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the William Patenon

eacoServing the College Community Sincen 1936 Volume 46, No. 22 Wayne, N.J. Tuesday, March 4, 1980 Hyman approves 26 promotions recommended that 34 faculty In the memorandum sent to Hyman, the Ralph Walker, associate proiesser ot secondary education, and Lois Wolfe, By SUE MERCHANT ' members be promoted. •College Promotions Committee listed the The committee sent a memorandum to names of seven rejected candidates it assistant professor of political science.. News £d Cheo. b\ the faculn. according to Cheo and out their own research, and use the military draft computer terminal for class instruction, By DOROTHY RYAN according to Haroian. Staff Writer 'The computer terminal is meant to be an additional tool for faculty and student use." The SGA Legislature voted last week not said Haroian. to take a stand for or against the draft Dr. Clifton Liddicoat, chairman of the registration but instead provide information business department said, "This was to keep the students informed of the discussed at the faculty meeting last week, government's actions. A forum on the draft and from a practical standpoint most of us issue, which was cancelled Feb. 27, has been don't care where the terminal is. as iong as rescheduled for Wednesday, March 5 at it's in White Hall." 12:30 in the Science Complex. According to Liddicoat, the terminal will In a questionnaire distributed to be installed in a seperate office on the first approximately 300 students by SGA floor of White Hall near the other facilities. representatives a random sampling showed A telephone line and wiring are needed in the that 63 percent of the students polled favor room for the computer terminal. "It will be the registration of men. Forty-eight percent convenient for the faculty's use," said' favored the registration of women and 52 Liddicoat. percent oppose the registration of women. "The main thing- now Is to get the Fifty-nine percent oppose reinstating the computer terminal hooked up as soon as draft. Seventy-seven percent opposed the possible." added Liddicoat. "We are waiting appointment of women to combat positions tor the man to Lome in to get it hooked up and 69 percent wer in favor of draft deferments for college students **=*-.: *->~xv Fuibright grant Historical tour Poetry fest revealing A WPC student will study Many historical sites can Last week's poetry index... in France thanks to a be found in the Paterson- festival showcases recent teaching grant. See page 3. Wayne area. See page 4. writings. See page 8. Page 2 March 4, 3980 4For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Candle sale Irish events A candy sale -Ail! be held by the Catholic Plans for S:_ Patrick's ueek will be discussed Campus Ministry Club Tuesday. March 18 Rainbow is Enuf' a: a meeung of the Irish Cultural Club in the Student Center lobby from 9 am to tomorrow. March 5. at 1 pm in the club's 7:30 pm. The sale will support the work of office. Student Center room 5IS. Events covenant House and the Passaic County A choreopoem by Ntozake Shange include: Moonshine Mountain Bo\s on Youth Shelter visitation program. March i 2 and a speaker on Northern Ireland on March 15. if interested in helping, come Computer seminar to the meeting or leave a message in the SGA DATES & TIMES office. We income ail old and nev. members Dr. Nicholas Pippenger of IBM will speak and anyone interested in am aspect of on "Extendible Hashing" Monday. March Wed.; March 19 12:30 Ireland and its heritage. 10 at 12:30 pm in Student Center rooms 332- Thurs., March 20 8:00 333. Fri., March 21 8:00 Chess club meets Players meet Sat., March 22 3:00 The Chess Club will meet today. March 4 at 2 pm in room 335 of the Student Center. The Pioneer Players will hold an important 8:00 meeting today. March 4 at 2 pm in the Coach Sun., March 23 3:00 Semester abroad House lounge. All are asked to attend. New 8:00 members welcome. The deadline for applications ior next year's programs (Denmark. England. Israel. PLACE Australia, Greece. Spam, Mexico} has been Water games extended until March 14. For information, Water games canceled unti! Thursday. Hunziker Theatre contact Prof. G. Saira, Matelson Hall 31". March 6, from ~:3O-9:3O pm. "AS! are welcome to pah water polo, volleyball and History club meets basketball. Don't forget your suit. TICKETS The History Club uili meei Wednesday March 12 at 12.30 prr, in Mateison Hail, Adults $3^0 5 room 3IS. Early childhood Students $2.50 (i The Farl> Childhood Organization will Catholic Ministry meet on Friday, March ~ at 1:15 pm in r- (i Raubineer 109. The CanioTk Campus Ministry Club will hold Bible Studies Mondays, 6-" pm; weekly mass Mondays. Tuesday and Friday at Audio-visual 12:30 pm and Sunda\ mass at 8 pm. also The Audio-\ i>ual depart men; of the po\eny awareness Donations of food and library LS open e\er\ Sunda\ during the money for the poor a re being collected as the spring semester from noon to 6 pm. Catholic Center (next to Gate I.) TEENAGERS ARE VICTIMS OF Scholarships Gynecological clinic TIMES Academic -chobrvhip:, arc available for The Passaic Counl> Planned Parenthood worn- n ih r o u g h o u i t h c -\ m c r i c a n Gynecologic Clinic's hours are Fridays from ; A^ociation oi I m\er>i A Women i! \ou 9 am to noon at the Women's Center. SEX ON THE are more ihan 25 >ears old and h\e in the Matelson Hall 261 For appointment or Lakeland area ;-.)'J ~.a> be eligible t-or information please call ^42-8551 or 595- Junher info eon;ac: Carol McCabe ai 855- 249!. 142S STREETS Women's Collective Writings needed Essence magazine needs poems, short UNDER 21 CAN BE A WAY OUT. A way out from The Women's Collective ;?> I'ianning u> stories and photographs for Sprins 1980 annual conl ere nee : or Apr-'! 1 5 ! \ \ ou would desperate exploitation and abuse. A way out for tired, issue. Our office is Student Center room 303. desperate young people who have no one left to turn to. like to 'ml? or hd'-eanx :dei.- Uir workshops, our mailbox ii in the SG -\ office Deadline- drop in the W orn.en'y Center, Matelson 2b2 March 15 or call ^2->55i UNDER 21 offers comfort and hope. At UNDER 21 there's someone to talk to, some- one who can help, someone who cares! someone

Future Shock COME HEAR STEVE TORKELSON OF COVENANT HOUSE, NEW YORK, SPEAK OF THE WORK THAT IS BEING DONE The r'oiiu •>*:n? t."oiurrin is prepared bv the Camp Winadu: 3 1 i Ofth-v L<> d.:rt-tv C :>un.st';in% and Pldcemcnt Mason-Hanger: 3 11 WITH THE RUNAWAY YOUTH WHO HAVE TURNED TO and oppc'df-• r.sr: <>iner w t'ek in the Beacon. Stop & Shop: 3 12 PROSTITUTION IN THE TIMES SQUARE AREA OF NYC Medi-Mart: 3 12 Jobs: On-campus interviewing Sentry Insurance. 3 13 The folio v.ing c ornpanies have interview American Frozen Food 3 13 space a\3iLibis ar"id uilS be on campus to mter\ iev> senio rs (or careers aiter Part and full-time jobs OPEN TO ALL WPC STUDENTS, graduation. WJ ir.Li>; come to Career Sharon Rosengart. the new job locater Counsel ing and Piaeemem Raubmger. STAFF AND FACULTY and developer is on campus (Raubinger, lower level to sign up prior to the interview lower level, Room 2H to-help students find Automatic I)aU Processins: dale to be full and part-time employment while they announced are going to school, if you need a job to help HERITAGE DORM LOUNGE Burroughs Corporation 5 5 meet expenses or for goof their cultures. Lee •An applicant must besingJ^and under teaching an eight-hour day. French literature, particularly littie- applied for ateahing grant, the full title of 30 years old. Lee credits much of the experience he known I9th century French symbolists. which* is the Fulbright-Hayes French -He must major in French (since this has had,in his field to his association with He said his "passion" is tracing the Government Teaching Assistant grant. grant is sposored by France.) Octavio de la Suaree, chairman of the influence of theFrenchsymboliststo 19th Every year teacher training colleges -He must want to pursue an academic foreign language department. century Caribbean literature, primarily (called normal schools inFrance) submit that of Cuba. Lee call this connection a • career in French (or a foreign language.) Lee has lectured on certain literature "open posts" (lists) of prospective "transatlantic influence/* ^^^ -He must have had some foreign themes in conferences on campus and recipients to the Fulbright Commission. experience to assist in the adaptation to a out-of-state. He was a student assistant to After the commission judges the different culture. the language department; handling "My experience at WPC has been very applicants, it gives the results to the -He must have a "sound" academic clerical work and some public relations. good—complete, both educationally and French government. (InFrance, schools record. Now he tutors in language and some personally.Those in the department have are under government control.) The Fulbright Grant was originally a literature. This tutoring is within the been very instructive and helpful," Lee Lee hassevera! options underthe^arit. means -of war reparations. Now the department and is not a--part of the said, adding that the college has offered He can enroll in a degree program in purpose of the grant is to promote an Learning Center. him constructive criticism and aid in France, where his tuition would be paid, understanding between people of the Lee also taught English as a second establishing future plans. he can conduct individual research with participatingcountries. NJSA President Mintz to resign ..^rriz-ircAi.. student governments to gett together anand himself. • |J5 By JANE EAGLESON vote on something." Mintz helped to organize the state wide Staff Writer David O'Malley, the executive director of conference to discuss the Department of Mike Mintz, New Jersey Student the NJSA said, Tve been with the Higher Education's Master Plan which was Association president, will'resign from his organization two years now and Mike's held Feb. 16 at Middlesex College. position due to other commitments which done asuperb job, as president." According to O'MaHey, Mintz is working | FREE PRE0NANCY TESTING will keep him from devoting the necessary O'Malley has worHed closely with Mintz just as hard even though he's resigning soon. f • Abortion Procedures time to" the NJSA. while Mintz has been president. They have Mintz is currently working on a plan of *• Birth Control Counseling The resignation will be effective as of the lobbied together in/Trenton to get student action against the possible tuition increase £• Sterilization Procedures next NJSA board meeting which will be held representatives on tneBoard of Trustees at next year. »• Complete GbstetricaTS March 16. Mintz, who has held the position New Jersey colleges. ^*** Mintz, a WPC senior, will graduate in I Gynecological Care since last March, will be replaced by the s Some of Mintz's activities included May although he will technically be finished present vice president, Roger Castor of serving as vice chairman of the student with school in March. He only has one class Caii375-0800 for immediate appt. Jersey City. advisory committee to the Department of which ends in March. Mintz is on the swim I - Located 1 bioefc-ftom Irvington Center u;»i... EJ—•:— He has also given team whose season also ends in March. Hours9am-5pmMbn.-Sat. Ampteparking Assembly Education 40UmonAwuSwt* 104- Irvmflfw. N.J,

Mintz feels he "teamed" *a tot about the O'Malley feels that being a business major legislative process from being involved with has helped Mintz handle the position. Since the NJSA although Mintz admits, "At times the NJSA is a corporate organization, about PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT it was frustrating trying to get people from hatf the work is doing taxes. With his different areas of the state with different accounting ability, Mintz was able to do this UNITED PARCEL SERVICE WICI holds first meeting •^^ Unloaders, loaders 5 days a week The next meeting will be Wednesday I IR^ Guaranteed minimum 3 hours By NANCY PEN DAS March I2, at I2:3O pm, in Hobart Hall room Staff Writer C7. O'Hare urged all who are interested to Twenty-eight WPC women students attend. ^ • J SADDLEBROOK YEAR ROUND attended an organizational meeting of The following are required for student Women In Communication, Inc. (WICI) applicants: be a full or part-time student; last Thursday. have completed two communication SHIFTS'. NOO&DAY-il:00 am to 3:00 pm Laure O'Hare, a communication senior, courses; have a 3.0 average in was voted chairperson pro-tern. communication and- a 2.5 overall average; MTONITE—10:45 pm to 2:45 am WICI offers a national news bulletin and be committed to a career in posting job opportunities around the communication. * country and a resume-writing service. The If a student does not meet these organization is committed to maintain requirements, a faculty adviser can send a professional standards and strives for equal written recommendation. employment and salary. SALAR Y.' $5-03 per hour to start, progressing to SMC/PTSC protest draft $8.38 A group of students and faculty are The committee is organizinga draft teach- organizing a committee in opposition to the in scheduled for March 13. Speakers from draft, according to Irwin Nack, professor of WPC along with outside guest speakers will history. discuss the draft issue with students. FULL BENEFITS: Hospital, Medical, Dental, The Student Mobilization Committee Anyone interested in helping to organize and the Part-Time Student Council the teach-in is welcome to the next Vision sponsored an open forum for discussion of committee meeting tomorrow at 4 pm in the draft last Wedenesday where students room 326 of the Student Center. and faculty expressed theirviews on Carter's The committee also hopes to organize a draft proposal. The SGA had been student group to attend the anti-draft march i Applications will be acepted at scheduled to hold a forum last week but scheduled to be held in Washington, D.C. on postponed it until tomorrow at 12:30 pm. March 22. Howard Johnson's Rt.80 SAPB gets jdeas in D.C. on March 4, 6,10 \ (continued from page 7) Treasurer Ellen Scolnik, Publicity Call 864-2810 SAPB participates in cooperative buying Chairman Steven Jacques and Cinema and books much of its entertainment from Committee Chairwoman Kjren Zack. The , wftat/ is-* presented at the NECAA staff members was Director i^f Student | An Equal Opportunity Employer Female/Male convention. SAPB members attending (he Activities Barbara MUjie and* Assistant convention were President Dave Stefcns, Director of Student Activities Ira Rosen. Page 4 March 4 Tim Historical tour spans 200 years; dwindling. There was no money to pay the pm™ , _"excep t ..Wednesda, . . y and. -rThrusday- . . -rT-o d wind line. There was nn mnncu tn nav ih salaries of the troops and not enough for continue on the ^historical journey, come proper food and supplies. The harshest back out onto Valiey Road. Continue for winter of the century had just passed several miles untif Valley Road ends. Make a characterized by mutiny and desertions. The life onto Riverview Drive where there will be British had control of the South. a golf course and then make another immediate left onto Totowa Road. Keep It is interesting to note the state of going for about a mile or so. American government at this time. In 1777 Washington had applied to the Continental Dey Mansion Congress for a draft, and was denied. The Coming up on the left in a beautiful governing body had no power to get money country setting is tjre Dey Mansion. During or troops from the states, as the states had the Re -iutionarv War the mansion served their own authorities. as General George Washington's _ Although there were many patriots of the headquarters and the surrounding area was American Revolution, there were also the the encampment of the continental army in Tories. loyal to the King. In addition there 1780 were those who just weren't sure whether The summer of 1780 was a most dismal independence was the right course. This tirTTTof-the war. Now in its sixth year, the ambivalence is readily understood- The war seemed interminable. The original troops were weary from battle, restless troops of the continental army were (continued on page 5)

"~~~~ Beacon pkvm by R.I P. Dey Mansion, headquarters for Gen. George Washington during the American Revolution. Dy M1CHELE PADDEN Turnpike. Staff Writer Van Riper-Hopper House WPC is snuaied in the township of "The contents of the house vividh portray Wavne. coumv oi Passaic. state oi New a lifestyle wholl\ dependent on the strength JerJey-just outside the cin oi Paierson. A of the men who picked rocks from the fields city much like an;, other, reeking with and cememed them together with straw and pollution. po\en\ and politics. But. this is ^'s> from the earth. Realize too, the clothes 'no1, the whole ^lon. There is much more to on their backs came trorn the flax grown in Paierson and ihc- iiirroending area than you their fields, picked by their children, spun on might imagine. looms and dyed brown UMng a plant called Being in the area of the Great Fails of the buuonwood. Passat River ar.d >::u2td near the coas;. is The house, built relau\ei\ iaie {1^6}. is

Wa>ne area were among ihefirst in the new Dutch homes. Beginning a.- a one-room world, dating back :o Ib95. residence, additions were huiii on the sides. We ha\e. tor our en;o\rnent. taciiiiies in Constructed facing the south. a> were al! the area which enable us to tra\e! through hou>e ot ihepenod to receive the full benefit time: to be able 10 £o hack :o when mere ••"** the sunlight, the \iev» toda\ is of a sun.i\a! w.i> ihe :::>i!\;e o-f our earh Dutch re^enoir In \~i>b the view out of the ancestors. l0 go baA :o >um\al' of our window «JS thai of an apple orchard, co untrv during : he struggle for ihe JommiiSion has successful!) independence and 10 io back to the relocated the Van Du\ne House, built in indus.nal Re\o:^i:or.. when Americans lT0(\ behind the Van Riper-Hopper were creauna '.he ^ooer. which ^ so residence, and ^ hoping for funds to restore uniqueK ours. it Older :arm;> homes in the area are the The Wav ne Township Historical Mersehs home, dating to the I760s and the Commission has ::s head^uaaers ai the Van Berdan home, whose name \ou might Riper-Hopper House situated at the nonh recognize. Both homes were demolished "in end of the Po;:r. \"iew Resenoir, minutes the name of progress." from the college just of: the Hamburg Visiting hours are e\eryda> from i to 5 Beacon photo by R. I. P. The Great Falls in Paters on Helped make that city a "cradle of industry." Today's job of preserving past Without the present our past would be together stuffed with sand which fills a lost. The realities of preserving the past rest modem energy need. They are called "Draft with the "people of today. All of the people Stoppers", and cost S3.50 each or 3 for orcani?ing and working in the facilities S10.00. When you visit the mansion you will described appear deeply involved and in love note how weil they work. with'their work. Dr. Flavia Alaya, president of the Passaic Steve McGinnis. the curator at .Dey County Historical Society, believes that the Mansion related to this thought. "He who history of a county is of "cultural does not know his past, U condemned to importance." She said that "preservation as repeat it," said by a great historian. George a business upgrades the character of an area" Santyana. and "improving cultural resources is related McGinnis. a former high school history to drawing people here to live." teacher, is currently trying to get backing for The society is concerned for the Lambert a 27-minute him. He would like to donate it Castle. Built of sandstone, more commonly to schools, intending for it to be a history known as brownstone, this building material [esson. will crumble it it does not receive attention The film views the 18th century, from the and maintenance. Dey Mansion in the 18th century. Some of Dr. Alaya spoke about the Heritage the areas it will include are Dey Mansion. Preservation Grant, sponsored by the Morrisioun, N.J.. Springfieid, NJ., West federal government. These S100,000 grants Fireplace inside the roginal room of the Van Riper-Hopper House, Point, Newport. R.I. and two bridges of the are for the maintenance of a building's built m 1786. The building h now the headquarters of the Wayne Passaic River. exterior. The county, however, would have Township Historical Commission. The tour guides at the mansion have an to match its funds and.produce half the excellent product for 'sale—fabric sewn' amount -requiring'local support" March 4 1980 Pages all sites within minutes of campus (continued from page 4) without salaries and starving as they and right onto Wayne Avenue. Stay on plundered farms and orchards in search of Wayne Avenue past one traffic light until food. The situation was critical. you get to the end. You will see a little More than 900 pieces of correspondence concrete bridge. Across the concrete bridge left the Dey Mansion in the year 1780. on the left is Overlook Park and The Great Washington came to Dey seeking comfort Falls of the Passaic. The falls have-been a and a hide-out. Here he planned strategy fishing and camping area for Indians, with his generals andwaited. tourist attraction and a power source for the It was here at Dey where Benedict Arnold Industrial Revolution. began his act of treason. He implored The Great Falls Washington to put him in command of West Take a good look at those falls, and the Point. Arnold did receive the command, but power in them. Although the original his ultimate plan,to allow the British to take landscape has been changed and reduced by~ over that post, was unsuccessful. man, one can still feel the magnetic pull of Revolutionary War Strategies the forces of nature crashing into the valley When the troops were ordered to break of the Rocks below. Besides Overlook Park, camp in November, it was to execute a closer view of the Falls can be had going Washington's feigned attack on Manhattan. back across the concrete bridge and around The plan included erroneous letters in the to the right. There is additional parking right hands, to make General Clinton, the there. British commander, believe the Americans The falls are the focal point of a 119 acre meant to attack New York. Qinton was tract of land known as "The Great heading up the coast to Newport, R.I. where Falls/S.U.M. Historic District." (S.U.M. American allies, the French, were trapped in represents "Society for Useful the harbor because of a blockade. When lie Manufacturers".} In 1971 the Great Falls Another view of the castle. Biaam photo by R.I.P. heard of Washington's plan. Clinton Development Corporation, (GFDC), a non- -The first full-length movie ever made, profit citizens group was organized. Today Paterson as the "cradle of industry". It was immediately abandoned that course of time when immigrants and their children was filmed in Little Falls and West Paterson. action. SendingClintononthefamous'*wiki this" group administers the renovation, -"The Silk City"-The silk industry was restoration and adaptive reuse. of the were the labor force; time when goose chase," the Americans were able to industrialists and inventors were making - started and revolutionized in America by join forces with the French. This led to the district. It sponsors a festival every year, on John Ryle in the mills of Paterson in 1846. Labor Day Weekend; and a Walking Tour fortunes; a time when Paterson was surrender of General Comwallis at the capitalizing on the decrease in foreign The silk and related industries sprang up in Battie of Yorktown and the end of the war. of the District from May through Oct. 31, Paterson and the population i ncreased Monday through Saturday af 11 am and manufactured products because of the War The Dey Mansion is open for inspection of 1812. ' tremendously as jobs beetle available. Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from I to 2pm also, Sunday at 1:30 and 3 pm. (During Paterson boomed until the Great Labor the winter months by appointment only.) Encompassing all of this was the birth of _5pm. Also Saturday and Sunday I - 5prn. the city of Paterson, wKich the area Strike in 19I3. From the Dey Mansion driveway turn left Via mills, factories and. architecture the LAMBERT CASTLE tour "takes ig>a to the !9fiT oejDgiiy and surrounding the falls was named in 1792. onto Totowa Road Make a leffat Onion Actually the Paterson that was founded in From the Overlook Park side of the Falls 1792 was by the S.U.M. This corporation make a left onto Spruce Street, then a right was given enormous power with the onto Grand Street. Turn right at Main controlling rights of the water supply of the Street and continue until you reach Barclay Passaic, in the area of the Falls. Street. Make a right, go up a hill and One member of the corporation, governor continue into Valley Road. Going beyond at that time, is the namesake of our college. the intersection for Route 80, the first turn William Paterson's career, includes being the on your right is the Lambert Castle. first senator of New Jersey, a signer of the Heading up the drive towards the castle Constitution and a justice of the supreme one may conjure up visions of dracula and court. vampires. The castle, called Belie Vista, It was Alexander Hamilton's experiment. situated on the mountainside, looks out over and based on his belief that America needed all of Paterson and the Manhattan skyline is to guarantee its independence through clearly visible in the distance. industrial might. Consequently, there was Its builder. Catholina Lambert, seeking to no local government for the first forty years capitalize on freedom trom the class system of Paterson's existence. in Europe arrived in New York in ISM. In 1831 the New Jersey legislature finally Forty years later, having amassed a huge gave Paterson a charter. As the city was fortune in silk and art. he realized his dream founded, so it was run, for the benefit oi of rising to the aristocracy. business, expressing disregard for its The castle which was home to his family citizens. S.U.M. dissolved in 1946. also housed his art collection. Lambert Did you know that...? hosted many parties inviting prominent The S.U.M. had shaky first years, but people of Paterson and New York to \iew forging ahead. Paterson attracted and bred the collection. inventors and entrepreneurs. Paterson is However. Lambert and other famed for: industrialists became victims of the era in -First Submarine-John P. Holland, a histlfly which also ga\e them their wealth. Paterson school teacher, after testing his Ju>t babes in the cradles of industry, the\ first sub in the Passaic, eventually perfected had no idea thai historv would come to the design used in WW2. support the workers. -First Revolver-Samuei Colt, born m The Labor Strike in 1913 stopped Paterson. invented the repeating revoKer- production in the factories for five months. the six-shooter, that won the west. Lambert was determined to hold out against -First American Locomotive-Thomas the strikers. He pui his whole estate up tor Rogers, a carpenter, built the first collateral and lost u. Subsequent!;., the locomotive in America and then went on to furnishings of the castle and n^ art establish Rogers Locomotive Works The collection went to auction. factory, a landmark in itself, is a huge The Museum oi the Palate Cou;u\ success for the GFDC. Historical Socieu, Mtuaied m the !ir-*i floor -Wright Aeronautical Corporalion-The roorm oi the castle, is reali\ the focai roini engine that powered Charles Lindbergh's The socien has succeeded m aune\ ine *o"ur "Spirit of Louis" across the Atlantic came online! and extravagant pieces o! I amber! w out of this plant which mo\ed to PatersCn fortune. TheVxiet;. Kust> one oi the not following World War 1. silk collections m the countr\ Ihoe .IU^K -Sam Patch-The only man to jump the with artifacts and remembranco c-f .HI Niagra Fails without protection begun his Industrial America, set up amids; sn? illustrious career in Paterson. A huge crowd interiors oi magnificent hard woods and was gathered to see the first bridge being set stunning marbleinuke a trui> impre>si\e Belle Vista,"the Lambert Castle, was the 19th century estate of a wealthy across the Fails when Sam Patch jumped. exhibit- * aristocrat nphoioby R.I.P. "The Great Train Robbery" The castle is open weekends from lopm. Page 6 March 4 1980 NOMINATIONS OPEN MARCH 4 FOR ALL SGA, CLASS AND LEGISLATURE POSITIONS SGA Executiue Offices: Class Offices: PRESIDENT PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT CO-TREASURERS TREASURER SECRETARY one Representatiue From Each Of The Following Academic Departments: ACCOUNTING, LAW & CRIMINAL JUSTICE LANGUAGE & CULTURES ADMINISTRATIVE, ADULT & SECONDARY LIBERAL STUDIES PROGRAMS MATHEMATICS AFRICAN & AFRO—AMERICAN STUDIES MOVEMENT SCIENCE & LEISURE STUDIES ART MUSIC —•—BUSINESS, ECONOMICS & COMPUTER NURSING SCIENCE PHILOSOPHY ^ BIOLOGY POLITICAL SCIENCE ^ CHEMISTRY, PHYSICS & ENVIRONMENT- PSYCHOLOGY AL SCIENCE SOCIOLOGY, ANTHROPOLOGY & COMMUNICATIONS GEOGRAPHY COMMUNITY, EARLY CHILDHOOD & SPECIAL EDUCATION & PUPILPERSONNEL LANGUAGE ARTS SERVICES ELEMENTARY EDUCATION SPEECH PATHOLOGY ENGLJSH THEATRE HEALTH SCIENCE HISTORY Two Representatiues From Each Of The Following Club And Organizational Diuisions: ACADEMIC INTEREST SERVICE INTEREST CULTURAL INTEREST SPECIAL INTEREST

Ail nominations must be made in the SSA office, room 330 of the student center (9 am-$:30 Dm). All nominees must be full-time wrc undergraduates in good academic standing. NOMINATIONS CLOSE MARCH 19 AT 5 PM March 4 1980 Page 7 SAPB brings back hew ideas and acts, presented are becoming available By KAREN ZACKS i or college appearances, and agents Staff Writer representing them were present to discuss details and facilitate immediate bookings. In Four students and two adsisers from previous years entertainers such as Linda WPC's Student Activities Programming Ronstadt, , Muddy Waters and Board (SAPB) recently attended 131 r Robert Klein have appeared in the educational workshops. %ie\ved 76 acts and NECAA's entertainment showcases. •films, and met 195exhibitnrs-atthe NEC A A * One segment of the convention was {National Entertainment and Campus devoted to cooperative buying, a concept Activities Association) Convention in designed to reduce expenses for a Washington. D.C. programming board. When two or more The convention, held Feb. 13-17 at the schools in the same geographic area want to Sheraton Washington Hotel, allowed 1.500 book the same attraction, each can save students and staff members to exchange money by mutually agreeing on a time ideas and discuss problems facing their period for the performance. This reduces the i n d i\ id ua1 programming boards. anist's travel expenses. Since many college Workshops were presented which included programming boards are suffering from topics such as leadership, minority budget cuts, rising talent costs and increased programming, contract and copyright laws transportation costs for touring performers. and time management. the savings provided by cooperative buying An exhibit hall was set "up at the enables them to present acts they could not con\ention with booths for the exhibitors, otherwise afford. including talent agents^ film rental company representatives, individual lecturers, bands The Sheraton Washington Hotel, the and mime troupes. The booths contained convention site, is a new building with some demo tapes, catalogues and information areas still under construction. about acts that students might want to book for their colleges. Tweniy-six hours£of (continued on page 3} convention time were set aside for exhibit v hail attendance. Pilgrim Medical Group Trip to Brooklyn and An assortment of films, coffeehouses, >' ABORTION SERVICES ' club acts, dance bands, concerts and other id Mid-Trimester (tfcru L5wlcs.) performing arts acts were presented during Trimester (16 thru 23_»ks.) Chinatown to Celebrate the convention. Films such as Life of Brian FEMALE STERILIZATION (TUBAL LI CATION] and The Seduction of Joe Tynan were FREE PREGNANCY TEST HOURS 9-5 P.M screened. Dr. Hook, a band whose recent hit EXAMINATION AND HON THRU SAT the Year of the Monkey singles include "Cover of the Roiiing Stone." COUNSELING 746-1500 • "Sharing the Night Together" and "When THE (MY STATE LiCtKStO 18001 772-2174 You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" ABORTION FACILITY IN ESSEX. PASSAIC. MORRIS Sunday, March 16,1980 appeared in one of the musical UHIQN AND MIDDLESEX entertainment showcases. All of the fiims COUNTIES. 11-00 Bus leaves from Gate 3, WPC ICELWDUR TO EUROPE 12:00 Arriving at Brooklyn Botanical Garden (exotic flowers, artistic performances) BIG BIRD 3:00 Leaving Botanical Garden AND A ' for Chinatown Self-Tour 5:30 11-course Banquet (Optional) LOW EIRE 8:00 Leaving Chinatown^io return Fees: 1) Trip including Banquet Students with ID $7.00 Others $9.00 S S 2) Trip not including Banquet Students with ID 50 to political purposes. After these accusations and other comments, the er.iire rage o\ed downstairs to attend a cultural event, teaturing black poetry USLC. Those who were able to. h ^ tiore poetr.. i ua i the last program in n \ featured a reading a \ II ge poet from the St. L "I rtLnateh. neither poet i h absence appeared— Poet Bill BerUon kicked oil UPC tin>t poetry festival when he read in n^eliing the e\ent. the Student Center Feb 2' n co tudent-poets who e r undauntedi\ held an n own. first in the d ioor oi the Student p the ground floor _^ t r n r-schedu!ed readins. v.e e of high quality, d nersonal st>learid it is n ma> continue on a

mued on page 11 j James Hill: struggles B> NICOLE BUSCH Arts Editor 1 ACCOUNTING CLUB II Trip s Tour to American Cyanamld in Wayne: | Wednesday, March 5, 2 pm |] Sign up in office, SC 210 Alumni, Faculty, student uiine S Cheese Party: jj Thursday, March 13 I 8-10 pm Second Floor Restaurant II Bagel Sale: Tuesday, March 11 Student Center Lobby - Hi H -< lames Hill, WPC junior Commim Page 9 Pop to bring raw power to Shea show to terrifying extremes. He still bean Pop (nee James Osterberg) pessimistic for the acid-head flower children By GLENN KENNY of the time. Indeed, when asked on television scars on his chest from the time he slashed prominence in the late '60s as the himself onstage with a broken beer bottle. Staff Writer monosyllabic leader of the seminal group. what he considered to be his greatest accomplishment, he replied. "I think I WPC audiences need not woiryaboutany The Stooges. He gained considerable of this recurring in his upcoming show. After The legendary' Iggy Pop. considered by notoriety for his wild performances which helped kill the '60s." many to be one of thefounding fathers of the another stay in a sanitarium. Iggy re- seemed to chart his own disintegration. He His manic rush to self destruction finally emerged relatively sane. He made two punk rock phenomenon, will be performing would smear peanut butter on his body, at Shea Center for the Performing Arts landed him in a sanitarium, where he was albums under Bowie's tutelage f"77ze Idiot" jump into the audience, start fights with "rescued" by David Bowie, who produced and "Lust for Life"). He currently promotes Wednesday. March 12. in a concert audience members who would subsequently sponsored by the Student Activities the definitive Stooges album "Raw Pop" his self image a- a sort of debauched, Programming Board. beat the shit out of him, all the while On the tour to promote the album lgg\ tell Vetzschean genius which he ma\ well be performing material too raw, powerful and prey to heroin addiction and took his stage (continued on page Si) Photo exhibit at Shahn

"Altered Subjects: Photography" will be photographs, but upon closer inspection one the first show at WPC's Sen Shahn Gallery discovers that he has physically placed dealing strictly with photography. The dotted lines of tape, lines of string, and exhibit which runs from March 10 through aluminum foil directly onto his subjects that March 26. win showcase some of the most tend to destroy ai^perspective. respected modern photographers who see i their subjects from other than ordinary Don Rodan uses the SX-70 camera for his \ iewpoints. The idea that reality is what one series "The Greek Myths" and proceeds to \ lews through the unfailing lens is present his modern day view of the ancient challenged here by eight photographers in as ideals in what was once considered a **non- many different ways. art" format. Don Slyer arranges mundane household objects and presents them in a manner that The works of Bernard Faucon. Ralph forces the viewer to re-evaluate his thinking. Gibson. Bruce Patterson. Richard Prince .lohn Plan! presents the viewer, with and Victor Schrager will also be exhibited. problems in perception. His color works at The Ben Shahn Gallery is open Monday hrst glance seem to have geometric designs through Friday 8-5 and Tuesday and. graphically drawn on the surface of hts Thursday till 10 pm.

John Pfahl's "Blue-Right Angle" is an example of the type of of a student actor hh to be exhibited at Ben Shahn Galferv March 10-26. with Lee Strassberg. H e aiso met J oe Capoue. a teacher at Barbizon. Capone worked with Hill, and eventually asked him to start a theatre company with him. The 'For Colored Girls result is the Incite Theatre Company. Hill's present acting project. When the Incite Theatre Company first Who Have Considered began. Hill and Capone were faced with the task of getting a cast together. "We wanted people who had the ambition and who were Suicide When the going to be dedicated to the company itself." explained Hill. The company now has approximately seven memoers.d Rainbow is Enuf' After the Incite group did a free performance oi Oh' For Gripes Sake." at The Brooklyn Museum, they were A chorcopoem by Ntozakc Shange discovered by a talent agent and were then financed for a future performance. The pla>. which was written and directed by Capone, was performed off-Broadway at the"Nat DATES & TIMES Home Theatre, on Feb. 17. According to Hill, the Incite Theatre Wed., March 19 12:30 Company worked on ''Oh' For Gripes Sake" Thurs., March 20 8:00 for approximate!) two months. He said the cast is made up of "all new faces and all new Fri., March 21 8:00 talem." Sat., March 22 3:00 "li uhe plaU is about people's persona! gripe- " y&id Hill. He explained that the 8:00 hour-long production deals with gnpes such Sun.. March 23 3:00 as ••freedom." and being "ripped off b> crooks." "1 really get into it." he noted. 8:00 While Hiii now directs hi> acting energies tovard "Inciie" productions, he icei> it is a PLACE -iteppms stone toward bigger things "i |ust look at it ii experience and exposure. There Hunziker Theatre y wiil be agents there (in the audiences] Hill says that when an actor ieams up with an aseni. it ;? easier to obtain aenng-^obv At the TICKETS moment, however. HU! is on his own. "i had one (agent) but he really screwed me." he Adults $3.00 \ commented Students $2.50 * In addition to hii present acting work with Incite. Hiil must face lengths audition-s for commercials. >odp operas and pla\ v Although ihe\ "take hours." Hill, along with as man\ as 2.000 other actors, attends these (continued on page /, / ptions major and actor. Paee 10 MarcH4, 1980 /^*YSifK* Student Activities ^^d^^kJ Programming Board

Tues., March 4 Wed., March 12 Cinema: conoert: 4 Animal Iggy Pop 9 valid WPC I.D.: $5 House Others: $7 valid UIPG I.D.: 500 8 Dm Others: $1 Shea center for Performing 2seom Arts student center Ballroom TicHets at SC info desk. Wed., March § Thurs., March 13 SAPB General council meeting Talent Show Hidden inn coffeehouse Student center 203-a-5 Wayne Hall 5 Dm Applications auailahle: Student center 21a Tues., March 11 Mon., March 17 Cinema & English Dent. Film: Poet: 'The Hustler9 John Ashberg 2&8pm 12:30 pm student center Ballroom student center Ballroom Free Admission! March 4 1980 Page 11

First poetry fest Before'Star Wars' there was and there (continued from page 8) underground which flourishes in new forms will always be The festival provided exposure to many here at WPC. Perhaps it has likewise aspects of the poetic community-lyrical demonstrated sufficient interest to warrant a academia, emotional outrage, political poet-in-residence to work with writer's involvement and even a self-willed poetic workshops on a regular basis. Imagine! 2001: James Hill: student actor exposure,..and a lot of hard work. But it's (continued from page 9) steady work—you sign 15-week contracts," auditions in hopes of obtaining some form said Hill. A SPACE of acting work. Until he does land ajob with a soap opera, "If you're picked out ofSOOpeop^you're Broadway show or television commercial. somebody. When people pay $25 a show, Hill will continue to work a-nd perfect his art. they want to see talent. They don't want to When the time comes, he wants to make the see the producer's sister-in-faw," said Hill. best showing he can because, as he puts it, ODYSSEY Another requirement actors have to face "In theatre, you have one chance." is the high cost of union dues. According to Hill, there are three unions. Actor's Equity, Screen Actor's Guild, and the American Crated G) Federation of Television and Radio Artists, Iggy Pop at Shea... that range in dues from $200 to $500. However, Hill points out that "the union can get you a job." (continued from page 9) March 23 8 pm SCBR However, the material on his last album Although Hill receives no pay for his work ("New Values")'failed to live up. to the, with the Incite Theatre Company (he relies expectations that were set for it. March 24 12:30 & 8 pm on his earnings as. a part-time worker at He's just come oui with a new album Foodtown), the. future looks promising for ("Soldier"1), and his new band includes Glen him. Matlock (ex-Sex Pistols and Rich Kids). Student Center Ivan Krai {ex-Patti Smith Group)and Barry "1 have a couple- of agents who I've Andrews (ex-XTC). The upcoming concert rooms 203-205 contacted who want to taik to me about will no doubt be at least intriguing, and doing soap operas. 1 have a good feeling SAPB deserves credit for booking such a Predated by: about doing a soap opera. It's very good challenging artist.

The Sophomore and Freshman Classes Present: A Rock and Roll Showcase/ Jam-O-Rama oh Friday, March 7 in the SCBR Featuring: ^ Snow and The 32 Breeze Band Beer and wine will be sold. FREE MUNCHIES! WPC I.D. and proof of age required. Jam starts at 8 pm (doors open at 7 pm)j Admission: $1.00 Page 12 March 4, 1980'

^| the WiBom Peterson beacon That old Saving the College Community Since 1936 American spirit Eric Heiden, Phil Mahre, Craig, A group of young men, college kids, Eruzione, Johnson. Christian, Herb Brooks: really, showed the pundits how wrong they American names that, at least for a while, were. When the news reports and videotapes will symbolize everything that is good and of Iran and Afghanistan first came in, great about America. Heiden. of course, for thanks to the selective offices of the those few who were Philisjing enough to television media, it seemed as if America and ignore the Winter Olympics, accomplished its power were truly in their death throes. As the unheard-of feat of being the only man in we sat in our living rooms and watched in the history of the modern Olympics to horror the hate-twisted faces of millions of ~ garner five (yes, count them, five!)' goid Iranians and 'shuddered as wave after wave medals in single events. of implacable thanks' overwhelmed the Help us out! Phil Mahre, one year ago a man with a Enfield rifles of Afghans, we wondered foot so twisted and snapped that it was abqut America's chances and America's "1 think that the paper is drab. There are never any new doubtful whether he would ever walk virtues. ideas...The paper is not as creative as it has been." normally again, let alone ski. But. with three of the seven silver pins that had been screwed At the same time, Lord Killinan and the These comments from a letter to the editor which appears in its into his ankle just to keep the bones together o!d men of the International Olympic entirety on the opposite page represent some of the feedback we still in place, Mahre won the silver medal in Committee kept blathering about the ha\e been receiving lately about the newspaper. Olympic Spirit as they had in the 1930's x when another world was failing apart. .^e the Beacon's primary purpose is to serve the college President Carter, on the other hand, denied community, we are, of course, concerned that we are apparently The Right Voice that spirit and called for a boycott of the failing to meet your expectations and fill your needs. It is for this Summer Olympics in Moscow. reason that within the past two weeks we have begun making Dr. Richard Jaarsma attempts to encourage the members of WPC to become more ironically, it was Heiden, Mahre, and the interested and involved in the newspaper. You may have noticed the slalom one half second behind the best boys from the U.S. Olympic hockey team skier , Ingemar Stenmark. in who showed what the "Olympic Spirit" was several special announcements appearing in the Beacon asking for painful, bone-shattering runs that all about. Because that spirit is reaily the old your opinions, comments and contributions. continually teetered on a ski-edge of American spirit which says that the ordinary For example, at the bottom of the Happenings column on page disaster. man, the gifted amateur, the man or woman without the vast weight of a state machine to two we have included an announcejnent asking that campus clubs And Jim Craig, Mike Eruzione. Mark and organizations submit information about their events so that Johnson. Dave Christian and their coach.. support him from the rnoraesiMie-is-able to - they may be better publicized. We also included a short paragraph the unflappable Brooks—members of a strap on a pair of skates or hold a hockey collection of college all-stars and amateur stick, can overcome his limitations and inside the paper announcing the establishment of a Beacon players who had. willy-nilly, been dumped perform Herculean feats of skill and will- (suggestion) Box where you may submit comments and ideas into,a pot called a team six months before power. about what you'd like to see in the newspaper. During this week. and told to represent the United States in however, we have not yet received any suggestions. hockey in the Olympics against the So it was Paul Bunyan, and Brer Rabbit, professionals from Sweden, Czechoslovak- and John Henry, and Tom Sawyer and We want to serve you better, it's our responsibility to serve you ia and the greatest team in the world, that of Huck Finn, and Charlie Lindberg all over as best as we can. but to do that we'll need your help. Our staff is the Soviet Union. again.. It was all those grand old American cliches fleshed out! "The difficult wedo right small and we often find it difficult to cover each colleee event or And—Frodo lives!'- they did it! Going undefeatedinw the semi-finals, they took on away; the impossible takes a little longer;" issue. We may also (unintentionally) ignore an event that is "When the going gets tought, the tought get important to members of the college community simply because we the cool, sroic Russian hockey maching and, yes.Jbeai them. 4-3! Two days later, they put going;" "Pluck and Luck;" "True Grit." were not aware of it. away the Finns for the gold. And how American were the victories! To help us improve our service to you we'd like to ask you for The self-styled guius of public opinion in your ideas about w hat you'd like to see in the Beacon./What topics the United States love to tell us that When Heiden. having already garnered four or issues would you like to see featured in the Beacon0 Do you patriotism and nationalism are bad. golds, got his fifth, he had overslept on the particularly for Americans. Our country, day of The taxing 10.000 meter race. He had know of something happening on campus that you think would be they tell us. is a grand failure, manipulated no time to eat breakfast or put on his of interest to the students, staff or faculty? Do you know of any by the devious, vicious juggernauts of the uniform or his skates. Grabbing a piece of interesting people associated with our college with arixfnusual CIA. Exxon and the Pentagon, who are all bread, he was bundled into^ car by his coach 7 engaged in a mad plot to stamp out, the to arrive just in time to step on his uniform talent, hobby or note-v,orthy--aCcomplishmenf Is thereim area of "legitimate aspirations" of the rest of the and his skates before he was called on to do the college v, e're overlooking that you think is important and needs world. We have, they tell us, betrayed all what no man has ever done before. He won coverage? li you have any ideas, please let us Jmow and help us that is good and innocent in America and the race. Incredibly, he also set a new world improve the line of communication with the^members of WPC ha\e created a slick, power-hungry, self- record! indulgent society that must feed parasitically on the rest of the planet, threatening its So too Craig, draped in an American flag peace. With the deserved defeat of the after his team had won the gold, peering EDITOR-IN-CHIEF helpless giant, America, at the hands of tiny. frantically into the seats of the stadium (and beacon Mary Termyna freedom-loving Vietnam (massively aided into our hearts), his lips soundlessly framing by Russia and China, but never mind), the question. "Where's my father? Where's patriotism had, beneficently, been destroyed my father?" MANAGING EDITOR NEWS EDITOR once and for all in America. Da\e Bruce Bl/SINESS MANAGER So we stopped in the middle of basketball Joe Heah Most of us. of oucrse, knew better and games and bars and in our living rooms and waited. For, after all, there wasn't much to sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" and "My FEATURE EDITOR ADVERTISING MANAGER Country 'Tis of Thee" and wiped away the Dar:a Hoffea- be patriotic about lately. Under the "nice" Heidc Alexander administration of Jimmy Carter, we saw not tears and savored the lumps in'our throats. only our international prestige plunged to a An English friend called me the Sunday- ARTS EDITOR EDITORIAL ADVISOR nadir comparable only to that caused by the Herbert Jackson evening of the American gold in hockey. Nicole B-u-.-n burning of Washington in the War of 1812. "God," he said, "how 1 wish I wert an BUSINESS ADVISOR but also found ourselves victims to an American today!" SPORTS EDITOR inflation caused by the vengeful oil demands Bill Fitzgerald America is not down. Its virtues are the Jet R. Sch«ar-,< of Arab feudalists. Then came the hostages real "Olympic Spirit" the IOC keeps CIRCULATION PHOTO EDITOR and Afghanistan. Where was America? hollowly chanting. The world has taken Bucky Daniels What was it? Where were its strengths and note. It should do so again, this summer, in Miguci Mendoza Grounds Crew virtues now? Were the hate-America gang Moscow. Boycott the summer Olympics? right? Not on your life! March 4, 1980 Page 13

been different. The paper is not as creative as it has been. Also, how come some of the articicsdon't Challenging reply -make-anjLsejise? They seem like they have parts cut out. I have seen sentences cut right Editor, Beacon: in half. I was surprised when I read your recent The spelling errors/typing errors are editorial concerning the Board of Trustees reaily bad, too. This semester has been the meeting and its decision on the new worst to my knowledge. Doesn't the B sac on admission standards. In that editorial you have someone to proof read? These stated that you were "horrified" when typographical errors make it impossible for another speaker addressed the board people to fully understand the ideas the claiming that it was the responsibility of a articles are trying to convey. public college to admit that student and apartment, where there were some Please accept my criticism. train" him until he could function with descrepancies, said there were close to 250 college material. Ski Club responds empty bottles left in the room. 1 was^one of the occupants of that room and know that Sincerely, Editor, Beacon: statement to be a blatant lie. The author, by Clifford Jordan As one of the speakers who attended that writing such a flamboyant article was meeting 1 feel I must challenge your As president of the Ski Club I'd like to assured of having it make the paper. In my interpretation of that speaker's comments. respond to the article concerning the Ski opinion the author of this inaccurate article One more time In reality, what the speaker was saying was Club's trip to Switzerland. The article was out to discredit the Ski Club and its that instead of getting embroiled in the all appeared in the Feb. 14 issue of the Beacon. members for his own personal gains. Editor, Beacon: elusive and quite nebulous selectivity The author attempted to discredit the Ski standards rating game, WPC-should apply John J. Murphy May I correct a correction? As I was its excellent resources toward the solving of Club on a limited foundation of facts, gross President exaggerations and outright lies. saying last time (Feb. 26) in your letters an even greater problem—those of the needs WPC Ski Club column before I was so rudley interrupted by of the remedial students. By applying to all the typographical gremlin, I am unqualified students strict standards for cintinuation I found several descrepancies in the Editor's note: Regarding your charges that to be a dean because "I am congenially toward a degree after the sophomore year, -author's inflated estimates of the damages. Mark Conlan's "flamboyant article" was full incapable of performing those two WPC would fulfill two valid and quality He claims there was $190 in damages which of "blatant lies" about the occurrences in quintessential functions of a dean: to give objectives: works out to be $2.75 per person. This is a Engelber, Switzerland i( must be noted that good paper and to write bad prose." small amount especially when the hotel he confirmed the story with the hbtel owner, Your typesetter, however, garbled my. 1. Give WPC students a worthwhile, charges approximately S29 for replacement the concierge, the niaitre d\ the waiters and words, so badly that the meaning became competitive degree. of a lost key. Many hotels sometimes take the EngelbergTavrist :_Qffic<> m

*HEAR BOTH SIDES OF THE ISSUE

WED. MARCH 4 12:30

SCIENCE BUILDING 200A Page 14 , . ; Marc""""h' n>4,1980 "™ Winter sports coming to an end elite squad. "Whenever we've needed a big Item:Piorwers appear in piay-ofTs third nationally in scoring with a 26.1 bucket Clinton's gotten it for us" added In 19" when the Pioneers last appeared average and has the tenth best shooting Adams. in the South Atlantic regionals they won the percentage in the nation with 62 percent. Sports Round-Up championship. That same year head coach In the championship contest against Joe R. Schwartz John Adams was named NJ. Coach of the Jersey City State. WPC hit on 66 percent of Item: Lester sets record Year. its shots. In the second half against the WPCs George Lester set a track record at WPC leads the nation in field goal Gothics the Pioneers hit an amazing 84 said WPC coach Adams about ms junior Monmouth. Lester's 1:58.3 in the 880 broke percentage a^ they are hitting 57 percent of percent of their shots (22 for 26). stand-out Clinton Wheeler. If Wheeler the previous low of 2:01 set by LaSalle's Joe their shots. They are third in scoring with Item: Wheeler AH-American possibilities? doesn't have a total collapse it is Burns in Jan. S5.3 points per eame. Clinion Wheeler Is "He's our franchise, no doubt about it" inconceivable that he not be selected for the WPC students do well in tourney By DOMIN1CK COPPOLLA of the approximately 15 WPC students who individual event held in such varied places as Eric Kessler and Tom Hubbard which Staff Writer competed in the A.C.U.I.-sponsored Illinois. Arizona and Washington State. finished -eighth. KeHey Kinkhuff bolted to Eastern Region Three Tournament. Andy Hadjioannow achieved a well- third place in the goalie-war competition. Ruth Sembbrat defeated fellow WPC The tournament featuring such events as earned second place finish in backgammon Table tennis featured an extremely strong student Kay Cosjturie in the semi-finals ot table soccer (foosbail), backgammon, after barely losing in the final games. At ons Field including a U.S. Tabie Tennis Team the female half oi the pool tournament heid bowling, tabie tennis, chess, biliiards and _point he was losing 9-1 in a semi-final match member. Roger Sverdiik, who is ranked fifth the weekend oi February 16 at Rider frisbee throwing attracted hundreds of and fought back and won 10 straight games in the country. WPC students John College. Kay Coutune who gained third college students from New York State, New to defeat his opponent 13-11. Crawford and Dominick Coppola were piace and Sembbrat who collared second Jersey and parts of Pennsylvania. In tabie soccer Daria Myers and KeHey knocked out early in the competition, but place i after losing in the finals to last years Tile winners of the contests'.in most cases) Kinkhuff finished fifth among a large field teamed up to avenge their fosses with a fifth 3rd place finisher Jill Fabian) were only two will go to the nationaUournaments for each and were followed closely by the team of place finish in the doubles competition held the second day of the tournament. Tom Goulbic, Steve Nebesni, Steve , Scheck, Paul Enden and Joe Scianialepole She was married at 13. were WPCs bowling contingent. Although Tom Goulbic and Steve Nebesni led bowlers She had four kids with 194 and 197 averages respectively, none of our male bowlers gained a spot in the top by the time she was 20. three. Donna Derrick, WPCs only female bowler garnered a third place spot which entitles her to be an alternate for the national She's been hungry and poor. bowling tournament. She's been loved and cheated on. She became a singer and a star Equestrian team because it was the only way By GREGG THORN she knew to survive. Sports Contributor One of the most unified and comopetitive teams on campus is the WPC equestrian team. This little known team has ridden into another season of this elite and demanding sport, competing with 27 other schools.

The team boasting a membership of 15 skilled riders, never fails/to win its share of victory ribbons. Recently at a show held in Farmingville, Long Island, the equestrian team managed to return with five rib&ons, once again proving its talent. Carla D'Augustine and Anthony Carpinelli both took second places. Gloria Darnese and Alan Hassett each captured fourth place and Andre Troyano brought a fifth place ribbon home. Sponsor their own show Since the formation of the team the riders have the goal of sponsoring their own horse show despite the high cost. This dream is gradually nearing reality because of the efforts of the present members who hold fund-raising activities such as bake sates and raffles. Five shows remain thisspringforthe team to continue increasing their points with the Equestrian Society and to accumulate the funds for a horse show next semester. Women cagers... . (continued from page IS) SISSY SPACER TOMMY LEE JONES WPC didn't have a JV team last year, so "COAL MINERS DAUGHTER" this season there was no team to build on. also starring BEVERLY DANGELO LEVON HELM Screenplay by TOM RICKMAN They had to start anew, recruit new players and coaches. Based on the Autobiography by LORETTA LYNN with GEORGE VECSEY WPCs coach Susan Gasparini said that Executive Producer BOB LARSON Produced by BERNARD SCHWARTZ the size of the team was another factor. There were only seven players on the team, Directed by MICHAEL APTED A BERNARD SCHWARTZ Production A UNIVERSAL PICTURE tU which is hardly enough to play a game, PG CBKJ l*Ni YESSAL CTTY STtUCev INC. ALL RIGHTS RE3EHVED excluding the injuries that the team faced. Gasparini also said the teams the Pioneers " played had women whkhVert"much tal]|er* (hinherpl«yejscre»tingadisa

get to know her. After the Pioneers were leading them with an average of 11.4 points had eight common opponents and WPC By MARICA M. SMITH and "10.3 rebounds a game, while Sandy Staff Writer aware of what was expected_o_f__them,they also outscored Ramapo in this category. played better both defensively and Horan has averaged 4.2 assists per game. When Iacewic/contacted the committee offensively towards the second half of the Inspite of the Pioneers 17 losses, most of members she saia they told her that, "they For the second time in the last three years them were close, and most were against the WPC women's varsity basketball team season. had made a mistake. They realize that they tough teams mostly from Divisions I and II went in dumb and stupid, but there is has posted a losing record. In I977itwas7- Trying to replace a player of Debbie because the Pioneers were playing "a tough 13, and it rebounded last year to post a fine Comerie's caliber is a difficult task for a nothing they can do about it now,"she said. schedule" according to Jacewic " She was also told that the decision eould not 17-8 record, but this season has been a coach. Mtchele Torrence, who played at .lacewic/ says she is optimistic about next disappointing one. The team ended the be reversed because it had been "written" season bemuse she finished the season with that Ramapo was going to be in the season winning nine games and losing 17. Comerie's old position, center, has done a nine players and seven are returning, so the good job this season. Comerie graduated nucleus of the team is returning. They are regionals. ^ This season WPC featured a new coach and is now playing for the New Jersey Gems. recruiting new players, so if all goes well, the According to.iacewic/tacts have clearly and several new players.Maryann .iacewic/. Also because the new players didn't know Pioneers can look forward to having a shown that the Wi'C women's basketball who has played on the Queens College the old piayers, it took some time to winning season next year. team was penalized for playing tough national team for four years has now taken coordinate the players to play together as a division teams which it had no control over p"er as the head coach of the Pioneers. team and this also affected the team's Jacewic/ flies complaint and the Pioneers are victims of unfair Jacewic z believesthat because the Pioneers performance. There has been a discrepancy regarding judgment by the newly formed EAIAW had to adjust to playing under the leadership the. Eastern Association for Intercollegiate Selection Committee. of a new coach the team was affected . The pioneers have averaged a total of 65.5 Athletics for Women Selective Committee's JV goes winless because it took them "about half a year" to points/ a game, with Karen Petermann decision in choosing Ramapo over WPC for This season the WPC women's junior the Division III Regionals for this area. The varsity basketball team finished without seven-member committee held three votes winning a game at 0-7. This seems and Ramapo won a close 2-1 vote over WPC. misleading for there were many factors that Classifieds Jacewic/ said she filed a formal complaint determined the outcome of its season. T.V. production people needed: and has compiled all the statistics and (continued on page 14} Babysitter needed for occasional evening lighting, camera-work, etc. Also mailed them to the committee members and babysitting. Own transportation helpful but media salespeople. Please call Tim to president of the EA1AW. According to not necessary, Wayne apartment. Call 694- Masters of P.M. Productions. 887- .hicewic/"they didn't have any set criteria; \\ NORTH JERSEY 3689. 5006. they were arbitrarily setting their own M WOMEN'S HEALTH standards in selecting the teams." ^ORGANIZATION INC She believes their decision was based on students who would like to share my: Roommate needed: 1st floor , Family Planning Service \ home with me in exchange for a fee or apartment in 2 family house. Own the fact that Ramapo defeated the Pioneeis babysitting services. You must have bedroom. 5 minutes from WPC. by two points in the regular season game Birth Control patience and love children. Elmwobd Available how. Call 595-1263 M-F they played. The EAIAW handbook clearly points out that the teams should be judged Information oPark area. 791-5929. Call between 10- after 6 pm. Ask for Kathy or Karen. Pregnancy Testing 4. on common opponents, strength of schedule Roommate's) wanted: House in and strength of opponents. VD Screening Jacewicz believes the following show WPC Federal tax returns prepared: Only Paterson, 2 miles from campus. Abortion Counseling $5.00. Call 767-3382. Available now. Call Dave at 595- to.bea**stronger"teamthan Ramapo: WPC 2248. played 24 division teams and Ramapo 450 HAMBURG TPKE. Cosmetics: Part-time sales. Top line played II, Seventeen of the Pioneers 24 for home parties and/ or sales to Drivers: $4.85 per hour to drive a games were against Divisions 1 aridtfrwhiclt . WAYNE beauty salons. Fantastic earnings for school "bus part-time. We will train are the toughest divisions. The two teams . 278-4500 short hours. For appt. call 265-3126. you. Charter work is available. Van drivers needed also. ConvenienttoRt. Politically aware volunteers needed. 17 & Rut. Call 845-3300. Burt Ross for Congress Committee. Typing: term papers, resumes. Pick Telephone 568-9321. up & delivery required. All work done on IBM Selectrix. Call 694-8924. Voice Lessons: Popular, rock, GOT A classical, breath control, range and Want to have something made, voice development. Laura Carrano, hemmed or just to stitch up a hole? professional singer. For free audition' Come to Eugenia. Not expensive at call 891-7351. all. Call 595-3046. LEGAL Invite the bunch... mix a great, big bucketful! of Open House Punch HASSLE? Serves 32... tastes like a super cocktail! Smoothest, most delicious drink for any crowd! .Mix in advance, add 7UP and ice at party time — and serve from the bucket. Looks and tastes great. Free Counseling

Recipe: One fifth Southern Comfort Service: 3 quarts ?UP 6 oz fresh 'emon juice One 6 oz can frozen orange luice One 6-oz can frozen lemonade Chi>i ^gradients Mix m bucket, SGA Lawyer adding 7UP last Add drops of red food coloring (optional): stir Aad ice. orange and lemon slices Puts punch in any party! u Wed. 9:30 am-3:30 pm Southern Comfort SC Room 330 Nothing's so delicious as Comfort & on-the-rocks! SOUJHERN.CQMFORT CORPORATION. 8Q

Miguel Mendoza Left: Pioneer Clinton Wheeler slamsthe ball through tfte hoop in opening game against Allegheny. Right: Wheeler shoots one of his patented jumpers as Allegheny's Dave Contardi (41) and George Dafton (25) try to defend.

By LAMONT 81NG floor. That's where tournament M\ P Ste\e Vikings put the game on ice as they led b> as second half. Behind Dave Coniardi's 24 Staff Writer Keenan came in. much as 24 points. Green. Timberiake. and points and Eric Lindberg's 22. the Gators Keenan. a b'T' forward from Ridgeiield. Keenan were the big men. with Timberiake closed to 53-51 before the Pioneers opened scored 20 pom:s in the first half. He dro\e getting 14 second half points. their lead and ware never seriously i>—n\ ^nd Bob Ciccone. it ihe lane at will and made some ke\ ottensile Ted Bonner was the Piopeer offense in the threatened again. Final score was 81-74. ^"".J o! ;neir Pioneer careers rebounds to keep L'psaia ahead. Keenan second half scoring 15 points. Wheeler Pioneers. o- Wheeler, ii was an abrupi scored ssx of l"p>a!a^ first ten points cooled down considerably and finished with a >pec:jcu;ar veason. And \v ! he Vikings lumped out to a 6-2 lead, and 26 points. Bonner finished as the Pioneer's -e\ er trailed the rest c-i the w a\ T he high scorer with 28 points. The 6'4 forward Pioneer notes: I he P:oneers ended their Pioneers did manage te tie the eome--t on out of South Orange also h-id 14 rebounds. Pioneers finished at 20-7. Upsate carries a 'r.e dM'erent-occaMon-. but never could 'zo She difference in the game was the 23-4 record into Pennsylvania for the Mid- ::r. V.jtii knaNof theNC-W ahead. A ke\ to first half along with Keenan. Vikings getting off to that earK jump, and Atlantic Finais this Saturdav. was the play .of 6'5" Phi! Timberiake holding it. Keenan finished with 2!S points, John Rice, against Allegheny scored his Timberlake was a force oi! the boards Mr the and Timberiake. an all-tournament pick, i .GOOth point as a Pioneer. Rice, who is 6'2" r".-.- hang \ ikmgs w ith eight rebounds at the hali But had 20. and from Maplewood. returns for still .-.;: :r.e -,v -.c hal: In thhee- first halt. the man who realK did the Pioneers m.wa-. Pioneers Win Opener another year of action for the Pioneers. 'A r;ev>j'^ !•:> "••••"'- helped keep the Eiimna "'T:n> " Green. In Fndas's opening round game, the Other returning players include: Wheeler, P.;-—r- u.:h;n -«:r;i>.;ni: d^ianor at 54-49 at Green, at 5'6" the smallest pla\er on both Pioneer's beat Allegheny of Meachilie. PA. Bonner. Clayton Morrell, John Caidweli. n^!: Mrne V> hve:^: and Ted Bonner -.earns, scored 16 of his 26 points in the M-4. Malik Abdullah, Mike Fitzgerald. Willis corr.^i-ec :o: .;f- o: the Pioneers 4^ points second half. With 12 assies, he penetrated In that eame. Clinton Wheeler led the Simmons and James Me Clain. Looking to B.^r.r.^r v. ^. rart:cu;a:i\ etfectr.e oil the :hrough the Pioneer defense to help the Pioneers with 25 points, and John Rice and move up from our undefeated JV squad are: hoards w;ih e.kin: rebounds at the hail" Ted Bonner had 21 apiece. The Pioneers Dwight Atkinson. Bob Degman, and a host Bor.ner didn't recer.e much support under Second half ail Vikings took the lead for good at the9:15 mark of *.he of others. Named to All-tournament team '.r.i v-c-^rc^- w;th John Demh\ nursing irethree e The Vikings scored the first 12 points of first .period and never trailed again. The were Keenan and teammate Timberiake up persona. iouK I p^tia contmua goi the ha!! to open up a 66-49 lead before the Pioneeo led 45-38 at halftime and increased front. Eric Lindberg of Allegheny, Wheeler :ebo-Tid alter rebound at both end •i the Pioneers called time-out. At that point, the their leach-to 51-41 at the beginning of the and George Spears of Washington & Lee. Women,cagers end dismal season See story page 15