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The thI acan, 1972-73 The thI acan: 1970/71 to 1979/80

10-19-1972 The thI acan, 1972-10-19 The thI acan

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OCT 2 · 1T2

I

'The Ithacan, Ithaca, New York October 19, 1972 Hayden, Fonda, and Near at Cornell The '' Most Precious ''

"A POLICY OF EXTERMINATION" FONDA EXHIBITS HONEYWELL ANTI-PERSONNEL NEAR EXPLAINS INFORMATION DISSEMINATION BOMB AT PRESS CONFERENCE

Thc nol 1ccably weary but nonetheless ebulhant combination of art and struggle. Characteristically, Nixon's National Secur1 ty Advisor, Henry lndoch1na Peace Campaign rolled mto a near SRO she sang several beautiful anti-war songs. She K·issinger, likes to think of it, at least the Hollywood parties he attends, as a "fig leaf." "I Haill'y Ila II last Saturda}" night and shot new hfe struck the chord of her audience several times, but can't thmk of any other reason why he uses the 11110 ,1 rl'Jwakl'ncd Ithaca anti-war movement. most heartfelt was the hand-clappmg refrain they phrase unless he's afraid of somethmg being HL·twcl'n Holly Near's art1st1c ab1hty. 's sang along with her m a song to the antiimpenalist ex posed," Hayden said sardonically. In other cnl1ghlL'lllllg rcvt!Jt1ons concerning her trip to struggle of the Vietnamese: North V1cl11am. Jlld Tom 1-la}den s informative continued on page two pohl1L·JI dL·livL·ry. 11 1, easy to understand why "You gotta hang lfl there a little hit longer Though I know Its been too long lhL'Y havc hl'L'll wcll received throughout the major "Uncle Eddie" de A~uero l'!t•l·lor.il ,l,1ll'S they haVL' covered thus far. 2 7 years you have been jlgh tmg 2 7 years you have been :,trong" SEE MCGOVERN VICTORY AS TACTIC I hl' purpo,c of the IP(' has been to draw ,llll'nlwn lo thc Victnam war at this critical time HAYDEN, KISSINGER, AND THE "FIG LEAF" Art With prior to the election and to help raise money for Tom Hayden, whose political expenence ranges l\frcJ1cJI i\1d tor lndochma. They arc clearly from l11s cofoundmg of Students for a Democratic IIHlqll'nt of the ML·Govern CJmpa1gn but at the Society in 1962 to Chicago in 1968 to a recent A .. Message ,allll' t1mt· feel 111s victory 111 November, should 1t trip to Hanoi, spoke of "the policy of Ul't·ur. would bring an immediate end to the war exterminatwn" the Nixon Administration has now .If you find that your social schedule has left wht·r,·..1, under the Dikt' Bomber (ISO attacks embarked upon m Indochma. The facts at his you an open Saturday mght some weekend, you hetw,·en April 15 and July 31 according to French disposal seemed endless, yet this too has become might thmk about going down to 214 Utica Street journalist-photographer Mark Ribaud ). we can the trademark of those who have opposed the war and visiting Eduardo (Uncle Edd1eJ de Aguero. ,•:-.p,·ct "rour Morc Y cars." Furthermore. in line for so long. There have been, he said, 'carpet Ithaca College's own internationally-recognized with till' now wdl undcr,tood concept within the bombings and saturation (bombing) raids where 90 artist is more than happy to mix one a drink and muwment of ··taking th,· offens1v~ they are trymg tons of bombs are dropped simultaneously from show him his own private gallery. lo t·onfrtint thl' media to for,·e them to reevaluate B 5 2s on Haiphong in the middle of April on areas By the time he was sixteen years old, Ed de lilt' state of ..1ffairs in Vietnam and present the 1/2 mile wide and I¼ miles long." He emphasized Aguero had already had three one-man showmg of n,•ws in J mon.' humane way. The group reported the fact that rice being floated in from Chinese his paintings in his native Costa Rica. that tht'} had dis.-ov,•r,•d. whik in Syracuse. that vessels outside the mines m Haiphong harbor are Educated in public school there, he also onl~ one-fourth of CBS" affiliatt's had covered now "military targets'. In effect, this allows attended a Pharmacy school and a Fine Arts tlkGovern 's r,·,·t'nt spt'e,·h on the war. American jets to swoop in on Vietnamese on their school simultaneously for four years. Then after he With r,-spe,·t 10 the rco.:l'nl bombmg of the bamboo rafts (used so as not to disturb the mines) had shown his paintings at every gallery in Costa Ftl'nch ,•mbas.._,. in Hanoi l New York Times. floating out to receive the rice and either strafe or Rica, Ed came to the United States to study October l .l) Hayden rl'marked "'It is a reflection bomb them as they please. For this, Hayden painting. on lhl' kinil ol war wl' are w..1ging when whne remarked ''We are taking glorious credit." · Ed had a summer scholarship to Appalachian people arl' killed and it bel'omes an international Th.: Indochina Peace Campaign is trying to State Teacner's College in South Carolina. Once he inddent but when fiv.- Vielnamese die. it doesn't stress the fact that the war is not winding down. got there, however, he found that not only would t"\·~·n ·oo.:,·ur· on thl' inside pages." Fonda had "It costs S20 million each day to support the he be a student, but was hired as a Spanish earlil'r mentioned in a press ,·onfrreno.:e that the Saigon regime and the combined efforts of the professor. Naturally he kept painting, and Edward Soviet-Vietnamese Friendship Hospital in Hanoi l\avy and Air Force," Hayden said. "We can de. Aluero found that the U.S. was just as had :ilso been bombed while she was there. yet expect to lose ~O pilots each week the war interested in seeing his work as his native country. such incidents often go unreport.:d. continues (based on past averages) and the 39,000 He had a one-man showing while at Applachian Holly ~ear. a red-haired. bright and friendly troops remaining in Vietnam can be attacked or and several more at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. )'oung woman who toured with Fonda's Free The held hostage" at any time by a much stronger Thtn in 1953 Ed came to Cornell University to Army show. start.:d off th.: evening while: National Liberation Front. "The cost to the major in Linguistics and Spanish Literature. Before undaunted. Cornell's liberated dogs nonchalantly Indochinese people," he added, "is infinitely he ~ad graduated from Cornell, Ed had had several wandered a.:-ross the stage. Her personal work has. greater." conti-ed on pqe 2 likt the Vietnamese . .:entered around the As for the Saigon regime, Hayden related that - The Ithacan, October 19 1972 Page 2 minutes. When Jan.:, adm1ttedl~ quite confusl'd. 'Most Precious' looked Jround the• room lor SO!ll<' form of explanation ~he notiad ··,:\,:r> on<' \\ .i, ,·r~ 111g ·· Student Congress Acts Goals NOTHING MORE PRECIOUS lOnt,nuccl froni puJ '\,:.ir l",Hr> \\ 1th the•m LlJ1\~. It on Recruitment Issue word-,, S,.11gon will numble and deca~ hut the 1,. ·in an 1ron1c: ,, .1~ . .i ,ottrcL' 1n~pir.1t1011 to l;n1ted C,tatc,· 1mdge, 1f all goc, d'> planned \\Ill ,,f them. Th,: lndoch1na P,:.i,·,: C.1mp.11gn e•nurnr.ig.:~ remain intact. 1 hi, led Hayden to propo,c that B~- Ken Holcombe .1pprc1,1111.1t,·I~ ~ll ,,ut ,,1 .1 Ill effect. not .i \ot.: for Ge·org.: \kGO\efll or Jll) K i"~inger and !\1xon run for the office of On 111gh t the· IC. p ,, , , 1 b I,' 7 ll ll , '1 f-, J 111 p II, other peac,: cJndidatt'. hut J n)\,: for 1\\.: Godfather, wherein a "new balancing act" of the Stt1J.:nt Congr.:". [,~ .1 \c>te• ,,f rc•,1de'llh ,'\c'I \ll(,·d 111 !he· p,,ll Vietnamese people HJ)d<'n rcp.:.it.:dl~ world's power,- would re-,ult in a "nuclear power -I 3 -1~ - 3 . de' C Ide d t U .1 l I Ll \\ 1n ll( h,·1 re'c"I Ult llle'llt bu,111e•,,. duh" who,e 'client," (1.e. ,mailer nauon, ,uch a, underscored the cr1t1cal tl!lle period\\ e Jft' 111. Th.: re·prt',e'llt.ltl\c'' Llf the' lln1t.:d th,· C,Higr,·"· r,·que·,1 h>r .111 Vietnam) would he "brought to heel." Ohv1r1u,ly. anu-war movement must exp.ind ,ind Like th.: StJt.:, 1111ltt.1r~ clll th<' c.1mpt1s ··jnjun,t 1,,11·· 111 l·,,111111u1111~ with our 3 OGG m1htary ha,e, around the world. offensive. he said. '·w Ith th.: feeh ng t ha I \II e Jrt' !or !lie' put pll~e' ,,( d1,,e'll1lnJt1ng c,,urt .l/!,1111,1 ,tllel\\ 111!! 1111ltt.11> there ,houl .1, f.. e' d I he of the Vietnamese people- - "That there is nothing th.it of the American Indian by the lE ,u,p<'n,1011 ol the· r,·gtllJI rule•, (.()llgl"l''" lt.l lll\l',t1g.11i.: till' Government. It 1,n 't surpnsmg, he pomted out, more prec1ou,. than freedom Jnd tnd.:pendence :· and dL'L'llle'd the lll<'L'!lllg .1 I .I I I ll I L' l l f I h c· I· 11 /! I I , h that the be,.tseller at the height of the Vietnam '"sp.:c·1al ,e•-,,1011·· of the• ti e' p .I rt Ill L' 11 l Ill IL' 11 L' \\ I h l' ·war was Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee. he CongrL',s. It WJ\ ,J"t·rt,•d fl~ L"Lll1(f.I,"( ,,r 1'1,11,·"'" Juli.Ill could very easily substitute the words "strategic member, of the Gov.:rnJ11L·e Smith Mr l'.ir,k~ .Illcg,·d lh.11 S1111th \\ .1, qu1,·tl~ d1'1111"''d cl\e'I hamlets'' (used m Vietnam to control t~.e NLF) Committe.:. Jt tht' .:nd of th.: Ed de Aguero the ,u111111l'r 111,1111h, e·ven th,1u!!h for "reservations, he meeting, that th.: ent1r.: 111.:et1ng was 111 v10lation of the Congress a ,t lldt· 111 -t.1,·1111~ e·,.Jlu.1ti,111 <;a Id, and understand the same symptoms of continued from page I const1tut1on and thus 111valid. p r O C t' , \ , h Ll \\' e' d I h .I I h I , 1m pe r1 alism and manifest destiny. "And you Asked for a vote on the matt,·r retention w.1, dc,1re·d h~ .1 kno·y ," he concluded. 'tw'l or three generations more showings in New York City and elsewhere lllJJonty ,,r Ille' J,·p.111111,•nt. \ In 1956, he found his present callmg, as Professor by Barrett, the repres.:nt.1t1ve, from now a book could be written called Bury My pre~cnt, who were allt:gcdly 111 0 t I o 11 W o rd L'll .. S I ll d t' 11 I Heart At My Lai and 1t would revere Ho Chi Minh of Spanish at l.C. Co11gre·ss a,b thal J11li.1n S1111th\ Ithaca C'oHegc has not stifled Ed de Aguero', acting in v Io I at ion of the in much the same way as we have such great Congress const1tut1on. dc:c1dt'd t t' 11 u re· be• rL' e' \' .ilu.11,·d.. w,1, artistic talent. While here, he nas done several Indian chiefs as Geror!imo. Cochise or Sitting Bull. pJ~sc:J. On W,•dn,·sd.1~ nll1111111/!. paintings a year and exhibited his work all over the that they were. 111deed . .1ct111g howcvl'r. lhL' Fx,·,urivt' 13,,aid ,,1 THE RAISIN OF WRATH globe. He spent two summers in Madrid exhibiting legally The vote dealing with the Congres~ pn~t ponL·d .111} .1, I 1u11 For many people at Bailey Hall, SaturJay night his work and painting more. In 1964 the son of a recruitment issue came after the 0 11 t h ,I t Ill () t I ll 11 p L' 11 d I 11 !! was their first extended exposure to the "anti-war childhood friend of Picasso lectured at I.C. Ed con~ultat1011 with M1 S1111th. activist'' Jane Fonda. Recognizing this, Jane invited the man to sec some of his paintings and results of the poll of lJ,t week were announced by Cha1rmJn of A mot 1Dn w .1s proposc·d h~ recounted her short ( 3-4 years) involvement with they became friends and correspondents. Through the movement. She recalled the "pitch" games her the Health and Safety ofl-ca111pu, 1L'p1csc·111.1t1v,· St1.1w father used to play with John Wayne and Ward Committee Rick Slone. On the WL'1s111,111 whil"!1 would dl'II) ., Bond wherein the men settled down in cowboy question of whether or not v ll t c 111 ("l)n~r,·,, 1,, attire, laid their pistols on the table and acted out military representatives should rt:prcse11t.1t1ve•, ,,r duly­ their fantasies. She had grown up in !he 5 O's, a time be allowed to disseminate recognized org.m11.al 1011, Al tcr that"wove walls of fear and silence around us and information on this campu,, the ser1ou, dcb,ttL'. 1ndud.11~ .111 numbed our minds." By allow,ng herself to be vote was 1,704 yea, 418 no, and argument hy one studl'nl prc·st·nl manipulated as Jn actress, she became a "cynical, 119 abstentions. On the second that the only rc,11 power lh;1t apathetic dropout ... whose only 'success' was question, that of whether or not Student Congri:,, h.1~ b tlw baking a good soufflee. I was a 'good' cook ... a military representatives sho•ild power to control the f111Jnc1;il 'good' wife ... I was dead." Almost increduously, be allowed to recruit on the I.C. destinies of 'iUch organi1ations. she added, "I was like an old raisin!" Then, campus, the vote was 1,095 yes, the motion was soundly realizing what she said, her quick mind flashed and 1,046 no, with 237 abstentions. defeated. she dubbed herself "The lhisin of Wrath." It was pointed out, however, It was Jnnounccd hy Mr. Indeed, Jane Fonda has come a long way. that the only thing military Slone of the llealth and Safety Several years ago she witnessed the women's representatives are allowed to do Committee that his commlltcL' march on the Pentagon and was deeply impressed by federal law here 1s to will be meeting on Thursday. by their eourgae in the face of the Army bayonets. disseminate mformation - - thus October 19 to discuss the She travelled and spoke to soldiers, who she no vote of the Congress was questions of the safety of became "particularly grateful to" in her political taken on the second question. It recruiters while _on campu~. the Aguero: Painting Reality development. After careful study she was "forced Ed de is now being charged by some quality of the food m the ~nack to admit we were being lied to." Much of her early to Make It Fit Your Own Purpose members that the entire poll was bar, security m the dormltorie~ work, interestingly enough, was with the American invalid due to the fact that and parking lots and other Indian Movement, but within the last year and a this friend Ed came to live with Picasso at his representatives have been matters. Membership of the half it has been primarily anti-war. She and Donald home in Juan Les Pines, France in 1966. During accused by some constituents of committee 1s open lo all Sutherland staged the FTA (Free The Army) Show his summer stay with Picasso, Ed painted, studied coercion and also because only students interested. on military bases and coffee houses at home and the masters work, and heard much productive , abroad this past year to enthusiastic Gls. criticism. He feels he profited greatly from the · Most significant, however, Wll.S heF t'l'ip this past association. He says,"1 would just walk through July to North Vietnam where she saw the scarred rooms and rooms and basements full of paintings." bodies and land of the Vietnamese people. She Returning to Ithaca, Ed put on a few shows at emphasized f1Tst the role of the Vietnamese LC. which he feels "showed alot of what I learned women in the struggle for liberation. "There are from Picasso." Just last fall while on sabbatical in 500,000 older women known as the "Mothers of Spain, Ed was the guest artist of the International Fighters" who take care of the wounded NLF," Press Club there. The T.V. cameras, the interviews, she said; "there were 840,000 women generals in the previews, and the exposure all were enjoyed the Vietminh (the predecessor to the NLF) during inurenrely by "Uncle Eddie" who doesn't attempt the French Indochina War, and there are millions to deny his love of publicity and appetite for of women soldiers - 'the Armies of the Long Hair' - fame. "I don't care if they burn all of my paintings who fight in the NLF." Furthermore, the Deputy after I'm dead," says Ed. He wants to enjoy the Commander-in-Chief of the NLF is a woman and fruits of his work now. He is, by his own the head representative of the people's admission, "selfish, self-centered, vain, and proud Revolutionary Government (a branch of the NLF) of being so". It would seem that one such as he 10 Paris is a woman named Madame Binh. has a right to be a little proud. Ed's paintings hang HER NAME WAS MINH in such pubhc places as Rockefeller Center, the She then told of an amazing encounter she had Museum of Art in Santiago, Chile, the White had with a 22 year-old woman revolutionary who House, and the Egbert Union at Ithaca College. had been captured and tortured by the Saigon They are also personally owned by Princess Isabell Photo/Larry Van Deuu "Color, treated with austerity, Army. "Her name was Minh," Fonda began. "She in Spain, King Constantine of Greece, Jacqueline had undergone such severe torture that the Onassis, Tricia Nixon (whose wedding invitation and a very personal technique" ..:hemistry of her body had altered and changed the he refused) and the daughters of LBJ- -Linda color ot her skin. Her thigh had been ripped open Robb and Luci Nugent, and others. Although an artist often makes a living by with a knife and her heel had been shot off (after "Color, treated with austerity, and a very selling paintings, the financial motive 1~ u,ually being stood up in front of a firing squad and personal technique, are the characteristics of this secondary to the creative. Much of what l:.d de threatened to be shot)." The most severe torture young painter" said one art critic in 1966. Ed's Aguero paints is not quickly bought \imply she had undergone. however. was the water paint is watercolor, unlike Picasso and most of the because he refuses to paint the simple type of tort,.ire. This ·common" torture involved pouring other famous artists of the century. He follows the painting which most consumer~ are 1mpre~sed soapy water down her throat until her belly example of Matisse, Goya. and the famous Spanish with. ~-welled up-at which time the guards would jump artists who have used watercolors .. Ed's work, Ed says "I would be prost1tut1ng myself by on her stomach which he describes as impressionism and painting landscapes and things that people Apparently. Minh relives this torture surrealism, often derives from his fascination with consider nice to hang in their homes." I try to get '·sometimes five times a day." One time was in the philosophy and literature. One can find the ph1losophical, political, and religious ideas in my company of Jane Fonda. At a meeting of the PRG mythical Spanish bull. which he finds a "symbol paintings. I have a message along with good consulate m Hanoi. Minh had all of a sudden of Spanish strength of character," in Ed's work-or techniques." Often asked why he doesn't teach bolted for the door, only to be restrained by other a strangely· grotesque human shape. Ed says, "A Art, Ed says "People who teach others to paint members present. She struggled fiercely while young pamter graduates from simple landscapes, destroy their innate ability ...nobody makes a pmned to the floor and held her lips tightly closed. to the human figure, to the distortion of the poet out of someone who can't write or a painter She then began to make odd noises (reliving the human figure." Once this level has been reached, out of someone who can't paint." He feels that guards jumping on her stoma.:h) and finally let "You take the reality and change it around to everyone has some kind of artistic ability but they' forth in Jane's words, ''a deep, angry, resonant make it fit your own purpose." The reality which should develop it on their own. litany in Vietnamese" whil"h translated into "It Ed alters is often not reality at all but ideas "In Ithaca" says Ed "an art showing is more like doesn't matter what you do to me. I will never generated by the artist's study of philoso"phy or a social event than an artistic event. People have to speak. ~e shall be free." This w~nt on for twenty reading of,literary classics. conttltue• on PO# 6 I - The Ithacan, ~ctober 19, 1972, Page 3 ! .. " visit- with· ->t/Je G. 0 .P. Grading Alternative

By Andra Youngberg showing up for the dinner. That had never seen a Evaluated chance rested on the hope ·of Nixon - -Agnew campaign to be The woman who appeared to procuring a Lear jet. button. One worker claimed to be running the show at A bus ride was cancelled. It have owned one but none could The Executive Committee ot the institutions surveyed offered Republican Headquarters was in was discovered that members of be found in the office. Mention the J.C. Student Congress, in an at least some non-traditional, no mood to impart information the Young Republicans from was also made of the lack of effort to resolve the controversy pass-fail grading. Only a concerning the relationship of Cornell had decorated· that and pictures of Vice President here concerning this year's new minority of students and courses college students with the were to have ridden on it. Dick Agnew on the walls of the grading system, plans to ask· the at the institutions were involved headquarters. It was October 16, Pauk, President of the Young headquarters. A lone photogragh Congress Academic Policies in the unconventional grading, Committee and the Community however. Council's Educational Policies The study, conducted for the Committee to consider the American Association of policy of adding the former Collegiate Registrars and ;ystem to the new one. If action Ad missions Counselors, found of this kind were taken, a third that a substantial nember of alternative to the present system 'non-traditional grades would would be added- students would jeopardize admission to graduate be able to opt for an A-plus, A, and professional schools at A-minus etc. grade;, along with one-fourth of the institutions. D's and F's. An almost equal number In an interview with THE reported that pass -fail courses in ITHACAN last week, Acting an undergraduate record would Provost Frank Darrow pointed not affect admission to their out that if the system is to be graduate or professional schools. changed, "it must be changed The most conservative through the same orderly positions on admitting transfer process under which it was students with pass-fail grades implemented. Darrow told us and on changing to that as soon as the Educational unconventional grading systems Policies Committee is formed, its were found at small institutions first agenda item will be and at those in the area served discussion of the implications of by the Southern Association of .and campus reaction to the new Schools and Colleges. system. The membership of that Yale University in New committee, which put the new Haven, Connecticut adopted a system into effect, "will not be plan similar to that of LC. substantially altered," according (removing F-grades from one's and a full day of acl:ivities Republicans. made an entrance was at last discovered. to Darrow. transcript). at the beginning of centering around an appearance carrying a box of decorations, Calm, ,of a sort, finally Mr. Darrow feels that "We this year. Considerable by Senator James Buckley had removed from the now useless descended on the headquarters. should not ·act in a precipitant controversy has erupted been' planned for October 17. bus Student involvement there had fashion" concerning the issue. nationwide over this Ivy League However, Congress was still in Senator Buckley was to have become something worth talking "Clearly there will be substantial precedent. Alfred D. Kahn, Dean session. Two key issues, the · spoken at a local high school on about. The Young Republicans discussion." In defending the of the College of Arts and $250 billion ceiling bill and the Tuesday. The principal of the helped to canvas the 14 weak new system, Mr. Darrow told us Sciences at Cornell University HRI bill, were scheduled to be school was informed and (Repu~lican-wise) districts. that the new system is based on here in Ithaca was quoted by the voted on tlie 17th, so all the charged with breaking the news There are tables set up at the practice of awarding credit Cornell Daily Sun as saying "I activities had to be cancelled. to his students. Willard Straight Hall dispensing for successful work without don't believe in falsifying a Only the dinner planned for Phone cails were constantly information about the party and punishing a lack of work. As far sutdent's record when his work the evening of the 17th at the being made or received. Cancel elections. During the last two as the now-defunct D-grades are is not done well. Grades should Holiday Inn was to remain in the press conference. Let weeks before the election concerned, Darrow explained b.e abandoned altogether or effect. It was a fund-raising evervone kow the box Iunche.on students will be going door to that since D grades are officially utilized fully-you shouldn't lie." project and ·though most tickets 1s oft'. Decisions were made; . door urging citizens to vote described· as "unacceptable," Other Cornell professors quoted had been sold on the assumption don't cancel the reservations at Republican. On Saturdays the awarding credit for D's is in that Sen a tor Buckley would Holiday Inn! . students take care of business effect "awarding credit for by .The Sun were as equally appear, the show still had to go Relief was provided by a and man the headquarters unacceptable work". According opposed to Yale's new system. on. There was a possibility, less .:i tizen who wandered in. themselves. On Sundays they to Darrow other schools have W. Donald Cooke, Dean of than 50-50, of the Senator i_nquiring about the fact that he rest. been using similar systems Cornell's graduate school, said without any substantial effect that "The Yale system will mean on the ability of graduates to be trouble for students applying to· VANDALISM AT IC accepted at Graduate schools. grad schools." Mr. Dlrrow said "The national Mr. Kahn also stated that trend is toward elimination of most of the deans of major Btisted Elevators and Alarn1s letter grades." undergraduate institutions agree In a study of 1 ,301 colleges that there is a need for universal and universities last year, it was grading systems, with a failing By Abby Cox feel compelled to kick himself. Interestingly enough, both the found that more than 60% of grade included. He added extra men to keep the University of Buffalo and Pe tty vandalism on a high machines in good working order. Buffalo State found it necessary school level is not surprising, but Mr. Miller has been in charge to revert to this system. at the college level it becomes a of the washers and dryers for Various vending owners and bit more difficult to understand. four years and just brought out school officials met last Tuesday Yet even on a relatively wealthy the candy and cigarette concern to discuss the problem • campus such as I.C., it is still a this •year, the previous firm Unfortunatelytp.ere have been problem. stating that they had had a great more serious incidents of Although it is only deal of trouble here. "malicious mischief" on campus mid-semester. 7 Coke machines, With only three of his cleverly devised by some agile 2 candy m~chines, I washing machines hit this year, Miller creature in our student body. and I cigarette machine have feels that things ·are going fairly Last Saturday night, both already been· broken into. Over smoothly. Two years ago a letter elevators in the West Tower were $300 in cigarettes was taken written by an R.A. and out of order, clearly the work of from the cigarette machine distributed to her dorm some ingenious mind. The only alone. threatening removal at the next problem in that being that in Simple logic dictates that a incident took care of the case of a serious emergency such ._·.-1-· ~ ,')-:~- as an accident or illness, valuable business operating at ·a loss will problem which had been :,.~~;, :: not long endure. and Mr. Miller, · particularly acute there. time would be lost in walking up ~:.:":~ owner and operator of the Presently the school is being and down the stairs to say ··--~:~,e~ I au n dry. cigarette and ~andy billed for damages and repairs, .nothing of the added trouble machines on i:ampus seemed to however the next step will be to involved. hold to this bask truth when he send the charges 'back to the Another bright idea has been said late this wc?ek that the only students who live in the dorm in to either stuff the fire alarms answer to the problem is to which the damage occurred. with rags or bend the clapper so remove the mai:hines. He is very The bleak alternative is either the fire bell will not ring; or if it sympathetic to the large removal of the machines or a do'es manage to ring in spite of majority of students who are central loi:ation for all machines the most determined efforts, also vict-imized by· people that will be supervised to then it will ring softly so as not tampering wi~h the machines. He prevent vandalism. Needless to to disturb anyone studying or says that he has found that most say. the '"Midnight Munchies" sleeping. students understa~d the problei:n now supported by the local Aside from infringing on the and thaf it only talces ·one or two candy. soda and cigarette rights of c>ther stU

·.:· Editorial

The time has 'tome (long ago some of us think) for the media to - · others; and most recently the Supreme Court decision against black meet and assume its moral responsibilities in society. In an age of journalist Eari Caldwell requiring.even privileged infoanation.(in.this technology whose limits no longer s~m shackled tQ the remnants of case concerning the Black Panther Party) to be divulged if the human dignity -- when the screams of bombs ckown out the cries of · prosecution so desires--seriously jeopardizing the reporter's mercy -- the last institutipns of decency and rationality are. constitutional guarantees while pursuing his. client's (the public) pathetically sinking into the pro:verbial Tar Pits of mediocrity and "Right to Know." · ignorance. Ironically, it is precisely the possibilities of that ·technology that Nor, on the other hand can we excuse the major media enterprises provide the means by which the media can once again assert itself, (i.e. newspaper.s, television, radio) for continually relying on asThe" New York Times did with the Pentagon Papers or CBS did "official statistics" of fascistic government complexes such as Saigon with "The Selling of"the Pentagon". N_ever·before have the facilities when these statistics (i.e. body counts, desertions. nature of attacks) of communication been so extensive, where by quintuplets born on have been repeatedly contradicted for nearly a decai:le ·by unbiased one side of the globe can be announced within a matter of minutes and Furthermore, reference to an anomalous·(or so it seems to the thousands· of mile·s away; as can the death of five Indochinese babies American government) body-that the American public rlo lo_nger be recorded in Washington or New York City. __ desires to battle-as "the enemy" is abhorrent and intorerable in a As societies become more and more dependent upon each other, free society. - · or conversely more unnaturally competitive with one another, the The American people are in grave danger of an unconscious means of communication and the forces controlling those means will . submission to the "counterfeit brain struct~e" that Tom Hayden assume a progressively greatbr, more privileged role. The problem has spoken of. By acceding to the narrowly-defined state of affairs being considered here is who shoul.d control the means and in what from the· hermetically~ealed feaders of this ·country, we ·may be fashion? forfeiting our last chance to define the extent of our individual It should be apparent as we survey our society that strict liberties. Similarly, those leade·rs of our 'institutions of · limitations threaten the necessary· free flow: of communication- the comm.tin.ication must recognize their responsibilities to. ti1e public·.-. "Right to Know" if you will-that not enough of us are demanding. One of Richard Nixon's ·most significant pledges · has been "A We should recall the news "blackout" during the invasion of Laos Generation of Peace." In· a :nation whereWar is ~·P.eace, .. perhaps we two sprin~ ago? the attempted suppression of the Pentagon Papers are just beginning to see the more realistic signs-of a dGeneration of in the New York Times, the Washimrton Post, the Boston Globe and Silence."

TO THE EDITOR: you will see that this action was TO THE EDITOR: · This week's Student Congress: entirely in order. To those of meeting began. with a rilling. you who raise questions as to The Tompkins County Jail. from· the Chair suggesting that, the legitimacy of Tuesday has gone through some changes "I) Tonight's meeting be night's meeting, after more since prisoner protest. last March declared__ .a __ Special Session. of careful thought, I believe you brought jail conditions to public Student Congress. 2) All will agree with me. If there are view. Sheriff Robert Howard , TO THE EDITOR: TO THE EDITOR: questions of order be decided by ·still questions, I am always open outlined some of the changes in the Chair, with assistance from to suggestions and discussion. a recent interview with a· It is important for all the Even for The lthacan's the Vice-Chairman. When the Perhaps the ,more important member of the Ithaca Bail Fund. young voters from the State of frequently dubious standards of Chair is. undecided, he will .ask issue is not whether or .not rules The recreation room on the New York to know that they journalism your editorial of for the sense of the body on the were violated, but whether _or top floor of the jail has been have the opportunity to October 12, 1972 on military issue. 3) Robert's Rules of not the meeting was a good one. open for several months. It p artici pate in a land mark recruitment reached a new low. Order, Revised will not apply Certainly,-compared with the ·houses a pingpong table, decision this year. For the first To quote directly: "There are officially on any matter in meeting of two week~ ago, it WilS weight-lifting equipment arid a time they (and everyone else) some of us who can still feel tonight's meeting. 4) Whenever a an obvious improvement ..A Jot television. ,The room is used for­ will have the opportunity to deep, heart-rending emotions dedsion of the Chair is of time was saved by not having g e n e r a 1 r e c r .e a t i o n· vote for a woman for judge :>f which obliterate any sense of questioned, an appeal may be to· deal with constant (accomodating about 1/3 of the . the State Court of Appeals, New intellectual freedom or other made by any voting member of interruptions on questions -of jail's inmates at a time). and for York's highest court. such garbage." Congress. It is not debatable, order. I do not believe anyone's regular programs. The candidate, running on the From Attila the Hun to need not be seconded,- and must right to speak-was denied and I Programs at the jail include a Democratic ticket, is Mrs. Hitler, the pages of· our history come to an immediate vote. The think. the different opinions on high school equivalency taught Nanette Dembitz, presently a books are stained with blood appeal will be µpheld by a each issue were expressed to the · by a BOCES instruclor, weeklr, .. judge in a Family Court. She has because misguided zealots majority vote of those present." satisfaction ·of the members. religious servic_es, and a_ had 30 years of legal experience, preferred .. h~art-rending· The .reason for this proposal was Student Congress is often twice-weekly cal.isthenics and much of it in appeals work emotions" to .. intellectual that· I felt that the Congress criticized for it's ineffective~ess, weight-lifting program taught by which is the type of cases she freedom or other such garbage." could deal more effectively with but if we ~ontinue "to get b, ,gged a deputy sheriff. In addition, the would be presiding over if Perhaps The lthac,an could the issues at hand if the meeting down in parliamentary· Tompki_ns County Public · elected. She is active in the Civil follow the dangerous precedent ·was conducted in an infoIJDal pr·ocedure and legal Library sends a representative· Liberties Union, the Legal Aid of the Student Congress and manner. I stated that Robert's technicalities, rather than deal weekly to receive prisoner' Society and has been on the hold a campus-wide referendum. Rules of Order is a complex with the issues,'nothing will be requests for library books. National Board of Directors of accomplished. We could vote "Yes" or "No1' system, and that unless everyone Shipments of mattresses an~. Planned Parenthood. uniforms have also been ·received on ''intellectual freedom or in Congress was familiar with all Sincerely, Among other people who are the it could not be an ·. at the· jail during ·th6 last .few other. such garbage." Having rules, Peter Bmett supporting Dembitz for this effective· system for conduc;ting months. complete faith in the students position. is one of her old law an orderly meeting.··Tne· continued on page jl11e that I know, I am certain that Chairman of Student Congress professors from Columbia who proposal was; in effect,· asking the result would indicate that we wrote a letter in her behalf on the members of Congress to October 4, 1972. After need new editors for our student ·place ·a great deal of trust in the newspaper,, who believe in the. describing some of her activities Chairman to run the meeting in' and mentioning her "unusually old-fashioned idea. ·, · a -legitimate and proper manner.. able. writjn~ in professional And finally, the option was Sincer~y, periodicals," he wrote: "Most available to appeal any- decisiqn . -Hugh Hainniett recently J have benefitted f~9m of the, Chair at time"during . . Department of History: any some of the penetrating opinions the meeting, and in fact, this W3$'. she has written' as a judge of the done once. . Family Court, which has TO THE EDITOR: At the end of the meeting,: a KEN HOLCOMBE•EDITOR· unfortunately not had a complaint was raised by the tradition of explaining Governance Committee stating .IOHN ORRAL,L ·.a. BUSINESS " ADVERTISING impo·rtant decisions, as she has Although I sympathize with that the meeting .should. be· WAAO-SILVER•FEA'fURES EDITOR done- so usefully. Every phase of your feelings a·bout U.S. declared null and void due to her acti~ty has been marked by involvement in Vietnam, I violations of the Student Body JAN GATTI • COPV · effectiveness in thought and thoroughly disagreed. -with last Constitution; In fact, there were­ execution. Her briefs have week•s Editorial_ How can you no violation of the Constitution, strongly influenced both so contemptuously dismiss the By-Laws, or Robert's Rules OOROTHY AILES/ RICARDO WOLETl!-,;.LAYOUT substantive and procedural '"intellectual freedom or any of Order. The proposal was issues." other sw:h garbage?" Since _when· presented as a ruling of the Chair In addition to her excellent is freedom of speech a,nd and· no objections or appeals RICHARD SHARP/ WALT LEIDING -PHOTOS preparation and competence for intellectual freedom "garbage"?! were made. I asked for .a vote of the post for which she is Do you seriously believe in support·on this proposal and the running, Mis. Dembitz is the silencing those whom a· majority result was --34 in -favor, 2 LEAH FACKOS - ENTERTAINMENT fust woman who has made it to· of people ·consider wrong? I am opposed, . and 9 abstentio& I the final ballot. Six men are sure a majority of the students co11S1dered this an overwhelming running also for' the three on campus disagree with some of show of support of the proposal,. AND OTHER HELPFUL,FOLICS positions open. Each of you can the views expressed in The My decision to call a Special cast ballots for three. Some Ithacan. - quite often. It is Session of Congress and conduct Pulllblled -ldJr duttng tbe selloal year. except first ,... In people who think it is important Man:11 and TblM WMk In OctolMr~ SECOND CLASS POST· to have a competentwoman on . f o r t u n a t e · f o r y o u· the meeting as it was conducted is supported by Section 2.11:i AQE P~ID AT ITHACA0 Nl!W YORK. 14850. Poatmaller this highest court in New York (and me, incidentally) that they or· the· By-Laws. Nowhere DleUe send 3$71-ta 8Ull-·Mtr,TIie tuuican, West·. are planniniz to vote for only one don't all agree with you that fonn throughout, the meeting was T_e,, Ithaca Colle.. , ltbaca, N.Y.14a50. · Su11ICl1pUon judge, Nanette Dembitz .. I hope Constitutional liberties sliould there auy violation of· the cost-•7.SO. Edltorlat_wtews reflect tlle oplalma Of_t1111·' ,t, you will make your vote count, be abolished when they conflict Constitution. if the proposal was EdltoitafBoard. T_helf neither ~ tlle ottia.1 ..-aon either by voting in person or by · with the popular sentiment. ot ltf!IC:a Coll... nor neceBallly Indicate tlle con•-Of absentee bi:illot. interpreted. as a suspension of this· is tlle student IIOCIY. TIie tn.-a ,_,... hie IICIITIICt Sincerely, the rules, and if your ""'"w Margaret Feldman obje~tion, please'read Section 22 · ·•· edn; c>r nfu• to publllll •11¥ lllatltflal Hbmlttacl for pu- ' Dorothy Ailes llcaUon. · · · Psycho!ogy of Robert's Rules of Order and ·-~ --- ....

. The Ithacan. October 19. 1972, Page S J visiting privileges are limited ·to 1, LETTERS adult members of·the prisoner's immediate family Oll Tuesday COMMENT continued from page· four and Friday from 2-4 pm. This isolation of prisoners must be The Sheriff's Department ended. If, as Sheriff Howard deserves commendation for their says, limitations of staff and response .to community concern facilities prevent any expansion WHAT IS THE A.L.S? about jail cqnditions. They have of normal visiting privileges, done what they can- -and they special arrangements (perhaps, By Mabu Brad Young have shown how little they alone for example, telephones for can do. The big problem at the prisoners' use) should be made. WELL ...bv some it is defined as "the Nigger or Negro jail is· not their administration of New York State law requires Association on campus. It probably is also looked upon as the it, but popular misunderstanding much more flexible fraternity for "those people", or the "Black Students Union". But of what a jail is for. opportunities for to the people involved it is essentially the union of the present The prisoners in the communication than are oppressed minorities of Ithaca College. When I speak of minorities, it Tompkins County Jail are local presently provided. 3) Workl is refered to the non-white students of Ithaca College. At the men, and they will be our release { that is, release during present, the 'individuals involved are the black and Latin students of neighbors again soon. We would working hours to an outside job) this campus. The initials stand for Afro-Latin Society and this benefit much more by helping should be made a regular should not be confused or purposely changed. tliem solve their problems in the program for all prisoners rather The organization has it's own constitution and annual elections community than we do by tha1;1, as now, an w xtraordinary for offices. We are politically motivated, but we don't seek to rule isolating them from the occurrence. And, as most or lead our brothers and sisters in social, cultural, or economical community to punish them. Jail prisoners didn't have jobs before concepts. We provide to the best of the people's decisions on just doesn't solve social problems, it being locked up, jobs in the what the A.LS. should function on. The origin to the A.LS. can be only postpones them. community must be found for related to the reacti0ns of the power structure of the world. The The Ithaca Bail Fund thinks them. power structure (in the past and present--white) being those people that the following three For the sake of the ~ho have oppressed the non-white people of the world with their proposals are steps in the right community, the Tompkins democratic power and who control the more liberal aspects of the direction: I) Only sentenced Cour.ty Jail must stop being a K.K.K., at the base of Ithaca College. In brief, liberalism and cultural prisoners should be held in the temporary dumping ground for valves of Klanism, are synonymous! (Dig) county jail. The present unwanted· people Jail doesn't The organization again is not surviving on theories of one or two money-bail system must be solve social problems, it only people who represent the almighty power politicians, but, a changed to end the injustices, postpones them. colle-ction of intregrationailst, nationalist. etc. We are workinl! for including pre-trial imprisonment, the best representation that we as an organization can fulfill. The which money bail entails. 2) Gloria Ortiz 305 Stewart Ave organizations at other colleges and universities. that represent the There should be open lines of Mike Wright 323 Elm Street non-white minority are part of us and we are part of them. The black communication between Tim Lawrence 3 19 Linn Street Latin, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, all people of color through-out the prisoners in the county jail and the community. At present,. Ithaca Bail Fund continued on next page COMMENT The Marines Have Land_ed

By Gary Reing Community Health and Safety the second qu~stion, the result was polling procedure were that of alleged Committee to draw up a poll to be close. The intent of Congress taking coercion by pollsters. This was The Marines have landed or at least taken concerning student opmion on this poll was to receive student input. brought to the attention of Congress established a beach-head at Ithaca. the matter. The question on the poll Congress adopted the results of the in the form of a written statement. Gollege. Along with the other military -, I. Should military representatives be poll as the position of Congress on the Othcrobjcctions were made as to the services, tne Marines will appear on allowed to disseminate informat10non matter by a vote of 43-12-3. wording of the questions and the i.:ompus on October 25, to disseminate the Ithaca College campus? There were some questions as to the ambiguity of the same. information relating to recruitment. validity of the poll, especially question -, 2; Sho°illd military representatives be respect to the health and The presence of the Armed Forces on two. Several inconsistencies should be With allow cd to recruit on the Ithaca safety aspect of the miHtary question, . , .campus in this capa:oity is no_t new. In College campus? brought out. First, Jh~,re \\'\ls no Congress withdrew its suit. The basis the past years, the military has become polling done in Terrnce 's ·2, 5, and Polling was done by members of for this was the interpretation of the a familiar sight. This· year, Student 12A. In addition, only 57 out of Student Congress, For those on poll. This question was kept alive by approximately 700 off-campus Congr(?SS addressed itself to the campus, the representatives went door having it referred to the Community question of whether or not it was in students voted. An argument that to door. taking the poll. Off -campus Health and Safety Committee of the interest of the student body to these students had the opportu'nity to students were to vote in the Union this Student Congress for invertigation. have the military visit the camp11s for vote and therefore it was the fault of past Monday. Out of 3,947 students, Due to the importance of this the students that the off-campus vote , recruitment purposes. This question approximately 2300 voted. The results question, Rich Slone, chairman of the was small, was advanced in Congress has two facts: I) Did the students were: commitee, is bringing the matter want· the military to come on campus and accepted as indicated by the Question I: before the Campus Life Committee for and; 2) Did the military c~nstitute a Congress vote. By doing this, Student determination. danger to the health and safety of the YES NO ABSTAIN Congress accepted the votes of 5 7 college community. In dealing with people or 8% of the off campus Military recruitment on the Ithaca 1,704 latter question, Student Congress 418 119 population as being representative of College campus is here to stay. authorized a suit to be brought Question 2: approximately 20% of the entire Students, whether they arc for or against, should take the opportunity beforere the Community Council to YES NO ABSTAIN student body. These figures were not determine the health and safety aspect considered by Congress in validating of talking to these representatives. The of the question. 1,095 1,046 237 this poll. Had a more participatory military representatives arc here to To the question of whether or not method of polling off-campus students answer students questions concerning the students wanted the military on Student opinion on the first question been implemented, the results of the the military. This resource should be campus-. ('ongress authorized the was evident by a four to one ratio. On second question may have changed. used by the students to the fullest Further inconsistencies in the extent of their interest

• .. ~ 1 -

,, . - u.· ... Where You Always. Hear The Best Bands in Town. Th.urs. SWEET JENN·Y GRIT Fri. _,,SW_EET JENNY GRIT Sat~ Bacchus Mon. Al.- The Beer .You · ··-Can Drink ·tor:$1.00 413 TAUGHANNOCK. "RL'-'D. Down ·the !',tret>t from the St uti<_m. Rt>staunmt . ·. - '; .. ~ . - ,-• :_ . _:. .: ' ·- I .Tl"R:\ LEFT·LE.\\T\G ITHAC \ COLLI.C,I·. I', \I I l. I.SI

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• -',-i...,,. '• ,_- The Ithacan. October 19. 1972. Page -6 United States educational system, have organized and communicated so that they cannot function with the organiza.tion at all. Sine~ the · on the basis that oppressed students (which in the future will be the organzation is a part of the school, it's obvious who promotes these national power) have the same old "thing" in common. There hassles on our member. shouldn't be any need for.explanation on the commonality! de­ The political system of Ithaca College is alm?st lik~ ~he political So .. in conclusion, I personally feel the the Afro-Latin Society system of the United States. The U.S. has racist policies, so does is the most organized campus organization at Ithaca College. We Ithaca College! The U.S. has the CJ.A. and F.B.I., so does Ithaca have problems, but if you think hard and look back at College. In the same political comparison, there have been attempts history ..· .you can understand why we've come together .. .also you Aguero to break the unity of the A.L.S. This can be done by attacking can understand thepeople who created the problem! (Dig) individuals who are a part of the organization and promoting hassles RED, "WHITE" and BLUE continued from {XIKe 2

be treated like consumers of merchandise. You Reporter Arrested as Police have to wrap u_p your product with liquor and parties." He has had several showings at Ithaca College in the Union but would prefer the atmosphere of the Performing Arts Building. There Club Crippled Viet Vet was a move by some professors and students at I.C. this year to have a showing of Ed's paintings LOS ANGELES (LNS) -- - riot). He was released on $500 you, Ron'." During the past for Parent's Weekend. The powers that be Ron Ridenour, a reporter for the. bail and his camera returned several years, Ridenour has however, apparently dedided that Ed was only L.A. Free Press was sentenced in with the film exposed. written a bout various illegal looking for personal gain in exhibiting his· work. late September to one year in What he was trying to police activities among other Ed answers "One gains alot by having a sho:w and · "ail and faces the possibility of ;,interfere with" by taking things, including being very . the paintings may· even sell. They (the one and a half more for other pictures was the following: vocal about the war. Administration) don't look at it gracefully. For an misdemeanors. "Several witnesses watched as An appeal for a new trial was _artist who is already established, he needs one-man Ridenour was arrested while agents Mike Miranda and Joe shows." Speaking of painters_ in general, Ed attempting to photograph the denied even though the defense Robinson, who had been posing found the undercover agent w,ho says,"We don't associate with one another. There's beating of Ron Kovic, a in civilian clothes as fingered him, and who the a rivalry I suppose." . · paralyzed Vietnam Veteran by demonstrators, grabbed Ron prosecutor said didn't even exist. "Uncle Eddie"; a teacher, a painter, a friend of the two undercover agents. Kovic out of his wheel chair and The judge denied the motion for many; enjoys life in Ithaca and plans to stay here Kovic was part of a proceeded to twist lµs arms," a new trial on the grounds that for the rest of his life. J:Ie is not married but demonstration protesting the recalls Ridenour. "beat his one cop's testimony would not considers his paintings his "b:ibies" and even keeps mining of Haiphong Harbor shoulders and back and later alter the results. a complete list of who owns (has adopted?) each outside the Committee to throw him into a police car in one. There are still countless works of art hanging Re-elect the President. such a manner. as to break his A Ridenour Defense in Ed's home aruf next· door gallery and he Apparently two permanently deadened legs. Committee has been formed and welcomes the opportunity to show someone plainsclothesmen spotted and Ridenour was told that the can be contacted at: _around. Teaching-may be his livelihood, but shouted to a policemen to arrest charges "came from painting is his first love and his claim to fame. Ed · him. Ridenour was later charged downtown." He later tells us_ "A painter sees beauty where the average with interfering with Kovic's reported that the arresting officer The Free Press 6013 Hollywood B0ulevard person might not. I am always looking for the arrest, resisting his own arrest, told him, "They (the undercover esthetic nature of things." J.uc:Iging from his work, and creating. a 'rout' (a minor agents) certainly have it in for Hollywood, California 90028 the beauty and esthetic nature of things seldom escape him. K.H. Are the candidates you plan to vote · . "Our lands lie where our dead lie buried" for pledged to end -Crazy H«;irse the war?

For many Americans, the crucial issue in the coming election is endin_g the war in Vietnam. . WORDS · This is the third in a series of ads published by Peace Alert USA in newspapers from coast to coast to permit hundreds of thousands of ~mericans to vote on the single question: "Should Congress end the war by cutting A POEM BY DANIEL BERRIGAN off the funds?" Our apologies good friends Your peace votes have had their effect inCongress. We have nrities Write or visit your Congressman: Write or visit your candidates, both of that public order which is in effect national and state. Malec sure they are right on the war. - a massive institutionalized -disorder The National Peace Poll and other actions of Peace Alert USA are · life and gentleness and community and unselfishness working to tum the tide. We ask again for your vote and your help to rai~ the -- is the only order we recognize lllORCY needed to get these ads into.local newspapers. · For the sake of that order We risk our liberty our good name . Send your contribution to Peace Alert USA to keep this current effort going. The time is past when good men may be silent And make sure the candidates you vote for in November are pledged to When obedience · peace in Vietnam. can segregate rnen from public risk when .the poor can die without defense r••••••••••••••, r••••••••••••••, How many indeed must die ·_ · I NATIONAL PEACE POLL I ·1 ~~Ave. NE I before our voices are hear-d · · I I I Washington. DC 20002 I how many must be tortured dislocated .. ShouldConipesshrinathewartoancndby cunirti1ofl 1he lunds! I I Encl Oi5Cd is my contn.b ution or 5 ______I starved maddened? · I l'IO o I l'lcae make clxds payable 10 -Peace Alen uSA- I · How long must the world's resi:filrces .-. IN~. YESD .I be raped in the service of.legalized murder? ;\ I -' . - I.· I NAME .I . ' . When ll~ what poirit will 'you say·np _to t~is war.2: . We.have1chosen to say . ·- · · · · _-,;:.. : I ADDRE,SS --~-----: I ... \ . ~iJh the-gift. o( o.ur liberty ·· · ·· · · - ' =-~-settoT1t1saAt.'tpTro,N,..n~Al~AcEPOLi._·-- -.. .:: -~-•...... STAIE i1e<-=-:-'·; ·: -I I ori ·· . -I _i(n~~e~ry.ouriives: . . . :;.r· . :L.·~-~-~:;;.·:-" .. "l:l<.;:·:'.~_.l·i L111••-••••••••••~il the violence stops here . -, ' . - ' . ~ . the deatfr stops here . .-.·- . ., ... ~ Sen. Harold E. Huaties (D.:lowal Sen. Alan Cranston (D.-Calif.) . ·,he supression of-truth stops herci-",. ·__ . Rep. Donald W. Riegle, fr. lR';·Mi~.) ~P- ~uJ N. McCl~ey, Jr. (R.-;Cabf.l Redeem the times! .· ,. . , . . ' .. • .1• ••• 1 National ~-~~n ~S1 . _ .. We say:·.killina is disorder ...... ,,' - S•• -· • ' . •. .,....._,-.r1"'· ,,_-.., • • • ., ; ·• · ...., ~' • • ...... ' :. • •.. :. J :.: .. ~ ' ' -, ..... ·,. ••

. - " ' .-,;'.{,',:_-, ,;:_ ;, . ,· '·,,.-,~.~·=··;;,!·i.\?:-;.::'.::i~,~~ •.:ii~>,~,,~i::-;.~;~;;.~;.;:i:,jt~~;:·){ ~!>~/.<~- ' '•...... (· ',, ' . ·--· - ,_ :·, :'. ---·-- - --~- --- The Ithacan, October 19, 1972, Pa_Be 7 ,, ' Cleve.land and· ..Eliza Tan, violin; Roberta Crawford and Gene Semiatin, viola; Susan Doyle, cello; Jule Paul, bass: and Rebecca n8ws sho:rts Robinson, horn. llrt Dept. Medical Aid for Indochina will hold a meeting at 8 p.m. on Wed ~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~ Oct. 25 in Fl 06 See/ts GrowtlJ Ail applications for National Drect Student Loans (NDSL) must be On the agenda will be an (lppraisal of the recent Brown Rice and Tea in the Financial Aids Office by October 31. All papers for the Dinner; discussion o"f door-to-door leafletting downtown. second semest~r loan must be signed proir to. Thanksgiving vacation. community and neighborhood slide show presentations on Vietnam and other anti-war activities. If you have any ideas or wish to help, By Pinky Ohanian Ithaca College has received an unrestricted $6000 grant from the please come or call Rich Knight 272-9389. Eastman Kodak Company. This is part of over a million dollars in On Wednesday October 18 educational grants this year, based on the number of graduates who Total giving to Ithaca College doubled in the past year according to there wa~ J m.:et111g 111 the Jrl joined Kodak within five years after graduation and are presently an annual report, jointly issued by David J. Laub, chairman of the department for all art majors to completing their fifth year of company employment. At Ithaca Board of Trustees; and Edward Eisenhart, trustee and chairman of decide the future of the art College, Kodak gives $750 for each year of academic work the College's newly-formed Development Council. department. Ithaca's art completed by the employee.- Since 1968, the College has received Gifts totaling over three-quarters of a million dollars indicated department could be on.: of the $26,300 from Eastman Kodak. increased participation in development efforts by all supporters of best in the country. as phrased the College, including alumni, parents, friends, corporations, and by one of the faculty professors. foundations. This Years' total giving reached $773,193, compared The organization of the There will be a meeting of the Community Health and Safety with $381,412 last year. department is varied in the Committee at 7:30 this Thursday night in F108. This committee is minds of the students and the currently dealing with the questions of safety of recruiters while on Unrestncted giving is up 18 percent to over $200,000 for the first time ever. minds of the professors. The art campus, food in the snack bar and your health, security in dorm:. is fine arts and does not have the and parking lots, and other matters that will effect you. Under special restricted gifts, there is a 15 8 percent increase to almost $300,000, mostly from corporations and foundations. These commercial aspects of art· aa desired by too many students in Membership of this committee is open to all students interested. funds are solicited by the College for specific program purposes. this department. There are many Please attend if you want to join, if you have something to say, or if Not only the financial figures for unrestricted giving are up; the possibilities as to the needs, not you have an issue for us to look into. number of contributors increased 14 percent to over 2,300; alumni only physically in expansion, contributors increased 17 percent and parent contributors 21 but also in the minds of the DOES NIXON BUG YOU'? There will be a Rally for MCGOVERN in percent. students and the ability to work front of the Union Monday, Oct. 23 at 11 :00 a.m. IC Professors, together and become spirited Vietnam Vets and Special guests will be speaking. Ithaca College Television Department studies extend a warm through art to increase the invitation to all students who want to develop and present their dimension of the department. creative works --- and they will be produced and aired, subject to Presently the department is Music for french horn will be performed by Gail Williams in Ithaca -the approval of the directors of the executive board (which, by the Jacking leadership and has had College's Walter Ford Hall at· 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 21. The concert way, is made up totally of students of Communications). Program 300 applicants for the position is op-en to the public and is without charge. proposals· may be submitted to ED LIBONATI or STEVE of chairman for the department, Miss Williams is studying horn at the Music School with Prof. John SHIEKMAN, and they will set up everything you need for producing but is still unfilled. There is need Covert. She is a member of the Collee;eOrchestra and in addition is your creation: sets, crews, and all technical equipment will be for physical expansion and the principal horn of the Utica ~Vfl!phony. She has appearedtas soloist, provided. If you really want to get involved in the production of allotments of the budget are not chosen by audition, in the School's annual Concerto Program, ana your script, you can act . as executive producer and oversee the adequate enough to contain this. she has also played in the Concert Band. In 1911 she received the Pi makings of a superior program -: - - whether it be drama, comedy, a With the department feeling Kappa Lambda Achievement Award for outstanding performance talk-show format, or a documentary; anything you want to do. To together on certain necessities and contributions to the School of Music. follow up on this_ fantastic opportunity,just notify ED at 277-0873, there is a way and there will be a or STEVE . ,t 273-3778, and they will answer all questions or will. I urge all art interested The Saturday program includes Sonata; Opus 17, by Beethoven, problems you may have, as well as discuss with you the feasibility of students to help paint the Villanelle by Dukas, Concerto for Two Horns in E flat by Rosetti your proposal. If you can't get in touch with them, call centrex landscape a little brighter, and and.Partita by Verne Reynolds. 3216 or 3217 (274-3216 or 274-3217) and leave a message. We need attend a department meeting to Miss Williams will be assisted by student instrumentalists Jan Delli new talent and fresh ideas for productions - - -we need YOU! So ge• help save the arts next Bovi and Liz Seleski, piano; Ray Zoeckler, Karen. Lang, Michael involved and write your script today! Wednesday October 25th.

, TVS-ex- Topic in TV Guide The Weekly Cloud Dragan CapTtonConlesT

RADNOR, Pa. · Changing American attitudes on sex, nudity and language are now being reflected on television fare, TV Guide magazine reports in its current issue (Oct. 14). Viewers are seeing sexy movies, hearing discussions on \ - subjects like homosexuality and lesbianism, and hearing language ~"~-- that would not have been on the \~r...., Why did I leave medium five years ago. '\~ my Mateus cork at home? One group, the magazine -~~ reports in the first of a three-part series by Max ""'-~~U \ 'l/.1,, / ~'-·-' Gunther, "feels -America's moral • I ..,. • ' ' ._,r~ .Ii! r,/" ·' ,a· ... backbone is decaying and is sure· wl- ; •.. ~,:i.·-~ TV's new Liberalization is ho.th ,,, .. ·dlri.!',:-­ a cause and a sympt<>m o"f that ~, decay. At the opposite pole are, ..... those who sneeringly.dismiss the.· first group as far-~t political nuts or religious fanatics - or, to use a phrase that is fashionable ...... on college campuses these days, FREE CARTOON POSTER JUST FOR ENTERING 'sexually repressed.' " This is the chanc~ to get started in the Everyone who enters can pick up their prize All ..:nlrk~ mu~t he 111 the mail ,lot of Two major organizations craft you thought only your long lost poster in the Ithacan Off_i_ce, any day. after the It ha can off ice• ( Wc·~t I owc·r fighting · what they regard as uncle could teach you ... noon Monday. Just tell whoever is in 1he ha~emcnt) hy noon Monda~. TV's looser rules are Stop office your name. Then yg_u will he given your Immorality on TV, with Each week, Cloud Dragon Crafts will free cartoon poster and · your name will he Your caption will he judgo.:tl on headquarters in Warrentown, a ward free expert instruction plus checked off our list of folk~ ,, ho were hip origi11ality. humor anti/or Va., and Morality in Media, starting materials in any one of the enough to enter. appropriah:nes.,. located in New York City. The following crafts: ••••••••..•.....••••••.•.•.....•••....•...... Use th.: entry forkn provitlo.:d or write former group uses a chain-letter your own. J\ddrc~s your entry to: Caption ("ontc~t l·.ditor. Ithacan a p p r o a c h to .. pro t es t Stained glass programming it feels glorifies Puhlishing Co. Inc .. Ithaca College. adultery, promis-cuity, and Ithaca N.Y .. 148SO. Be sure to indudo.: "lewd, sick jokes about family Candlemaking your name .and addres.,. life." Macrame Morality in Me~ia writes, regularly to TV stations and Silk-screen- networks about alleged ..smut." : printing .. . ,. ' . The group~ chairman is a rabbi Batik. and · a Catholic priest is its President. Its board lists a number of prominent persons. ·

.•: _!,

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(These) "were the people who PART II: 1HE Il\1AGE Al\TI1HE ISSUES several of the nine POWs that had come to pick up a piece of they have released at three the Nixon administration at a LIBERATION News Services different intervals in the past price of SI, 000 a p/a te. The men few years have been returned to were in dinner Jackets, the Vietnam to drop more bombs women in gowns, all of them over that· country_ with pink faces and soft hands, Second, the Provisional smelling of money and safety, Revolutionary Government of good schools, old money, Portrait of, a Politician South Vietnam and the brokerage houses, seats on Democratic Republic of the exchange . .. winners. Vietnam have continually ''There were familiar faces: distinguished world statesman. home TV consumption." 26 million bomb craters, and the stressed in negotiations that , Jacob For a man who is But that's part of the Nixon defoliated forests as large as the they do not want to impose a Javits ... But most of them directing the. most technically technique,- -- when you can't state of Massachusetts, surely Communist government in were the people who we don 't advanced and most devastating brush something like Vietnam some Indochinese "Tanyas" South Vietnam. Their plan calls see, the people who inhabit war in history, it seems under the rug (even with were affected by those acts? for elections in which all boardrooms, the people who ludicrous. But never Vietnamese which tries to keep And again from that political tendencies will own America. underestimate the man who in up the war while making the speech --- his most recent major participate --- even the present "To look at them, you found 1952 said that Adlai Stevenson, corpses non-American), try statement on the war -· -- Nixon South Vietnam government it difficult to remember what minus Thieu. _But apparently flesh looks like after it has been Nixon, nor his negotiators in scorched by napalm. None of Paris, are interested in accurately them looked as If they representirfg' the Vietnamese' personally would blow up an statements to the American Asian peasant. fhey seemed part people. of some safe . . . vision of the And third, what does "stain world, a world of manners and the honor of the United States money and not the world where of America" mean? All it does is the American Air Force is laying suggest images which threaten down the heaviest aerzal traditionitional values of bombardment in history." patriotism and morality_ ECONOMIC PRIORITIES: -- liberal columnist Pete Hamill During his I 972 convention in the New York Post, after speech, just one year after the covering a Nixon $ I ,000 a plate announcement of his 'Historic fundraising dinner. New Economic Plan", Nixon spoke glowingly of the "millions This year, 1972, Nixon is acting like the Wizard of Oz, of new jobs created by our new economic policies;" that "as you dispatching personal emissaries -- Pat, Julie, Tricia, all know, we have cut inflation and his other standms -- while in half in this administration," he sits home in the White House, and that "unemployment is less working the controls, unseen. than half the peacetime average Nixon, himself, only ventures of the sixties." Dazzling out under extremely controlled statistics but it is easy to fling circumstances -- on a one day out irrelevant of false statements trip or so where he meets with in a speech when you don't have "city leaders" in the morning to defend your statements on and afternoon and later arrives tbs spot. al a closely guarded fundraising When Nixon talks about how dinner at night which is usually much his administration has simultaneously transmitted . to done for the working people of other locations. America why doesn't he The one in New York City on mention these concrete events: September 25, played to a full * *The West Coast dockers' house of 1,500 Nixon supporters s~rike_ defied a Nixon plea for the country's organized labor to who shelled out $ I ,000 a plate the Democratic candidate for distractions_ It's just highly said, "We've gone the extra for each the privelege of hearing President, "forfeits his right to advanced, multi-media bread and mile - -- in fact we've gone tens cooperate with his new and seeing the President in the even be considered for the circuses. of thousands of miles trying to economic policy of wage and pam:aked-makeuped flesh. That presidency" unless "he declares "As we work toward a more seek a negotiated settlement of price freezes. The record breaking strike was an speech was close-circuited to 25 U'lequivocally that he opposes peaceful world," Nixon told his the war . . . There are three other locations. And three recognition of Red China and conventioneers both during his things, however, that we have embarrassment to the speeches by Nixon at the dinner supports free (sic) China" and acceptance speech and during not ·and that we will not offer: administration and very in New York, followed by a then, less th.an IO years later, one of his movie tributes at the "We will never abandon our expensive to the shippers so luncheon in San Francisco an.cl stages and extravaganza for the Republican convention 'let us prisoners of war. And second, while the President was in another dinner in Los Angeles, American media on his trip to think of Tanya (a 12 year old we will not join our Peking he signed legislation to were expected to bring in at China. Russian girl who died during enemies in imposing a force the strikers back to work. leasl S5 million lo the Nxon Or as one radical journalist World War II. Nixon visited her Communist government on our Prior to that legislation he had i:ampaign. put 1t at the time: grave on his trip to the Soviet allies --- the 17 million people slapped the Taft-Hartley Act on Any mention ot the issues by Union) and ot the other Tanyas of South Vietnam_ And we will the dockwork~rs --- an 80 day Nixon. safe cithrr in front of the "The new Nixon never looked and their brothers and sisters never stain the honor of the "cooling off" period during audk•nl·e like lhe one in New newer -- shaking hands with everywhere. Let us do all we can United States of America." which time strikers had to return York or in .1 her mctlcally sealed Chairman Mao Tse-Tung, to insure that no other children to work. But the 80 days were But what do those words TV ,-[udio 1,- hound to bt' riddled quoting from Mao·s Little Red will have to endure what Tanya over, the dockworkers were back t, y dis l ort wn. 1rrevelance. or Book of quotations, applauding did and that your children and mean? First, whoever asked him on the picket lines, hence the 11111-righl tying. Let·,. look at a vigorously after the Communist ours, all the children _ol th~ to abandon the POWs? Certainly special strike-breaking ll'w l')>.,llllpk,-. world can live their full lives not the Vietnamese. They have legislation. Int c rnationale (the traditional together in peace and friendship." Tl II·. W ·\ R · A,. amaz111g ;.1,. it is anthem of revolutionary only· maintained as common Nixon even went so far as to 1,1 fl',1111,·. 11 1,. 111 lhl' arc;1 of movements). Any way you look No mention of the explosive sense would indicate, that they introduce into Congress a far i111,·rn.1lrll11.il .1ff.1ir, thJt Nixon al ll, 11 was a remarkable Nixon equivalent of 420 Hiroshima will not release captured enemy more threatening piece of i~ I" J perso~nel while they are still l r~ 111g l'OllJUr,· up performani:e, fully orchestrated atom bombs he has dropped continued on page nine r ,. !' ll I ,I I I l l 11 o f h l' I 11 g ;J 111 Irving color via satellite for over Indochina, or the estimated being attacked~ Particularly since

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.. •' - ... ,i,, ..~_ .• ·L •• , '•,;;~t~, •-..'_.:.~:., ..., •1 The Ithacan, October I 9, I 972. Page 9 **Ever srnce the Wage-Pnce I Board was ,et up It had a •Bloody Protest Staged at NIXON reputation for being tough on I conrrnued from paf?e e1f(ht wage 111..:rca,es and ea,y on pnce legislation --- the F:mergency nses Recently. however. they : USAF Anniversary Air Show Public Tran,portatwn Act which made a ~how of cracking down. I would give him the power to ban But I! wa\ a pretty poor ,how. I HO)'l;OLULU ( LNS) - .. The To bnng this fJct home to the "We pour our blooJ JI any tramportat1on "1rike which They vetoed a pnce rise on G M I ~eekend of September JS people of Honolulu ,llld to alert H1d,.1111 1,1d,1v to rl'111111d .ill ol wa~ ''damagrng to the national and 1-ord Lar, - - that 1s until I t h r o u g h 1 / w a ~ the Air Force cckhrant, o! th.: u, thJt the· blip, on a radJr economy. However he after the election. At that time I officially designatea tne period horror of the s1tuat1on 111 ,c·recn are horn. h.ne pJrent,;. withdrew the propo~ed bill a few the two corporations may to celebrate the 25th anniversary lndocl11na, c1v11Ian~ Donald W pla~ ·" children. love, laugh and month~ later 111 an effort to wm ,ubm1t their request aga111 and I I of the U.S Air Force: Though 1t Sharp and Robert C. D1cker,on LT\' and bleed and die whl'n our back the alienated labor union<, the 1mphcat1011 1s that this time I has only existed as a separate Jr. a It ended a ca rn1 va I and air bt;1;1bs and bullch Jre let loo,e for elect 10n t1 me they'll get 1t. I service srnce 194 7, it Justly lays 'i how open to the public on on them. The vcl11L"les th.it some ** Three of the four labor THE DRUG PLAGUE: In a claim 10 the history of the ll.S. September 17 and added then ot ~ou drive Jnd the pJpL'r, tlJJt rcpre,entat1ve, on !\1xon's "get tough" speech at the recent 1 Army Air Force as its own. The message to the fcst1v1t1es by other, ot rou file. the fuel ,ome l 2-membi:r wc1ge and price gathering of Democrab for 1 privelege bnngs with it the pounng the1r own blood on an ot you pump ,ind the c·omputers board, ~ct up to arbitrate Nixon at John Connolly\ Texas I memory, and the responsibility A1rForcc •-7D fighter bomber o l hers of you tend mJke dispute, between labor and ranch, Nixon lambasted I of l-11rosh1ma, Nagasaki, Tokyo used in Vietnam . possible this tr.1g1c reJhty" comp,rn1e~, quit 111 eJrly ~prmg. .. p e r m I , s I V C J u d g es " whose and Dresden. Over 300.000 As the cahopc mu~,c blared They charged that the board "leniency left a 'weak hnk' 111 I The Air Force security dearly d l'>Cr1m1nated against the country's efforts to nd the I c1vil1ans were mcinerated Ill on, blood dripped down the \Ide these cities alone as A RESULT of the plane and formed pools apprehended the two and working peoplt:. (One of them strceb of pushers of hard drugs. I handcuffed them. a truck full of wa, George Meany - hardly a Above all else, society must be I OF A1r Force bombs. inside the cockpit. Ghostly Today the Air force 15 handprints from the victuns airmen with nfles were brought polit1Lal enemy of Nixon). protected from those despicable I I carrymg out a new, awsome were a dd e d to t h c b o d y o f t I1c 1n. A~ the two were searched for Nixon quietly replaced the labor narcotics profiteers who spread bombing campaign against the plane. weapons onlookers were ordered reprc,cnLit1ve~ with three the drug plague for personal Indochinese people. Much of the lo hand back the leaflet~ and to "public" rcprc~entat1ves. gain.'' I I bombmg 1s planned at Hickam As the onlookers gaped, Sharp refrain from taking pictures. *-'In 1970, 1,300 peopll: with Yet 11 is becommg more and I Air Force Base in Honolulu and and Dickerson distributed The government has not yet rnco rn c~ over S5 0 000 paid no more clear even to the general I then sped off to Southeast Asia statements cxplain1n_g the1r deudcd whJt course of Jct1on to rncomc tax at all (at lea~! three public: that some of our closest I by computer teletype machines. actions. This statement m part take 111 the matter. of them had income~ over "fncnds 'in Southeast Asia seem SI ,000,000/. I I 'J71, U.S. Steel to have a hand rn the drug leaders participate Ill or protect ABORT I ON: "One of the even 111 principles ex pounded by Corrorat1on --- the 12th largest bu,1ness. Alfred McCoy. 111 his ~------the activities of those who foundatwn stone~ of our society the United Nations." American Lorporat1on earned on new book The Politics of Heroin contribute to our drug problem and civilization b the profound One New York colum111~t put :.o total bu~rne~~ of almost $5 in Southeast Asia spells it out should know that the president belief that human life, all human 111s finger on the irony of 1t all bill,'1n, hc1d a net rncomc of q LIile clearly. "As part of its of the United States is required hfe, 1s a precious commodity,.. when he ,aid, "As more than a $154,315,754 yet paid unqualified support of the by statute to suspend all yet 1n this great and good few people have noted, Nixon absolutely no rncome tax. Thieu-Ky regime," writes American economic and military country of ours 111 recent years, has great respect for the s,mctity Yet Ronald Reagan, McCoy, whose book the CIA assistance to such a regime. I the right to life of literally of human hfc when 1t 1s a fetus; addre~~1ng the Republican tned to suppress but couldn't, shall not hesitate to comply hundreds of thou~ands of it's when the fetus becomes a (' on ven I 10n and obv1ou~ly the U.S. Embassy rn S;1igon fully and promptly with that unborn children has been human being and starts walk mg prc~entrng that Party\ point of "look~ the other way when statute. destroyed--- legally--- but rn around in places hke l'brth presented with evidence that view called loophole~ 'that old "Our goal 1s the unconditional my Judgement without anything V1ctman that he gets himself 111 faithful of the demagogue~. Plug members of the regime are surrender of the merchants of approach Ing adequate trouble." in v o Ive d 111 the GI h c rom these and of cour~e we arc surely death who traffic 111 heroin. We Justification." These words and ECOLOGY: "I lhmk 11.s a home free. Well, this traffic." are gomg to fight the evil with more were part of a letter that mad world that sets off a five demagoguery already had CIA-chartered Air Amcnca every weapon at our command. Nixon sent to Cardmal Terance megaton bomb," sa:d Ramsey convinced many of our son~ and helicopters carry opium from 'These people arc literally the Cooke while the New York State Clark d1scuss111g nuclear testing daughter~ that our~. 111deed. is a remote Meo outposts 1n s I ave traders of our time • . . surpnsrng bit of interference • • · on an educational televiswn venal society, v1ct11rnz111g some Northern Lao~ to processrng they arc trafficers in living it is rare for a president to so station. "What is it that to provide undeserved priveleges plants in Long Cheng, all aircraft death. They may be hunted to openly interject himself mto the motivates people to dnll a hole for other~. Well, let them name used by the Lao and Vetnamese the end of the earth. They must midst of a furious state battle. 6,000 feet down into the the loopholes, and they will frnd air forces to transport opium are be left no base in any nation for Even the establishment press carth'ssurtace, at an enormous that they are the lcg1t11natc provided by the United States their operations. They must be suggested that Nixon was more expense --S200 million or deduction~ without which the through the Military As .1stance permitted not a single hiding concerned about the Catholic whatever it is, set thts thing off, working men and women of this Program: Meo farmers in Laos place or refuge from justice vote this November than about and then jump for joy when country could not afford to pay devote t hernselves fully to anywhere in the world." those unborn children. they didn't blow the world to their income tax." opium production since they It remains to be seen whether But what was even more surprising smithereens. **Nixon ha~ cont111ually re ce1ve all their rice supplies our "friends" in Vietnam, was the fact that JUSt prior to his t.1ken the ~•de ot the large from the U .S 111 exchange for Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand letter to Cardinal Cooke, Nixon "Why is it that the Atomic grower~ 111 the United the young men and boys they have their funds cut off. had publicly rejected the Energy Comm1ss1on and the s ,, n d t o L o n g Ch e n g for I' ,1 r 111 w o r k e rs st rug g le t o recommendations of his own Department of Defense arc conscnpt1on m the CIA-trained 1111101111.e migrant IJbor Commission on Population driven to do these things and army 111 New York City alone "l:leph.111b Like Lettuce" Growth (chaired by John D. why 1s t1 when five federal there are over 300 000 Vietnam and ··Hoycolt Grass Nll. I h,·y wc1e referring contraceptives to young people. th cy go ahead and do it lo the· l·.11111worl,.,·r, c,dl for J In the fact of the~c facts, Just as he did 111 Apnl, 1971 anyway?" Nixon's blustery "law and N .1 l I o 11 .1 I H o y , o t l o I a I I when he ruled against a Public pres~ure, order" crackdown 1s a farce and 11011-11111011 klluL·,· 111 .in alll'mpt hberahzcd abortion law for all particularly from native ala~kans lo IL'I lhL· u111011 111. Therl' .ire only obscures the issue for legislature was Just about to vote was also agarnst the A mdutka .1iil'.1d~ .11111-sc·,·onJ.11} boycott 1111lhons of Americans. on the repeal of 1t~ two year old bla~t. but Nixon wa, not moved . l.1 \I'-. 111 wv,·1.il ,1 .ill', ( w h1ch Nixon. seeing Vietnam liberal abortion law. It was a And no wonder How could he Veterans corning home hooked proh1h1h p1LI-.L't, .it food store,) military personnel, :s.;1xon said, veto nuclear testing wlule at the Jnd confirming those .ind th,· Rq,uhl1L·,111 P.irty ha~ "I cannot square with my same time askrng for more accusations, decided to reassure ' ll p fl\> I I L' d l h ll , L' I .J W , O 11 personal belief in the sanctity of money for nuclear armamants the American people September ,I 11 .1 [ I 111 h 111 "11~lhl · · A 11 y gov e r n men t w hose recognized by· law, recognized rHE •tables'" OlfERrAL SHOP PIRRO'S A._~( 1159 DRYDEN RD. ~ I""~ 3 MILE5 FROM Tl-IE CORNELL CAMPUS ~ 20J N. Aurora .5Plfr.! TED BLUE RIBBON 272-7710 • POl"A/3!... F c.5 • SIINOWICI--IE.S PIZZA J~... $/4:Jo~ Meadow Court SPrvedw1f/; a cr1jp Shell Qreen solod ondllof 272-1950 31 7 .\. 1/eat/11 u· St. /1!,aca. \. }' breads. Onlr;"8.35 SPEEDY·· .ferry I/olden. 1/gr. YOU RING - DELIVERY WE BRING I JI "/)'111·., o( R ,•pairs Bloodv /l1arys .41 WAYJ' 60¢ \TS /\SPJ:'(110\ ST-t TIO.\ /v1/ller, Mo/so/7 Ille, Portc1ron lop FREE DELIVERY on orders of $_20.00 or more 11be ltbaean. October 19, 1972, Page I 0 I I MUSIC Loggin~ and Mt-~sina 1n Concert I ·.1 • I By l{,,hh} \1<,r,i.: Song" ,ind J Ill"\\ Lut to be relea~ed on lh Hillel llay Ride THURSDAY OCTOBER 19 Loggin, \k"111J Jlhum. Loggin~ then int,L l.l'avc, lhl: ( ll,1pl.11n', c,ll1u: ()11 I 11<1.,~ 1h, 1h1rl,·L11tll 11111 1 gc,c,LI lu,k 11·.1, ··J1111m} \k,,,·nJ" Jilt.I the two musician,, Hand Crafts & Jewelry a I X l() p 111 w11 l1 K, 1111 1 I "!!)!Ill, .,ml J1111 \l,·,"11.1 .1, Iii,·} "( ountr} Song" In lhL' nuddll' of the 11 h,r r<·,l'rv.1!1<111, ,.ill l \~ \ Exhibition and Sale d<.:/n, ,c-d .111 11111,1.,11d111/! ,1111cc·r1 I'> .111 .111x1,,u, lollow111g ··( ountr} Song" the} were J0111 Union Lounge, 10 a.m - Pm <, Catholic Ma" .111d1< fill" .11 \} r,ll "" I 111h·r,11) 111 lh,· W<>IIIL"ll·, Jon ( larkL· on lhl' ,ax, Lc,tl'r Garth, al,o. Women's Group Meetin~ Chor.ii R,><1111 I 11111 II.di <, !IJ gy111 Du,· '" ,11111v dill1,ull1,·, wllli Ille· , .. und ,,1x. 1.Jrry S,m, un bass. and 111 drum, I hl' other, c;.1111c 111 with ~lll:h prec,~10 7 p.m. S.A.H Movie "Joe" lh,· ,11ld t .. , ,111 1111111 1111111 I <>gg111, and \h:"111.1 till' audiencl' wa~ overwhelmed. wcrv ,.11"11,·d w111i 11iv11 1111"1, .,nd lh,· d11,,r, wer,· group pl.iyl' .1pp111p11.1ll" lhL· (lll"\l'III. lor eXJlll)lk--"I lllk which he played two recorders simultaneou1i Ford Halt, 8: I 5 r 111. li111c,II I 11c h" 111 .111111h,·1 Wl'll-known ,ong w111i choru, appearing almost statuesque which serves :i rn<>g111/,·d ·" .. ,11v·11 11,,ve lun. lun. lun. '1,II her contra~! to Loggins who does a lot of sto ,tudenl Re1..ilal ,I Ill d,1ddy l,1ke, lhc I -h1rd aw.iy," the Jt1d1cncc l.l'l'lllH" and head shaking. The group manufa ::;ord Hall, I p.111. l'.1111 \ltlk1 ( h.111111.111 .111d ( ll1c-l llc·.11d ...,IH·'II h.1vL· 11111. tun. lun. 't,11 hl"1 1110111111y 111cred1ble sounds one of which is done wr ,habbal Dinner I xn1111v,· <11 (,.1111H·II <" will l.1kl·, IIH· h,1llc-11L'' .iway"--111 rcl<:rcncL' to an use of an electrified flute and Guild echo rec Jnion DcMollc Ro0111. \ p 111 l"IL'Ill 111lrod11cL' the phc110111L·11al Kenny Loggim wno concerts with "Thankyou for buying the, Trivia Dance ', (l Ill i!<1wl11q• l11ll111h ,II iliii lo<>I.. n·111,·1 ,1ag,· and c11clw11!L'd lhc .itH.l1cncc with and for coming here tonight as nobody l Buh, Fur. & J,g,. 11111,,11 I{,·, ( ,·111,·1 .1 ,olo <>I "Pooh Corner" tollowclly. 'I. 30 IOh.X Women's Varsity Field HockL·y W,·,1 I <>Wl'I p.111 1:1,c·11Lh p.111. ... ) 1s of the comic strip m l.)i~L·11s,io11-l>rug Law~ Israeli Folk Dancing with heavy black outline;.· Lock ll.1w11 v, llh,1,.1. I .\l) p 111 W1lh lo111pk111,<"01111ly I>/\ Dan,<' Slllll10. Ifill (\·ntcr. 7 JO and bright standardized co Senior Recital W,111.1111 S111i1v:111. 1-1111 1·1 W,·,1 p Ill. After 1965 there is a d1,· Gail WdliJ 111~. ""' 11 I nw,·1. ·7 p 111 KaralL' Club character change Ford llall. 2 p 111 W 1 ,·,1lmg R,. and l(f'y,n Thon1.n, L I\ r11111•, ll.lll of Roy Lichtenstein. October an 1ntr1guing vie• RIVALS ,,. ,1 t.a1oc1n,u,nq .. 10,y' (,n,•u,,,1u M,11y i\nn Cowrt-1'1,1110. Ford Artis.try• . 11 ,s .a lyric ,.,ory ,,1on

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ji The Ithacan, October 19, 1972. .. It I IDID ere? NOTES \tliSIC Rl:CITALS · P I a y i t A g a i n Sa~·- Two fn:e publ1<.: recttals h) lth.1c.1 Culkg,· l\llb1c ,lud,·nts will h,• g1wn at Walter Ford Hall this weekend. . . A program of music b} LisLt. Rav<'I. ~uL·c·1111. Bad\ l·.1ure: ~nd Out of Tune Haydn will bt' prt's<'nt<'d .it I p.m._ Friday, Oct. _7. Th,_ ,ul_~ perform<'rs art' Kart'n Bauman ,md ( arol Deutsd1, p1.11w. P:1tri,, By Pally Berger Pickering. soprano: Louise Dunn, c·cllo. and C') nth1.1 L1mh d.1rnwt. THE EARLS Also playing will be a stud,•nt dJnnt'l d101r. Thl'_ part1,·1pant, .1r,· "II 1s !Ill' s;1m,· cs a good joh of originating group, had many [j in New York City where he is studying and writing music for a .:onvincing you he ncvc:r will or ncvt·r nmld hl· a 'hits'; some were hits in many ':; future record release. He presently has six albums on the market Humphrey Bogarl. Plaudits(() lhc film t·ditor for a cities while others stayed in the :j ranging from the widely sung "allclu" to his ~eccnt.~elcas~ "~ear t~c job extremely well-done llumphcry Bogarl movies ~w York area. Just to refresh _;j Cry in." A music critic once wrote of the smger, He will linger 1~ seem to gt:t heller with ,1gc:, hul this 1110vic may your memory, since "Remember l.i your mind for years, and he will surface when you have need. never gel the t:hal:c lo ripen. Then," •he Earls recorded "Cry, [ Repp's music ranges from love ballads to protest songs and stresses C'ry, Cry," "Life Is But A/:" personal commitment . The concert is being held m co?pcratton Dream," "Never," "Lookin' For f:" with the United Christian Fellowship at Ithaca College. Tickets arc My Baby," and "l Believe." All r: available at the Egbert Union, Willard Straight Hall, Mayers Smoke these 45 rpm's appeared in h·: Shop, Mid-Town Records, and Annabel Taylor Hall. 1962, as did their only album f "Baby Jane" and "The Tingler" ent1llcd "Remember Then," on ~--: Theta Alpha Phi is sponsoring the ·films ""'.hat Ever Happen:~ t~ one of the two Old Town labels ;; Baby Jane" (Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Victor Buono) and The (there were two differen1.-~ designs to the label.) It was at :. T.111 gler" (Vincent Price) this Friday, October 20 at 7 and I 0: 30 p.m. in the Main Theatre of the P.A. Bu1 ·1. ding. lhal time that the Earls' contract ti,' with Old Town had terminated. i< The films are being sponsored by TAP to raise. m?,ney for their They were offered another [', annual children's-production this year, "Mary Poppins , rct:ordmg contrad with ABC ( Coming Soon .... HORROR Records which they accepted. ,. SAB would like to announce their Halloween Festival of Horrors However, Old To\\'.n still had one ? which this year will include 7 hours of films a~d- a lec~ure and song on tape by the group. They ft~ demonstration by a Stonehenge England pract1e111g Witch, on t:ouldn't release the song under 1 Saturday October 28 ,beginning at 7p.m. the name of the Earls since that ~·­ WANT TO BE IN PICTURES? would have hecn a violation of the wpyrrghl and contract laws. ' Anyone who would like to work on the production crew for a new Whal th1.:y

H2 0 is H to Pay Beneath the surface so pure and all Lies a discarded urinal, Ithaca Music Giveaway Nine kitchen stoves, a reticule, Six circus tents, a bicycle, A hundred tons of paving rubble. Win the best stereo Two trucks, a bus, automobobble. All mixed-up with Third Class mai.1 And remnants of a Tenth Class sale. ALBUMS Left-overs from a disrupt home, The daily garbage, lugs of loam. plus Here is water you cannot drink; Swim in it and you've got to sink. Slow, the thought gets through your bonnett: A Grand Prize Don't drink! Don't swim! Walk upon 1t! The rest of the book 1s given to a chronological compilation of the daily strips from July to December '71. The complexity and humor take several levels at a leap from the preceding section, comparable to the 'change from velocity to jerk and interspersed with catenating spoonerisms and spontaneous contatas. A bulldog with a singular similarity to a certain Mr. Hoover and a bear with a similar similarity to a no-less-certain Mr. Agnew are among the guest headliners Ill this Joycean montage of one-two-etc-liners, pup-dogs held for m1lhon dollar ransoms, cryptic and totally secret messages that neither sender nor sendee can understand (secrecy 1s supreme), alcoholic computors, and razz bazz foofaraw. Also prc~ent 1s the ubiquitous Mr. Miggle and unfortunately all too familiar emporium with bargians hke "Chocolate Covered Mmnow-the Dream Bait-Also Good for Snacks" and "Bird and Grass Seed Mixed-Grow a Flammgo for Your Lawn" available at hard-to-believe discounts like 5 cents a pound or ten pounds for a dollar. Churchill LaFemme takes his hand at poetry at the close with true Yuletide spirit, remember he does live in Okeefenokee Swamp, with his own favorite carol:

"Good K mg Sauerkraut, look out! On your feet so porous ... While the snoo lay round and bout, Deep with Crispness choru~ ! " The Ithacan Ot>tober 19. 1972, Pnge J 3 MUSIC them . Well, thus far concert shack? 'I've got a Jones running warning in this composition, an~ RECORD reviews of the group have been ltllCORD through my bones/ Don't care lets you know that the Man has quite good. This band has not what nobody say, I've got to none of those worries. You've been destroyed by take the pain away/ It's getting paid your bread-enjoy the ride. worser day by day, and all my By Bill Henk the loss of David ••v1awSuper Fly (Curtis Mayfield) On side two of the album, ••v1•w Clayton-Thomas nor are they By Barry King life it's been this wav. Curtis departs for a moment Blood, Sweat & Tears-New even fatally injured. It may be a The music that Mayfield puts from, all the problems coming Blood.Columbia- -Blood, Sweat personal thing, but as far as I'm It's early in the evening, and out behind the lyrics is also on, and shares a quiet moment and Tears is a conglomerate of concerned I like the band better once a~ain you're faced with the strong, ·and is tight throughout. with his woman on "Give Me truly exceptional rock and jazz without Clayton-Thomas. Jerry possible dilemma that there's Especially well done are the Your Love", This is a mellow musicians. They always, have Fischer seems to be an excellent nothing to do, and you have to horn passages, and the blen«;ling song that shows the warmth and been and they will continue so ~eplacement, though l must say bear your reality. But don't with organ and percussion. desire you can feel when you're as long as people like Bob by 1t took the band a ·while to find worry. D:m't let it bother you. "Pusherman" is next, and it with that person who can be an Colomby, Steve Katz, Lou him. Super-Fly is coming around s'oon arrives with the funkiness of a extension of you. Soloff, Chuck Winfield and Jim Fischer, however, is not the to give you all the company straight rap by a heavy dude But perhaps the most Fielder remain in the band. Thus only new face in the crowd and you'll need. who's working for the Man. "I'm beautiful piece that Curtis does the big question we find thus the title "New Blood". Curtis Mayfield has comprised your mommy I'm your daddy, on side two is "No Thing On ourselves asking is whether or the score for perhaps one of the I'm that nigger in the alley /I', Me". The inner peace and high not the band can survice the loss Gone also are Fred Lipsius and D.ck Halligan and in their stead more truthful motion pictures of the doctor when in need, want that is found when you've of David Clayton-Thomas as well the year. His LP Super-Fly, like some coke, have some weed'?" beaten the pushermen, when as it survived the loss of AI we find Lou Marini Jr. and Larry Willis. Also added was another its movie counterpart, follows a This is perhaps the most you've found enough happiness Kooper. Because, whether or not pace consistent with the important cut on the album, and meaning in life that you you liked him or not, one has to guitarist, George Wadenius. BS&T are bigger than ever and struggles within the ghetto, and because it establishes the don't need drugs!.. is ecstatic. admit that Clayton-Thomas is . the different changes that go relationship between pusher and · "I'm so glad I've got my ow~/So one of the most now comprise ten people instead down between the pusherman the buyer,at least as seen by the glad that I can see. My life's a distinctive-voiced vocalists in the of the eight they started with in and his clients. Man himself, Super-Fly. ,natural high/ The Man can't put business. In no way, however, 1967. But the doctor th.at the no thinR on me", can one find fault with Jerry The opening song on the LP, pusherman pretends to be Curtis Mayfield has outdone Fischer, either. Each has his own "Little Child Running Wild", As far as the concert is deals with the desperate life of sometimes leaves his patients himself on this album. The style, and Fischer's vocal style is concerned, expect to hear the ghetto. It's a fine introduct­ strung out, until they're found musicians on the album provide fine and distinctive in his way as material like Dylan's "Down In ory composition,and thelyncsare one day lying face down in the a full, easy soul-:jazz rhythm Clayton-Thomas' is in his. The Flood", Barry Mann and representative of a man who is gutter. This point is brought out throughout, with Curtis taking Therefore the problem then Cynthia Weil's "So Long Dixie" looking for anything that will in "Freddie's Dead", which top honors on the very relevant becomes will the audience and Carole King and Gerry make life seem a little brighter. conveys what happens when you lyrics. It should be capable o accept the new Blood, Sweat & Goffin 's "Snow Queen" along But how bright can life be when happen to do a little too much keeping you high for quite a Tears for what they are and not with originals "Over The Hill" you're living in a one-room white powder. Curtis gives you a while. for what they were; will the and "Alone" from "New audience demand all the old Blood". Talent abounds in thi~ "hits" or will they accept the group and "New Blood" shows Garland made famous, new material presented before it. "Somewhere Over the Of Don & Bat Rainbow". But Don and_ Bat's set was only to be followed up by Steve Brown's group, playing By Barb and Bob local group, Que'Pasa? The their renditions of top-40 hits, livingroom is gone, the lights go Roberta Flack's and Lbnny RECORD Imagine Ford Hall auditorium up and the cocktail lounge is Hathaway's "Where is Love?". ••v1•w as a coffeehouse. Picture the rolled out. The two groups then tried to By Bill Henk promotional copies of this performers in jeans and in The audience is confused and play together, but if you can see Batdorf & Rodney-Asylum- - album have two of the three cuts \mtique rocking chairs, playing disillusioned as the comfortable the incongruencies between the Despite (or maybe even because suggested for airplay over the country, folk and jazz music. mood is broken by the types of music, you can of) the groups name, this pair is other five mentioned above. The atmosphere is casual and substitution of the Carpenters understand why it couldn't a fine folk duo capable of Fortunately most radio stations free as if you are sitting around for Dylan, of fiashy work. The two groups just didn't combining two silky-smooth in the country know better and in your living room with old commercialism for quiet talent. blend in either sound or personal folk guitars and .harmonies with few of them are playing any of friends. This was Don Potter and Don and Bat came through ·style, and the players recognised a bass and a drummer backing these mushy cuts. Even the Bat McGrath, the Friday night with tunes like Dylan's "Just this as did the audience. them up. Definitely not to be biggest record companies are stars of Fall Weekend. Like A Woman", Don on Towards the end, Steve and the overlooked are five standout prone to make mistakes and Now imagine Ford hall as it guitarrone · ( a bassier guitar) and Rest of Que' Pasa Begged out cuts on this one. As a single any sometimes they have to learn the really is, the American Standard Bat on electric bass. The two leaving Don and Bat with the one of the five would be capable hard way, unfortunate as it may red carpeted auditorium. Enter even came up with a quite audience once again. The· of throwing the group into the be here for John Batdorf and Steve Brown and his well dressed likable ve1:5ion of the tune Judy audience clearly liked the move. fore of the American public as Mark Rodnay. they deserve to be. And yes, the As for the fourth baffler, ,,,,,.,J songs are that good. What bafnes somebody else (or maybe it was ,. r n e I I me is not the five standout cuts, the same jerk) decided maybe ~ for the first Ip showed the one rock and folk guitar would 0 Concert Com·missio\ promise and potential of these sound nice if they let the rock two, but instead the other four. guitar play much the same seven PRESE_NTS Somebody at Asylum, or eight notes throughout and Atlantic, Atco, or somewhere varied the folk guitar. Nice idea simply doesn't know the or novelty, maybe, but they're slightest thing about folk music. wrong again. Batdorf and You should never orchestrate Rodney deserve much better. folk music that's as nice as this And yet despite all this tragic is. Tlircc cuts (count em if you bungling the Batdorf & Rodney don't bclicw me) arc rendered is still an extraordinary album. near. unlistenablc by some The good is so good it sl'lil lH'k MOR type sfring overshadows the bad. Minus the arrangements. Ami to make it bungling, the next one should be ev~·n worse. Asylum's out of this world. ,~ uy This n,lumn 1s supposed to represent some of the best in album ent,·rtainment. past and present. Despite the extremely high price on,· must 11;iy for r~·cords these days. we feel the albums presented h,·re to be extremely good and i:onsistenly so throughout _and therefore worth the money that must be parted with.

Crkkkwood Green-Ten Years Aftcr-Deram foni !\litdJdl-Blue-Reprise Carol.• Kin!,!·Tapestry-01k JL1an Ba,·1.-0nc: D:.1~ ..\l A Time-Vanguard ·r.,m P:.1xll1n-Ra111bling Boy-Elektra Tlllll Rush-Cird,• Game-Elektra BL>ll Dylan-The Frc:ewheelin" Bl,b Dylan-Columbia !\klu II t ai n-l'li m hing-W ind fa II Th,· Flying Burrito Brothers-A&l\l splll>kr r,,01 h-Splloky TwL1-.-\& !\I ..-._ Th.: :,,.;..,,,. Riders of the Purple Sage-Columbia Blin.t faith-Ato.:o '.'>,;.:ii ,·,mng-Ewrn1nc K1wws This ls :,,.;·l,where-Reprise Sl.'als anJ Cwt'ts-Summer Brel.'ze-Warnl.'r Brothers Cat Stewns-Tca for thl.' Tilkrman-A&'.\I Friday 8 & 11 p.m. JuJ,· (.\,1lins-<.\1k,rs Llf the 0ff-El1.'ktra Jeft;..rs,1n .-\irplanl.'-Surrealisti~· Pillow-RC' A October 20 Bailey Hall Strawbs-From 1he Witd1wood-..\&'.\I Crazy Horse-Reprise • $_3. at Egbert Union Jethro {ull-Stahd lip-Reprise , \ .

The Ithacan, October 19, 1972, Page 14 ,. ·.. MUSIC opener that serves more to terrify the audience are: "'Malaguena" (an old. Latin favorite) than to get them listening. In this case the first .iBogota". ·'Intermission Riff'", (written origin~lly tune is "What Are You Doing tht; Rest of Your for the 1946 Kenton band, but dig this version!) Life?", a beautiful tune in which Stan plays · "Interlude" and 'Peanut Vendor". both from the J azs By R;ckComp10, soulfully on the piano. The communication late 40's but reworked. "Opus in Pastels", written conveyed silently by the members of the band is by Kenton for his first band in 1941 as •·sort of a so unbelievable that you really have to see them to reed exercise•· is retained intact. "Malaga". from 'BBV~ believe it. Suddenly, where there was a slow Stan's new book, is very exciting. "A Train" and ballad, tliere become~ waltz where "Artistry In Rhythm" (the band's theme since lead alto man Quinn Davis displays his artistry. 1943) show off the band's amazing difference in STAN KENTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA Back to the soft, slow theme to the end of the dynamic levels while always having an excellent blend of sound. -Stan Kenton Today ( London Phase 4Bp piece,; was there a tuba in there? You bet! 44179~0) What Are You Doing The Rest of Your I don't really have the liberty to· go into the I saw the band Tuesday night and they are Life, Ch1apas, Opus in Pa~tels, Malaguena, Artistry kind of detail I'd like to about all these tunes, so something. Those who might like to see the band In Percussion, Yesterdays, Fringe Benefit, Bogota, 111 mention the ones I found most exciting to live should contact me, as I have an itinerary. sheet Intermission Riff, Ambivalence, Interlude, Peanut listen to. Next is Chia pas, a5 /4 rock, changing here !,isling all appearances. And if you can't get to see Vendor, Malaga, Walk Softly, Take the "A" Train, and there to 7 /4 and 8/4. One of the band's most him in person, you should try to hear this a!bum Artistry In Rhythm, God Save The Queen. (2 _ popular tunes. Other arrangements worth mention one way or another. It's Great! record set recorded live in LondonJ Thi~ two record set, recorded live on Kenton's recent European tour in February of. this year, displays fully the talents of the individual players in a way that comes off as the most diversified non-electric big band around today. (non-electric By Ward Silver because of the absence of synthesizers, electric IN ONE EAR piano, electric guitars,etc.) Kenton's only use of electricity for the band is a miked standup bass and an electric bass (Fender). Mikes are used for Ladies and gentleman, allow me to introduce "Bustin My Ass" and to an extent on "Dearest I the soloists in conjunction with amps and column you to a fine Southern gentlemen. He answers to Wonder:• Bobby himself sometimes overdoes his speakers. Stan, now 65 years old, continue~_ to the name of Bobby Whitlock and, hot damn, can falsetto not that he ain't a fit match for Mr. spark the young players in his band to new !le play that ol' rock and roll. Stewart,.mind you. heights. The excitement genernted by the band- is Raw Silver (Dunhill) stands firm as his second As for his backup band, I'll give them a 75 cause quite obvious in this recording. Chances are you solo LP and as the title implies, this former I don't mind dancing, but they 'probably couldn't haven't heard of this band before. The Kenton Comino can lay down a song hard as nails ("Hello lift me out of my chair-that's Whit's job any how. orchestra has been around since I 941 ! And right L.A., Bye-Bye Birmingham" or "Tell The Truth") The lead guitar, Rick Vito is featured frequently_ now nearly all critics agree Stan's got the most or smooth as silk ("You Came .Along"or "Start throughout the album;notably on "If You Ever" driving, most awesome, most talented bunch of All Over"). After all, when one considers the ("Raw"side), where he almost strays into the guys he's ever had right now! This album would talent bursting out of the Dominoes ensemble Harvey Mandel genre on one break. His work on tend to mdke one agree. About the inside ... It (Clapton, Gordon, Radle, Brother Duane et. al.). "Think About It" on the "Velvet"side has been the tradition of the new Kenton band the sown home feel of Mr. Whitlock cannot· be complements the former cut nicely. Don Poncher, ( re va m pc d in early 1970 to facilitate discounted. Measure for measure, his "Thorntree the drummer, gives the skins a good slap here and advancements made possible through changes of In The Garden" on the Layla album is far and there ("If You Ever") -and Keith Ellis' bass on personnel and new ·arrangements) to begin each away the finest cut to be had. Although Whitlock "Tell The Truth" keeps pushing the other. band concert with a ballad, not a flag-waving, rousing performs admirably on rhythm guitar, that talent members: is greatly overshadowed by his gritty yet dynamic If I had to choose which side of Bobby voice on both sides ("Raw" being the rocker and Whitlock suited me best, however, I'd have to go "Velvet" the softer material) as well as some sweet with the "Velvet". My heart hurts every time I 69th ,piano leads and breaks. Recall, for posterity, his play "Thomtree", and "You Came Along" and keyboard segment on "Layla". There are some "Start All Over" tend to hit the same sort of problems with distorted production, however, note-but in a soothing kind of way. As Kottke ANNIVE.. RSARY which is strange for the likes of Jimmy Miller. The might put it, it's salt for my wounds and honey-for rhythm section tends to crowd Bobby's voice on my lips. ;,,·

SALE MIDTOWN Hurry , Sale ends Sat., Oct. 21 RECORDS .,i. -- SPORT COATS

...... " ••• $29 BUFFALO • Grand Funk Concert ' ,Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium, Ocoober 22, 8:00 p.m., $4.00 ,I' $5.00 or $6.00 general adm1ss1on.

Frank Zappa And the Mothers of Invention Concert Onondaga War.Memorial Au'dltorlum, October 28, 8:00 p.m., ·S4:·.0o, $5.00 or $6.00 ge~eral admls~io~. _._.-. ,._ ... -i- •.. \ ROCHESTE-R ' -· ,. • . ,. 11i"-,rp,

Joe Simon Concert ' , . '"":!il!:: ; Velvets or corduroys) Rochest~r War Memorial Auditorium, October 23, 8:00 p.m., · . Manr styles, many colors. $4·.oo, $5.00, or $6.00 general admission. ·. · Men s, students' sizes 35 Guess Who \ to 44. regular or longs! Rochester War Memorial Auditorium, October 28, 8:00 p.m., $4.00, $5.00, or $6.00 general admission. :"' Gr.and Funk Concert . ~ ~!, Roc-hestcr War Memorial Auditorium, October 21, a~oo.p.m~ w;A; , $4·.oo, $5.00 or $6.00 general admission. )~.\'fii" SYRACUSE Edgar Winter Loew"s State Theatre, Syracuse, October 24, 7:30 p.m.~ Tickets: S4.50, 5.00, 5.50

YES B - 9 P. .\RK..\S. rel!. S59. 95 ...... S·P. Syracuse War Memorial, November 6, 8:00 p.m. ·.·. :_ SLIEDE J .\CKETS. reg. S79.95 ...... S68. Tickets: S4.50, 5.00, 5.50 JEANS. C..\Sl1 .\LS. reg. $7. to S 1.L . .\I: .PRICE HAGGAR "SLACKS. SIS. ,·alue ...... 2 tor S25. CORNING SHETL.\ND SWEATERS reg. SHl...... Sll.99 Cool and Gang, Mark Almond, and Eggs over Easy Corning Community College, October 21, 8:00 p.m., 10:00 p.rn., '.\1.-\N\'. \I .\:'I;\' '.\IORE FA:'l;TASTIC VALUES! S3.50 general admission. ALBANY Grapt,lc by Ivan Lelbin Christopher and Coolidge Albany State University Gym, October 20, g,oo p.m., S5.00, or S6.00 general admission. · CORTLAND ' .., ... . Leslie West, Corky Lalno'·&';lack Bructt ··-:· Lusk Fl~la House, Cortland SUNY, Sl.lndilY Oct. 22, a:OO p,m., -~~ · S3. 75 loi· I st -1.000 T1ck'ets, S4.;!5 ,'~(-all -others -c.1-·20 EAST STA.TE S'lj{.'."}: .. ITHACA .· ..··.•.:• Blood, Sweat and Tears · · Cornell un,vers,ty, Bailey Hali, October 20,. 8:?0 p.m., 11:00 p.m.,_-. ' S3.00 oeneral adm1ss1c,n. . ,,. shop Friday nite 'til 9 ·- ··)- ... , \.J: __

:~ .. -...... - .. .-- ··: ... -· \ ' ,. ., .,>-•, • ~.. • '" .. ~ - -~ '

'' : _ _'.·':.:··_· ______:,"'. ______..:., ______.___.;.·':.;,1 :·::..·· ------'· ·:...·-·_,.-.:.,.::..;_· ·---'---'---~~~/ ,._.. --.-~:L··'·.: ·:--:·.;~~.>~:.:.-~;:, ·.:·::; ..:'.:.!~-~··,:Li£~)~_~:~\~~~- The Ithacan, October

Don Ellis Concert SHORT C_UT.Z T~umpeter Electrifies A.udience BILL HENK Those who attended fall weekend's "Saturday Night Special" were treated to a rare musical Lindisfame-Ding)y Dell-Elektra - - experience indeed. Don Ellis, his electric trumpet Lindisfarne is a good time English 8 amplifiers and synthesizer, along wigh 22 brasses, acoutic folk-rock band. They do some reeds, strings, and rhythm came .to Walter Ford very nice, tight harmonizing and are Hall and literally shook the place apart. The band one of the most popular bands in received a standing ovation at the end of the first England right now. Dingly Dell follows half, and was forced to play no less than four two fine previous -Elektra releases. encores as the crowed cheered and yelled for Unfortunately, this one is not up to more. Don kept saying "I can't hear you .Did either of its predecessors, except in you say "more"? And "just because we were so spots. lt's a hit and miss thing. Side nice", he came up with an additional 20 minutes one hits, side two misses. Catch "All of program material. Fall Down", "Bring Down the Upon reclining into my best listening position; I Government", or "Don't Ask Me" for was amazed to notice the panoramic setup on the a sample of this group's talent. And, if stage before my eyes. Rhythm section front and you happen to catch Rod Stewart s center, strings high and to the left, brasses high in golden oldie "Maggie May" on the the back center behind the rhythm section, and radio, that great mandolin player is reeds to the right on risers. Quite an impressive none other than one of Lindisfarne's scene. two mandolinists (It's Ray Jackson I Opening the concert was a 5 /4 version of "Jesus think). ' Christ Superstar" ...... a wall of sound with a drive that stunned the audience. My first Jonathan Edwards-HoRky Tonk impression ...Terrific! Following was a Hank Stardust Cowboy-Atco - - Jonathan Levy tune called Cross Currents. The string~ection Edwards is one of the attributes of Cat (2 violins, viola, and cello) helped create a sound Stevens in that his best materi~I very similar to something Chuck Mangione might bounces and bops alot. It makes you do ... An extended drum solo by Ralph feel good just to listen to it. And that Humphrey was extremely well played and very about sums up his second album as tasteful ..almost the high point of the evening. well. It's very fine listening throughout "Laurie", a ballad in 7 /8 time, was a good contrast with the possible exceptions of an piece and well placed in the program. Next,· orchestrated "Dream Song" and a baritone sax man Gary Herbing was featured in a slower "That's What Qur Life Is" that profile piece written by Ellis as a tribute to his Photo i,y R lchard Sharp playing. Called "Gary's Herbin'g Remedy", it was just sits there. You11 probably be DON ELLIS ORCHESTRA IN CONCERT haaring a lot of "Stop and Start It All just what the doctor ordered. Bary showed his Ag,!in". "Everything", "The Ballad -of technical prowess and artistic skill most during the U psy Daisy", "Sugar Babe", "Due choruses where he was allowed to get off the trumpet player for the Kenton band, Joe Days Bar", and - - - yes the list keeps melody. Marsindowitz. It was a very beautiful piece but it orfgoing. The pianist, who was imported from Hungary, seemed to me that Ellis' electronic trumpet solo stepped into the limelight for the next tune which was not really with the bag of the rest of the piece. Cat Steve~s-Catch Bull At was based on an old Hungarian folk tune. When he His closing number (supposedly) was "Strawberry Four-A&M - - Well, I guess it was took a solo on his synthesized electric piano all I Soup", from his Tears of Joy album. Building bound to happen sometime. The Cat could think of was it sounds like a Frankenstein from almost uothing to the climax of 4's has pretty much run out of new things movie. Then 'Ellis turned on his electric trumpet, exchanged by Ellis on drums and two other to do and l think he know it. So with which in turn, turned on the crowd. Then he led drummers. Very Interesting! For an encore Ellis him trying to keep from sounding all the band into a rousing symphonic ending that swung into his famous · "Pussywiggle Stomp", a the same, side two simply loses that brought the crowd to its feet. 7 /4 delight that borrowed a riff from one of bounce that Cat Stevens' previous lps To start off the second half of the program, Woody Herman's old tunes, "Four Brothers Ellis greetea the audience by saying"O.K. Now's Revisited". Although my ears were ringing from have been so full of. Side one tries to f· make up for this handicap but Olliy when we Jet all the stops out", He led the band the volume of the band., they are all good ,·. ''Angel Sea" and 'Can't Keep It In" into another Hank Levy chart in 7 /4 time. Quite a players.I don't believe the balance was the best in ( \, really.sound like the Cat of old. Loyal driver. Then he called our attention to the tenor parts, but that's due in part to all the electronic ,. C'at Stevens fans will have a hard time sax man who was to solo in the following number, gadgetry that is part of the Ellis bag. And liking this lp, but l know the/will. As "Put it Right Where You Want " , a heavy rock considering the fact that all the fellas in the band for m"yself, sorry Cat, you've chart in 7/4. Then it was time for a ballad, ate dinner in the Union Snack Bar, the concert was tcmp~rarily lost one satisfied "Reflections of Judy". Written by a former pretty damn good! customer. by Denis Kitchen

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...... ~ "!. '· The Ithacan.' October 19, 1972. Page 16

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Thursday Fried Eggs BLT Roast Fr. Ham Scrambled Eggs Scalloped Potatoes and Ham Fried Chicken Wheatlna Egg Salad and Celery Stalks . Chopped Steak Bacon Rashers Chill Con Cami Whipped Potatoes Waffles Biscuits Corn

Friday oatmeal Grilled Cheese Sandwich Stuffed Peppers Scrambled Eggs Spaghetti and Meat Sauce Macaroni and Cheese Soft Cooked Eggs Tuna Salad Plate Chuck Wagon Steak Blueberry Pancakes Asparagus Soup Green Beans Frizzled Lunch Meats French Fries

Saturday Scrambled Eggs Sloppy Joes Prime Rib Poached Eggs Shepard Pie Strip steak Bacon Rashers Turkey Burgers Lasagna Wheatlna Green Peas Asparagus Tips

Sunday Brunch Scrambled Eggs Veal Parmagana waffles and Strawberries Baked Ham Sausage Links Roast Turkey and Dressing Green Beans CreamStyle Corn

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·111e Ithacan, October 19, 1972. Page 17

·.;: =;: . - . ~ - . .~- VEGET-ARfAN MENU - OCTOBER 23 • 29

Monday Lunch Dinner oinner Breakfast Lunch Monday Kasha Risi C Bisi Dell Sar Pot Roast Baked Macaroni & Tomatoes Spinach Lasagne Monday Scrambled Eggs Broiled Cod Filets Stringbeans Creamed Carrots Waffles Borscht Parsley Boiled Oatmeal Tuesday Macaroni with Cheese and Olives Oriental Brown Rice !!>ell Bar Shish Kabab Broccoli Kedgeree TuesClay ~crambled Egggs Rice PIiaf I Borscht Soup Buttered Peas Pancakes Carrots Cream of Wheat Wednesday Potatoes Romanoff Cheese Pie Steaks Curried Lentils Brown Rice with Fruit Wednesday Solt Cooked Egggs Dell Bar vegetable soup Baked Potatoes Mixed Vegetables Celery and Basil Blintzes G1een Beans Farina Thursday Brown-Rice & Tomatoes Plakl Chopped Steaks Deli Bar Peas and Mushrooms Spaghetti Malnattl Thunday Scrambled Eggs Whipped Potatoes Borscht Soup Carrots ala Creme waffles Corn Wheatlna Friday Macaroni & Cheese Garban.zos a LasevJllana Dell Bar • Baked Chicken Noodle Casserole Friday Scrambled EgggS Potato & Green Curry Vegetable SoyP Stuffed Pepp~rs Buttered Squash Harvard Beets Pancakes Peas Oatmeal oven Browns Satui'day Chef's Chol<;e Red Beets with Sour Cream Brown Rice Prime Rib Dell Bar S•turday Scrambled Eggs Buttered Corn and Celery Borscht Asparagus Tips wneatlna Baked Potatoes Sunday Waffles Vegetarian Baked Beans Roast Turkey LentllS Sunday Brunch Scrambled Eggs Dressing Green Beans Amandlne Lolt; eagels and Cream Cheese Corn - Tomatoes and Onions Cranberry Sauce There w Ill be an Important F O R S A L E Whipped Potatoes meeting for all members of dishwasher-whirlpool deluxe Alpha Epsilon R,.o, honorary port.able, avocado green. Two radio-telt1vlslon fra1ernlty. years old, excellent condition • Dear Brothers, . Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1972, 9:30 $100. call 257-3574. Thanks for helplng us cut the p.m., T.V. Studio, All dues must cake you're worth waking up be paid at this time. for! FOR SALE: '66 Volkswagon, Love always, also drum set (complete) ·FREE CLASSIFIEDS 5 :B-7057. Your sister A ride Is desperately needed Brother Craig, to Long Island (Merrick French dogs aren't quite like Fourteenth, Vicinity, If poulllle) Oc,t. 27 & Mandy. Stay psyched. You've only Just back .:>ct. :29. I will share Sister Beth begun. expenses etc. Please contact: Betsy, X3631 Delta Phi Zeta wlshes,thelr new Disease posseSSed, pli,dge class the Best of Luck. You're far away but not Keep Smlllng. forgotten-my hands are getting Alternative: Pregnant? Need rusty. Love and backrub, Help? Con•lder All the Bromley Baby. Atternatlwes ,n Problem George Kennedy, It was quill! ·good of you to send Pregnancies. Call 273-6433. Any To my little brother Bruce, time. that package. Cheerio! You'll see that being a Pl Lam Jeanne Man Is worth It an. Love, X Big Sis Deb. Two Buddies: John Orkin summer 'Of '73. Wouldn't miss It Write! Scho-long! Love0Scott & Sue Paml, for the world. Through the "drifts" and the GI Freed on Pot Charge Love, Your Buddy 3 bows we've been together. A Blenstock, friend for ALL times Is a friend Private Wesley Williams was judge to diequalify- himself for forever. Happy Birthday! Delta Phi, Only letters will save you. Lots of Love, Zebra a c quit t e d of ma rIJ u a n a being a racist than the innocence You've got what It takes. Claire possession charges at Fort Hood, or guilt of Private Williams. Love from London Hello to Bob and Carol, Ted and Beeve, Allee-may the fickle finger of Texas, recently by a jury who Colonel Adair, the military Delta Phi Pledges, Miss you lots. Write. Regards to fate have mercy on them!! deliberated only five minutes. judge, had a quick reply to that Keep Smlllng-lt's worth It. Jr! Greeting from London Love, Lau Carol Milstein. Ride Wanted. To It was obvious to witness of the charge: "Why, just last week I Philly or near. For Fri. 20th. trial that the jury was more tried a· colored boy and found Dear cnartle or Is It "muscles" Terri, X594. Little lack of Hope you're enjoying I.C.l concerned with the failure of the him innocent." communication-sorry-have a How's Panch? Wanted to buy: Used good semester. Laurie blcycle-cheapt Call Pat or Pldge, Atlas 273-8559. Barbara Pederson, Deal'-Deli,·- :·.·· Your guardian angel Is watching FOR SALE: Ski boots Lange Please write-I will soon- Really over you. Pro, size 8, good condition, good • miss you. Love, Pete price. Call Don X767 or X·Roomle 273-9883. Pledge Mistress-Delta Phi, Gall zunz, I'm rooting for you. Hall the ~oil's are still nowhere aear·Loose Woman of Dorm 1, London In sight. "If it feels good, do It" congradulatlons. You're really a Carole K. woman now. Dear Craig. P.B. Really miss YOUI Love from L.ondan. To Tdm Ambrose, I love you with my entire soul. Dear Poo, Please! Lots of.love. from me to you. vour London Friend Fred INTERESTED IN AN nmour Amour TWO PARTS LOVE. •. INTERNATIONAL ONE PART LEGEND ~AREER?

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Affiliated w;th Available at: -Rothschild's Cornell Campus The Americ,n M1n1g1rn1nt A11oci1tion St.Jre / ...... The Ithacan, October 19. 1972, Page 18 IC Sports Hall of Fame H-arness . I ·d t d · C . Happenings FIV e DI UC e ID er e ffl OD J By v,mon v;~- T~ week v,mon v;c ~ ' To the disappointment of reneewed confidence and Tom Hicks, a I ea ding new position with the Dryden Hatch was a starter and a many of my readers Vernon Vic therefore is handicapping under contender for the Schoolsystemthis-tallwhe.re.he letterman in football and did not appear in last thealiasof"VemonVicious;" Li g h t-H ea vyw eight boxing is teaching special subjects to baseball from 1932-36. A tough week'slthacan. This was due to championship of the world, is handicapped children. At Ithaca 145 pounder, he was the heart the fact that "The Big V" took a one of five men who were College, Hicks earned one Jetter of four Ithaca grid teams which brutal beating at the track that Thursday night's winners inducted into the Ithaca College each in football and wrestling. compiled a 17-6-3 record. In week. Vernon Vic is always should look like this: I st race: Sports Hall of Fame last Friday t hose days, Hatch was truthful. Because of this virtue NAIL ZN AH-driver Jay Sears night. Fazio was a three letter constantly playing 60 minutes a "The Big" felt that he could not pulling out a ¾ length victory to winner in baseball, soccer and game, along with teammates like beat number 6 Go Scott Go. 2nd In addition to Hicks, the at Ithaca, and for the Ed Sawyer. Manager of the 195 0 race: the second half of the daily other inductees were Don Fazio, past eight years has been a top Philadelphia Phillies pennant double, your race winner currently playing with the performer in the minor leagues. winning baseball team. number 3, HELEN MIX , saver Rochester Red Wings of the In 1969 he was awarded a silver Jounce. 3rd race: _!!xacta play a I n tern at ion al League; George glove as the best fielding third Hatch coached high school 12 dollar box with AFTO "Dutch" Proechel an baseman in the minors, while athletics for ten years before BRADFORD' BIDDY outstanding athlete at Ithaca playing for Louisville of the returning to Ithaca as head DREADNOUGHT, and BI from 1936-40; Pete Hatch a Internationally League. football coach in 194 7, a post he JONES. 4th race: MAHOFF, stand-out athlete and coach at held until 1950. Since that time, saver TRAP SHOOT. 5th race: 1.C.; and Perry Noun a two Fazio had a lifetime batting he was Director of Athletics at Exacta Play number 2 sport performer of the late 5 0 's. average of .360 at I C. and was a Corning (N.Y.) East High School SJ-IUFFLES ON TOP WITH ... standout in the 1962 College until his retirement in 1971. every other horse second, in The induction ceremonies World Series. In Soccer he was a other words, wheel number 2. were the fourth since the Hall starter at foward for three years, Noun earned three letters 6th-WILD THING-goes berser was started in 1969. There are and averaged I 0.2 points a game each in football and baseball at in the stretch saver· FANCY currently 30 members, with only for the Ithaca basketball team, Ithaca from 1956-59. In football DANCER--tiptoes home. 7th three new inductees to be added while shooting over .500 from he averaged 4.5 years a carry as a race: Exacta-Box number l each year starting ·in 197 3. the floor. Apopular player,Fazio quarterback and halfback, and BERLEE, number 6 HA YES was named co-captain of the completed almost 50 1,>ercent of MAC, and number 5 SUCCESS Hicks has a 26-4 record in the three varsity teams in his senior his passes. SWORD. 8th race: Best bet­ light heavyweight ranks. He lost year. LADY B. SHARP, no saver just an eight round technical During his three year baseball career, Noun hit a robust .361 bet this. 9th Race: Exacta-Box knockout, on cuts, to champion Proechel won three letters in number I CZAR DIRECT, Bob Foster last November, but baseball at I.C., two each in and ·played four different positions. number 5 WARREN D, number was doing very well before the basketball and football and one ·5, WARREN D, and numb~ 7 referee was forced to stop the in soccer. He led the basketball WYNCREST GUY. . action. team in scoring as a· senior, and He served as Dean of Men at in baseball hit a solid .325 for Ithaca for several years, before Horses to Watch: CLOSE In addition to his boxing, his two varsity seasons, while entering the business field. He is Hicks taught Physical Education currently the Director of pick winners -for Thursday and KNIT, EASTER BUD, playing a strong defensive third Friday nights in "good COCHISE, PREVARICATOR, to the mentally retarded and - I Management Operations for physically handicapped children base. Since then he has been General Investments and conscience. TYROLEAN DANCER. of the Ithaca area for the p.i~t involved in high school coaching Development Company in three years, before assuming a and private business. Boston. Bombers Roll Over Fordham THE COLLEGE SMOKER

ALL BEDSPREADS

Bomber Strategy SuGcessful Photo bY Sc:ott ·Peril Doubles & Singles Led by the briiliant··running problems. The· tt"hacans have of Quarterback Ted Greves and coordinated their offensive and Junior halfback Tom Bryant the defensive efforts and the Ithaca Bombers rolled over prospects for the remainder ol Fordham before a homecoming the season are very bright. crowd of 5000 on Saturday. The passing game which had OFF Greves ran for a record setting been nearly non-existent in fou1 25% four touchdowns and passed for prev1ous starts· accounted fo1 92 yards, more than twice his . J 30 yards on 8 completions. passing yarda~e in the previous There were a few bright spoti , I"- four games combined. His for Fordham in Bill Wattike1 determined efforts along with running for 165 yeards and Dor the stellar performance of the Hommel's passing attack whict with this ad offensive line put the game out connected for 174 yards of Fordham's reach. Tom Bryant Wattiker carried 40 times settin1 not wanting to be outdone, put both a Fordham and Ithact on a little rushing show _of·his opponents rushing againsl J/,'t own. Bryant ran for I 76 yards rec_ords. · But the rest of the da} offer expires Wed. Oct. 25th of 18 carries and he and Greves was very dark for the Rams a: accounted for 314 of Ithaca's the tireless lthacans .blew therr 396 yards rushing. . off the field. For the second week in a ro~-, This week the Bombers wil 314 - 318 College Ave the Bomber's new wishbone· T be traveling to Wilkes trying tc •\ offensive overwhelmed their - extend their winning streak to :: opponents and now seems t'o be ·and increasing their chances foi ... , ,A.- ~icking after som~. early season a winning season . . . The Ithacan, October 19, 1972, Page 19 Recovers from 1n1ury IC Women Giants Show Win 2 Wojnar Leads IC Rush Winning form By Beth Nisco fhl' Women's Varsity Field Hockey Team boosted their Three years ago, Ithaca Business Admin1stratwn, and he's come on fast to show well record to 3-0 as they defeated Co liege 's offensive guard Bob then hopes to pursue a career m aga Inst West Chester and By Frank Cuce Cortland 4-3 on Thursday, WoJnar ( Auburn, N.Y.) was law and professwnal football. Cortland. and then last week have October 12th. The score at dubious about his football Wojanar had an honor-filled an outstanding performance as The New York Giant~ half-time showed Ithaca leading future. Today he 1s a leg1t1mate year m 1971 when he gamed Ithaca beat RIT, 30-13. He was continued their winning ways by a 3-1 margm, but Cortland All-American candidate. Honorable Mention on the named as the team's "lmeman of this past Sunday by upsettmg cut away at the lead and fmally Before the 1969 season began, Associated Press All-American the game" for that effort. the San Francisco 49'ers m wet tied the game at 3-3 with four Wojnar suffered a broken leg team and was named to both the Wojnar has come a long way Candlestick Park. New York mmutes remaming m the game. dunng an intra-squad scrimmage. ECAC Division II, All-East team since the doctors took the cast beat the favored west coast team However, Nancy Buttler closed After a very long year, the 6-3, and the New York State off, three ye.irs ago, and 23-17. The wm was the third the issue with a fine goal that 230 pounder was able to put on Sportswriters All-State squad. promi~es to go even further this straight for the Giants giving put I C. ahead 4-3. Janice the pads again and for the past "Big Woj" is human, and had season as a veteran Ithaca team them a 3-2 record and leaving Kirk pa trick scored the first goal two plus year5 has been the an off day m the openmg wm seeks its second consecutive them one game out of first place and Leigh Buck scored the anchor man and the leader on over Wilham Paterson. However, winning season. the offensive line. behind Dallas and Washington in remainmg two. The second team "You always have doubts NFC east. also played post mg a 1-0 victory. when you get. a broken leg m Charlie Evans scored the Margaret Davis scored I.C.'s only football," Wojnar pointed out. wmning touchdown with only I goal, wlulc the defeme !ended "You never know what effect 11 nunute and 31 seconds left in their supportas the I.C squad dominated the game will have. l 've seen very fast men the game. The score capped a The second game saw Ithaca slowed to almost a walk after 43-yard drive that began when soundly defeat Brockport 3-1. their recovery period. For a Pete Athas intercepted a John The two teams were quite evenly while, I was nervous, but after Brodie pass. matched, Ithaca displaying a the first few days in our 1970 Leading 13-10 at half-time the most aggrl'~,ivP .,,.,,i 5pring practices, I knew I was Giants fell behind I 7-1 3 after a ready." 14 play 8 7 yard 'Frisco march well-coordmalt:d team effort. Ithaca wa~ down 111 the first half W01nar ha~ all the ingredients which ended in a Brodie to WR 1-0, as it had heen in its necessary to play his unheralded Gene Washington TD pass After encounter with Brockport the pos1t1on. "lie has good speed, the 49 'ers kickoff the Giants moved to the San Francisco previous year. However, Ithaca pulls well on wide running plays, come back with three goals m ha, great explosion off t-he lme IO-yard line but the dnve stalled. Pete Gogolak came in the second half Colleen on ,tra1ght ahead plays and gives and hooted a 19-yard field goal Murphy, Leigh Buck. and Nancy us some excellent pass Buttler lead111g lhe attack -and blocking," head coach Jim closing the gap lo 17-16 A few kept Brockport scoreless. Butterfield remarked. "lle's a minutes later Evans smashed over left tackle for the wmning The first game wa~ a definate I It t I e bigger th 1, year but 11 moral victory, crush mg Cornell ha,n't hurt his speed, m the score. 6-1. The girls show a consistant lea,t, and we're hoping for a Besides the good Job turned in game with an aggressive forward repeat ol last season when he by Evans the Giants had sohd line and an ,1ggress1vc defense. helped us gain 2100 yards performances from Norm Snead, Janice Kirkpatrick (I), Leigh rush mg." the NFL 's leading passer, half-back Ron Johnson and Buch (3) and Nancy Buttler Due to the mJury m 1969, Photo by Ken Mclech cornerback Pete Athas. (2 )- -scored for J.C. Bob w.i, .,bk lo retain one year The Giants in beating a top Saturday, October 2 I st, of ehg1b1hty, which he is using GREEVES RECEIVES AWARD team, have established Ithaca hosts Lock Haven at I :30 up tl11s fall. He'll graduatewith themselves as contenders and a pm. a Bachelor of Science Degree Ill force to be reckoned with in October 27th and 28th bring OUTSTANDING BACK OF THE GAME their division. Next week the the season to a climax, as the PLAYER HONOR.S FOR Fordham GAME New York Giants will try to State Tournament gets Tom Bryant HO NO RARY OFFENSIVE CA PT· Ted Greves BEST HIT uF THE GAME Tony Grosso make it four m a row against St undeiway. Ithaca 1s seated I st, Cortland 2nd, Brockport 3rd, HONORARY DEFENSIVE CAPT. Tony Grosso HUSTLER OF THE WEEK J_B.Little Louis in the first of three consecutive home games. and Cornell 4th. 1 ' FREE PRESTONE SPRAY WAX" Cornell Unive~sity Unions presents Daniel Ellsberg Automatic Car Wash & Dry leaked the Pentagon Papers . J · __ ::;..,: SI .00 with any fillup $2.00 with no gas The man who to the Press '"...,._---1i~ITHACA'S FINEST AUTOMATIC ,_ BRUSH CAR WASH Thursday October 26 Bailey Hall 8p.m. 50( Hey Kids, I. It's Howdy Do~! Time Again

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Photo by Ken Melech ii,

WE AGREE! Photo by Ken Melech Photo bY R !chard Sharp DON ELLIS

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