERS 1 game against Lenoyne College. OPEN 6 .oo a.m. ---11 ,oo p.,n. 1 DAYS : Small is now 2-Q.

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COAT DEPARTMENT, SECOND FLOOR -, '---

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Crew Crushes Marietta 5th"• l WIDFor ' ·Powerhouse. Lftcro-sse Team

by Stew Kahn The mens' races began with of open water. The victory of the Jack Henry, Don Egan, the Ithaca novice shell against by M;ame Gorman Richard Wood and Tom The Ithaca College Crew lightweights visibly affected - Mackleer. soundly defeat;ed Marietta Col­ the Marietta Junior Varsity their fellow oarsmen psych, as have been keeping up witli the Lightweights. The inexperience they realized that they could _ The I.C. Lacrosse Teams goals also. . Coach Garrett bas lege this past weekend by record stands now 5 and 0. Since winning three out of five races. of the Ithaca oarsmen showed as beat Marietta. been intpressed with attackers they rowed with a. strong tail­ The •JV's faced last years last Thursday the Bombers took Don Egan and freshman Tom The only . races lost were the on St. Lawrence 9-7, Clarkson, novice and freshman eights while· wind which created rough wa­ small college national champions Mackleer Midfielders "Dick ters. The crew kept even with 15-10, Siena 18-5 and last Tues­ triumphs were registered in the and proceeded to open up a lead Wood and Jeff Glazer have also Marietta for the first five hun­ from the first stroke. The race days game wlls against Alfred, been doing a good job of varsity lightweight, junior var­ 27-2. sity and varsity races. With dred meters however the course was a tough one as Marietta hustling" said Coach Garrett. conditions -overcame them and refused to give up and Ithaca Assistant Coach Randy Gar­ After every game the coach­ their three victories the Bombers rett is very pleased with th~ captured the Robert B. Tallman they lost by 150 meters. could not increase, their boat es what they call a most valuable length lead. The JV's ·main­ team this year. "Everyone. is player titled -honorary captain. Cup, named after varsity (foach Close Frosh Race doing their job," he said. · "The Tallman and presented to him by tained their lead until the last They have been; RPI-John - last years crew. 300 meters and then when team is in better shape than Mooradian who is doing even The freshman race was next Marietta began to gain, they they've ever been. Every other better this year than last, St. Women Debut on the regatta schedule -and it sprinted and won by a resound­ scorer has been p assist. We Lawrence-Pete Auyer, Clark - was the meeting of two top The days' races began with ing two lengths. As Paul Zee look for 'an ,anjoyable and pros­ son-Al Johns, leading the team in calibre crews. Both shells got off said after the 'race, "We knew perous season." ground balls, Siena-Kevin Harris the debut of the Ithaca College to an excellent start and contin­ Womens Crew versus their coun­ what we had to do and we went Randy went on to say, "T~ and Alfred,goalie Tom Hofm_ann. ued to run neck and neck for the out and did it." mid fielder -h'ave · been scoring Saturday's home game will t~rparts from Cornell. The JV's 2000 meter course. With less raced first and in a close race the more goals this season than any be against Oswego at 2:00 on than 500 meters to go Marietta Win Tallman Cup other, year. The only time our South Hill field. Tuesday ·April Ithacans lost by a length and a pulled out for a scant seat and a half. The following race was oponents have scored were due 29 the Bombers travel to Cort­ half lead (approximately 6 feet) The varsity race was the last to fast breaks, broken clears o, a, land for a 3:30 game. between the two varsities and and held on for the victory. As the results were just as Coaches 'one on the schedule and to the man down on defense. stroke Bill Ryan commented victor went the Robert B. The game is not won only by • Mike Williams and Steve Perez after the- defeat, "This was expected. Ithaca won handily, Tallman Cup. Marietta College points but also by saves. The certainly our hardest race, but I is a perennial power in rowing defense this year - has been defeating the Cornell women by n't think' we rowed up to our three lengths of open water. As and was the toughest -competi- exceptional;so good that for the potential. I hope we get a chance tion the crews' elite eight has past two games the first and Magruder... Coach Williams commented after lo meet them at the Dad Vails." lhe races, ''I'm really proud of faced so far,_ . With their second defensemen have had The' possibility of these crews reputation on their · Jl!inds, the -equal time on the field. The the ladies. The JV Shell has meeting again is good as they are . continued from page 1 been set back by injuries but lthacans knew ~bey 'were in for a fourth and fifth midfielgers and - hoth strong crews and give the tough race and that they had to _the two freshman goalies have Magruder accepts an offer from they certainly rowed their best Ithacans a chance to revenge piece ever. My Amazon Queens row their b. est. It was. expected _ also had equal time; , S,#-,B. to speak on campus, their defeat. l h M t there will be an admission just outpowered Cornell in the The Varsity Lightweight that th_e ig ter ariet a cre,w The bombe;s three starting charge. varsity race." Overall it was a would Jump on the Bombers at d ,, p t A ye Ste've race was next and IC began its h. t e1ensemen, e e u r, Lyons does not think Ma- strong dPhut for the 'women and the start, however t 1s w~s no Van Slyke and Mark D"rrv have streak of victories. The light­ Th d .-•J Gruder will accept the offer. "I their success should continue the case. e oarsmen game a b d . ood · b Th ·y·v·e weights, looking extremely fast, two seat Iea d w h1c. h con t'mue d t o een h omgtr a gt Jo · thee ball will try for the sake of the under the two dedicated co!lches. ciefeated Marietta by two lengths widen throughout the race. With Oeen us mg O :ecover H fro stude.nt body but I am doubtful 500 meters to go Marietta began h~ve helped goalie Tom O an he will,.accept. We will try to th ·, to make a move however the ,. wi ~ :~a~es, ,, ~ :, -: . .' ~ -·t ~~~r bun the best deal we can . varsity held them off and widen- · Dfuing the fourt penod': 0 oecause we have already put him ed their lead to a length and a the St ,. Lawrence game wtth out," . half victory. It was an impres- three nun_utes left and two men Incoming S.A.B. chairman siv'e showing for the varsity and do~ our defense prevented any Sam Milgrim is conc!rned witli Wh Stew Leonard summed it up scormg. the proble~s that_ nught result best "We knew we were fast but from this controversy. "This will ComtH we n·~_eQe,9 a t9p ranked crew like The high scorers from tlie set _a, bad _precedent ~ it p~ts

Marietta to'push us. Besides 0 we 'past fo~ games have be.en I.C. m a very bad light with -Summer? didn't give the coach a cup last c?-captam Fran~ Welc~ ~ th programming agencies.!' Lyons year to give it away for him this eight goals, Kevin Harns ~th added that, "We are" in 'big ., twenty one, John Mouradiatt trouble with the American Pro- year. • with twelve and Al Johns with?! g'{aln Bureau.~ ·:- C ' There are at least three hundred reasons why - . ~· .. you should spend the summer with us, including 1 Ornithology Try Our'P~zzas ~-·· -Small Gaug?Videotaping ~ ,.-Th~n Our Prices - 3 ' ' . - Extensive Premed Offerings 4, ArchpeologicaJ Research Methods Conimunications~or Administrators Beginni~B through A~vanced Photography 7 . Fr .. Ger., Span. 133 Elementary Reading Course II Math for Those Who Th~k They ~on't Like Math .-PIRRO'S PIZZA! ' 9 Elem~rry Modei

'Uh,·,1~/I -tu ,n 1nt"n. . CJJ~ ... We Deliver To I.C.".' C.U. and The Ithaca_-Com!llunity -.~·-,·:ir,,: Goi,ng~ut?- Announcementsare available from the Cornell Summer Session Office . .;;ii 103 Day Hall, Ithaca, ~y 1~ Co~e Use Our Djni~g Room Facili~i~s-! ·~~~~ WEEKLY MENU • 4/24-4/30/75 WEDNESDAY, QPRIL 30 THURSDAY, APRIL 28 Lunch Soup of the Day EUROPE at Lunch Hot Dogs • • Soup of the Day praees you ean. · Chili and Grilled Cheese Hoagies Sandwich Dinner Assorted Cheese and Fruit from Eggburgers with Potato Chips Soup of the Day .... Plate afford sz99! Gourmet Casserole Baked Ham-Orange Mustard Turkey Supreme over Toast TRANSATLANTIC FLIGHTS • RAIL PASSES • TREKKING Cold Meat Plate · Sauce • Points ACC!Jli1MODATIONS • ALL INCLUSIVE "TWO WEEKERS" McIntosh Sandwich Grilled Chopped Steak with Dinner-Italian Special Night Spend less for thr. a,r more. wnrn you're there' For Dinner Fried Onion Rings Soup of the Day SPECIAL low rates. memhers contad Soup of the Day Cheese Omelet Antipasto Roast Pork with Gravy, Manicotti NATIONAL ASS'N OF OR ma,1 coupon lo NAST. STUDENTS AND ~------Box 1961, Grand Central Sta\1on. I Applesauce Bread Dressing MONDAY, APRIL 28 Stuffed Shells I NY NY 10017 I Grilled Baby Beef Liver with TEACHERS Veal Cacciatore I Name Sauteed Onions Lunch Sausage and Peppers ·· Pizza Soup of the Day ,Ravioli (800) 223·5267 I Aclflrrn · - · ·· -·-- ··--- I Pizzarino Sandwich Bread Bar National Office 1011 lrec ou1,,d,, I -- - · ------f (212) 661-f330 of Nrw Yo1k Sia\,• Telephone ~ _J______# FRIDAY, APRIL 25 Turkey Pot Pie Fruit Table 'ch~fs Salad Bowl with Cottage Spumoni Lunch Cheese Soup of the Day Pastrami on Rye with Dill ~------~------· Tuna Hoagies Pickle· Eggburgers Dinnei" ------=-~~- Fruit Plate with Waldorf Salad S<111p of the Day -Sheperd's Pie Roast Turkey Dinner ~ B~ef Stew with Hot Biscuits. Soup of the Day Eggplant Parmesan of Cheese Steak Hoagies Sandwich Cold Plate Baked Fish Lasagna TUFfSDAY, APRIL 29 SENIOR . SATURDAY, APRIL 26 Lurich Soup of the Day Lunch Hamburgers with French Fries Soup of the Day Tu.na Noodle Casserole Little Abner's and Hawaiian Julienne Salad Bowl Sandwiches ,~gg Salad, Cold Cut and Old Fashioned Beef Pie or Che~e set-ups PICTURES Turkey Pan Pie le~. Gream Excursion Spanish Omelet Dinger Cold Plate Soup of the Day Dinner Pot Roast of Beef Chilled Vegetable Juices Deep Fried or Baked Fish Charcoal Broiled Steak Crepes Florentine Buffalo Steaks . "'ILL BE H.ELD ()VER Shrimp Basket SUNDAY, APRIL 27 299 ·c_4·SES Brunch o·io B~ER French Dip Waffles ONE DAY Scrambled Eggs - r~ceries lcegs Fried Eggs Sausage s-ypp lies ice Fruit Bowl Meat Tray NITEDCIGAR Cheese Tray .. · OPEN DAILY Lettuce, Tomato •.• 8 .A.M. TO tO P.M. Bagels MAY 2,-­ r .... M.llaaar:311_...l::!S~-

'9'!~..J ---.....>-- . ' ~~1-• --··-- Al/Summer Fires #o·w On Sole See The New Cooper~teel Raclial IN THE J()B ROOM. $2~00 SITTING· FEi~. A~~ATAC G.AftDE·N [RtSTAU~f.~T] THANKS, THE CA YIJGAN. ~,v,ng lf\r Puo.1 •. ,tlrt' 19), C.Y)WE~e -AME··~·.,. Fooo 118 'w. TATE . . - • :"' .. ,,,>r ·., ,_. ·- ., ,_ • ...... The Ithacan, April 2?; 1975;-·P.age 14 -\. i f' i Letter:... standard. Further talk about If: Movie Trivia Qolz wasting .stu«I~t's funds to hear , !' Magruder spe~ when so few of MOVIE TRIVIA QUIZ continued from page 6 the students ever attencl' SAB by David T. Claghorn sponsored lectures, is only bogus Congress fell , victim to· the s~lf-rightousness by those who This week there were many partially correct 2. Who played Maid Marion in "The Adventures of artificial significance of their own· wish to mask the real issue. One answers, but compl~tely correct answers were Robin Hood" and who played Little John in the rhetoric and failed to transcend would think that the 1 400 odd rare. Paul Rosenthal and Mike Peters are to same movie? person;tl - political egotism in signatures collected by Russ receive honors for answering all of last week's 3. The movie "Airport" had a star-studded cast. order to examine the real issues. Lyons and Co. should be suffi­ questions correctly. Name six of the actors or actresses? The fact is Mr. Berrigan was paid cii;nt indication . that there is The answers to last week's quiz are: 4. Who was the organizer and leader of· the an undispute~ $500.00 to talk ·at enough student interest in hear­ CHILD'S PLAY Magnificent Seven? I.C. Because Mr. Ber{'.igan and ing an "immoral" man speak to 1. Fahy Dunaway was the female lead in "Bonnie NOVICE MR. Magruder are of opposing warraIJ.t_Magruder's visit_. :. and Clyde." 1. Jimmy Stewart starred with June.-Allyson ~n 3 political viewpoints, is it not . Jerhaps ~ongress feels obli­ 2. Omar Sharif and Barbra Streisand starred in major movies; one about a division of the Air essential for It.ha.ca College to gated to exercise c~nsorship as a "Funny Girl." F:orce, one about a crippled baseball player, and, · maintain a position of neutrality method of p~otectmg t~e minds 3. Elvis Presley-starred in the three movies. lastly, one about a trombone player. What are the and offer equal representation of of c~llege students against cor­ 4. The movie with Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier titles to the 3 flicks? - ' these oppossing ,views? This rupti~n_ by a-"?rnown criminal. was "In The Heat of the Night." 2. Who were the male and-female stars of the writer seriously questions 'the Certainly making Magruder NOVICE famous "Thin.Man" movie series? Also, what was . Mr .. morality of Mr. Berrigan's es- an offer-that amounts to an insult 1. The movie in which John Wayne won Best Actor - the name of their dog? ._ capades (as much or more so than a~d one that makes it difficult for was "True Grit" for his performance as Rooster Kirk Douglas fost one eye as a result of being · Mr. Magruder's) and although I him to accept, is in ef!ect a Cogburn. attacked by Tony Curtis' falcon in what movie? resented his being paid to come (subtle?) form of censorship. 2. Audrey H~pburn starred in "Wait Until Dark." 4. Who were the three men who were wrongfully 3. Katherine Hepburn won 3 oscars for Best accused in "The Ox Bow Incident"? here I did listen to him talk. Therefore denying that same Brian Murdock Actress. - ADVANCED History, '78 4. Audie Murphy starred as himself in "To Hell and 1. Who played Dizzy Dean's brother, Paul, in "The opportunity to Jeb Magruder Back." Pride of St. Louis"? And, who plays. Dizzy himself? would !:re to apply a gross double ADVANCED 2. Everyone knows the tune of the theme song 1. The _six James Bonds were Sean Connery, · from both "The Fighting 69th" and "They l)ied George Lazenby, Roger Moore (The Saint), David With Their Boots On", but what was the-title of the Traffic... part-time stude)!ts should not Niven, Peter Sellers, and Woody Allen. song? have to pay a $30.00 registration 2. Lauren Baca11 starred with Humphrey Bogart in 3, In the two movies, "Fail Safe" and "Seven Days fee because they have a more "To Have and Have Not." in May", what two famous actors starred as the continued from page 3 limited access to the parking 3. The final sequence of "North By Northwest" President of the United States in each flick?, facilities than on-campus stu­ took place on Mt. Rushmore. 4. Gregory Peck starred as a famous English naval severe in terins of students dents. 4. The six "Road To" movies were "Road To Rio, hero in this movie. What was the Flick and who functioning on campus ... The committee also discus­ Bali, Morocco, Singapore, Zanzibar, and Utopia." was his female co-star? Registration fees were also a sed the possibility of a separate major area of discussion. Stu­ appeals board. Consider thei;e for this week: dents feel that off-campus and CHILD'S PLAY I. What was the name of the famous actor who Send all answers to David T. Claghorn; 29-7 starred in '·On The Waterfront"? In the same flick, -2; LC .. Good Luck. - County Volunteer Nee_ds who played the priest'!

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607-272-7800 C~MP FIRE GIRLS NEED: -volunteers to assist _ with a large -group of handicapp_ed girls who meet­ at BOCES on Tuesday from 1 to 2 -pin. Activities ~an be arranged to silit the volunteers' sk'ills and mter~sts: PhQtography, gardening, and party ~--- ~au~le preparation are possible projects, with materials ~~18!¥)- available. · STEREO TAPES DROP-IN DAY CARE CENTER NEEDS: Volun­ teers to 'assist with their pre-school child care 8-track & cassettes program, for any two hour shift on Tu~day • over 1000 rock & We~nesday or Thursday. _ ' popular titles- • only $1.99 each These are hut a iew of many voluntary service opportunities. Please call the Voluntary Action • free brochure Cl•nter, 272-9411. Mon. thru Sat. from 9 a.m. to 1 write: AUDIO lOOP CO. p.m: for an appointment to whatever interests you. DEPT.739 P.O. BOX 43.155 CLEVELAND. OHIO 44143 U11usual gyt5 the iron shop

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DAVID BROMBERG W e h d \i f.' t O rt! te f' ; BAND f uil Chineese Menu T dke Out Orders Frida~· l\la~· 2 .. 197."i Tit·kt·l!'o 011 !'ialt• Roon1s Avadat(e r- or Collt?.fe

111011.laJ april 2H. 197:i I 8:00pn1 I And Frivate Par ties at Eµ:lwrt 1 · nion 1 in SllNY Bin~ha1nton 1 0 ~1r· L, 0 1) l i: ; ; . j •. · . i Men"'s G\·111 l 1· ', V, ,I ,- 1 Ch---. L ~ 7 G ,~ 1 : ,,,, I ------·-~-.. - -· ------·-·-·-· -·---- Tbe Ithacan, April 24, 1975, Page 15

effects of unionization, the group Spring 1975 Final_ Bargaining... would like to bring other models of "academic bargaining" into continued from page J ,, consideration as well. Presently cause the administration to seve­ ,;;uch models as the Faculty · rely limit both faculty and Senate, Professional Negotiating. Examination Schedule student participation in such Team, and the Professional Con-, activit'les as Dean selection and sultant Team are in use in: representation on the Board of various parts of the cou 1trv. - Trustees. Their goverance if the These are some of t. ·e issues AT: issue is agreed upon for negotia­ that will be discu!>sed at t )night's tion by the administration. While meeting. The union repr~senta­ t!WF 8:•JO a.m. r-·ay ( ·'-10 n.n:. in earlier faculty contracts the tivPs will be able to countu them 8:00 o..m. Y.ay I ·"-lL: .a.r.-,. administration included 'gover­ and offPr their alterna.tivP<= "" : "v.':-' 'J:00 a.m. o-1..C' n.lT'. ance.' now the negotiating has well. All students an a.m. F' ·1:-1.,.v ? 11...~•:"•' I -~: •(' ' In addition to spending bargaining dedsion will amount ]e.: 00 a.r.i. s ~:i.y 10 :..•): :10 -1:-' 'C more time weighing the possible 12: J0 noon !·! ~:ay 12 l:·: 30 -1,:: 3(' .,______tn more thatmi,,,.,..-.~ it alreadv ~'*"11~t··r• has ,,­• t,;: 12:00 noon !~ay 3 l: :,C -3: 30 12:30 !~ay 12 1C:3U -1?·~0 1:00 1:00 s May 10 l:W -3:30 2:00 !." t-iay ·-3 1:30 -3:30 2:00 R May 3 4:00 -{;;\)0 3:00 F ~'.uy 9 h:00 -G:l·O 3:3C 4:0J 3:00 S May 10 1,:00 -6:00 4:00 ~: V.ny_ 12· 1: 00 -9:00 !·~IP.F 5:00 S May 10 7:00 -0:00 iITv'ill'... 6:00 and ai'ter LAST CLM;S OR LSCTURE SPECIALLY SCHEDULED EXAMI..~AT!ONS

C0URSE SECTION FACUL'l'Y .EE. TL"1E ACCOc.'NTING Prin Acct. II lo6 1,2,3 Hinkleman R 5/8 7-9P.m. Cym A,!1 Prin Acct. II ,,. lo6 4 Massa R 5/8 10:30-12:30 Cyn A !-'.Mager ~. 202 1,2,3 Zaman s 5/'.0 4-6 p.m. Gj'!Il A,R AR'! H..cSTvRY 20 C Art 312 1,2 Grippi M 5/12 l:30-3:30 ':'101 \It BIOLOGY ,\II ~ev & Genetics 104 DeLanney s 5/10 9:00-1" a.m. Gy:n A Be'lav Anina.'-s ll.O s·.enaoo s 5/10 10:30-12:30 Cym r, ECO"lO?-'.!CS ~in Er:o:::i 202 1,6,7 Wilson s 5/10 7-9 p.m. Gym C P:'in !':con 202 8,9 Mieczkowski s 5/10 4-6 p.m. Gyr,i C M:i.c~o Econ 342 1 Hagens w 5/7 1-3 p.m. F205 ENGLlSH Intro Amer l,it 2o6 1,2,3 Parr M 5/12 7-9P.m. Gym A Intro ?o~try 213 1,2 Ogden, John M .. 5/12 1:30-3:30 G¥Jll ll Fantastit· Gifts For Fantastit· Pt•ople Short Story 318 1,2 Cronkhite M 5/12 4-Gp.:n. Cym C FRENCH \, S202 Intenn French 202 1,2 Ogden, Jane R 5/8 7-9 p.m. 'i GERMAS ~- Elem German 102 1,2 Rodda M 5/12 1:30-3:30 S202 HFI\LTH ?ersonal. Heal.th ll.3 1,2 Munch M 5/12 4-6 p.m. Gym B Family HJ.th Prob 315 1,2 Lalor s 5/10 7-9 p.:n. Gym B t Psycnoactive Drugs 350 1,2,3 Munch s 5/10 7-9 p.m. Gym A MATH F 7-9 p.m. Gym A -- Mr.+,h Dec Making 105 1,2 Keleman 5/9 I, Cal.c Der. MElking J..08 All Zahorik F 5/9 7-9 p.m. Gym C,D Cale , .ill '1 ,/1.2 7-? p.m • G}'ll! ll Ci>.J.c :':I All M ')/12 7-9 p.m. Gym C !mSI'.: - 1,2 F 5/9 4-6 p.m. M202 :'heory 131 1110;, Theory l~.2 1,2 F 5/q 4-6 p.m. !•:205 r::'heO!""'{ 132 3 F 5/9 4-6 p.m. Theory 132 4,7 F 5/9 4-6 p.m. M?.01 ':'heory ).32 5 F 5/9 "-6 o.m. i.U.02 ,,heO?-"".f !32 6 P' 5/9 li-6 ~.l!l. YlO'\, t.,-6 p.~. '.'.202 T::ieory 23l 2 3 5/l0 Route 13 -- Meadow at Green s 5/10 4-G F.m. N.103 ~i-:.c>ory ~32. 3 ~'.1.C4 Off Street Parking 11 :00 to 5:00 Daily 7heory 232 1,6 s 5/10 4-6 p.m. s 5/10 4-6 o.m. V.201 Theory 232 4,5 Open Sundays 1 :00 to S:00 Theory s 5/10 4-6 p.m. Ml02 232 3 M204 Theory 232 2 s 5/10 4-6 p.m. 11.::::01 Theory 33:.. 1,3 R 5/8 4-6 pm. V.102 Theory 331 2 R 5/B 4-6 p.m. R 5/a 4-6 p.m. M202 Theo?"Y 332 1,5 "!104 · :--TEP Thco?7 3;::! 3,4 R 5/U 4-6 p.m. 1120;; --1 DOW\ T<> ':h,,ory 3:.2 ;, R 5/8 4-6 J,.m. "FYS7C'Al. :::DUL. Gy,r A l::.r-r:1 A~~iv !67 Ro<:h<'ster 5/12 'ITHE MILL OUTLE\r r ,yrr.. ,., 7-_'.) fi.r:'l • So': o-:" r\.:uc 223 .i.-:-e~~rcsi ,, ~ /i) '-----, . --·:r:;. S.f:.rO':': I.' '.:"'10~~,10:-1,::_ ~~ !CLOTHES• ,, ..... -·r::~C. 2.:0 All Cym l\,.:J ,~.,.. ,"i, ··,~c":.!: 1"::I1'. ::-'-:.. ::. 'lo..-:· NAM>£ BRAND ·:·:o:. \CELLAR 2')2 l,2 _,'"' ~- r .. SPRING SPORTSWEAR at CLOSE OUT PRICES. ,...... , ; C ,' '~ rlO' on the mall

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