State Colleges Face CORNELL Last-Minute Cuts The much discussed budgetary belt-tightening planned for Cornell CHRONICLE endowed divisions over the next three years is already a hard economic fact of life facing the University's four statutory units — which have been operating under severe spending limitations since The official weekly of record for last December Some may have expected that Cornell's state-supported units Thursday. March 4, 1971 would escape the budgetary cutbacks because they have never used Vol. 2 No. 23 deficit financing, a basic cause of the new budgetary limitations in the endowed units "Just the opposite is true." Administration SetsGuidelines explained Arthur H Peterson. University controller. "There is no such thing as deficit financing For Endowed Salary Increases for any state-supported opera- Guidelines have been established for 1971-72 salary increases for faculty and staff of Cornell tion. University's endowed colleges with job performance the key factor in granting raises. "However, when state income In preparing the budget for 1971-72. in the endowed units. Cornell administrators set aside funds for threatens to fall behind salary increases for faculty and the various categories of non-academic employes Each manager and expenses, budgets are cut — dean will be told how many dollars he has for granting raises, and can then determine who will get what immediately," Peterson said. increase. The burden of making individual determinations will fall on the department head, with the help of "This means services, programs first-line supervisors, who will base their judgments on employe performance. and even people are curtailed. Supervisors will review With limited funds available for With state units, you cut the coat individual salary adjustments, to fit the cloth " increases, an across-the-board with each employe when the adjustment will be made only for Peterson indicated that an approved budget has been unexpected "tailoring" of budget classified employes All returned later this spring. This is employes in this category will for state support units at Cornell most important in recognizing had occurred in early December; receive a basic $125 increase. superior performance and the This is the second half of a $250 that next year's proposed budget need for improving performance, for Statutory units will also be commitment made by the according to Samuel A. University last year very tight; that capital ARTHUR H PETERSON Lawrence, vice president for Statutory Belt- Tightening For classified employes, who construction budgets have administration. almost been eliminated for the are those in positions for which coming fiscal year; and that there is a numerical job austere budgets will continue at classification and salary least into the 1972-73 year. Second Senate Meets; schedule, the minimum pay rates Peterson said the State Budget for each class will also be Office early last December adjusted upward in order to keep directed that some $1,200,000 Names Cooke Speaker pace with prevailing wage scales for clerical and technical jobs be cut from the current budgets Cornell University's second University Senate began its business of the statutory units. With less Tuesday as it elected J. Robert Cooke. assistant professor of All other salary adjustments for than four months remaining in agricultural engineering, as speaker. classified employes will be based the state's fiscal year, the cuts, Cooke. who was a member of the Cornell Constituent Assembly, is on merit. SAMUEL A LAWRENCE representing almost 10 per cent a newly elected senator representing the non-tenured faculty of The funds set aside to finance Announces Salary Plans of the state funds available for Agricultural Engineering. Animal Science and Food Science both across-the-board and merit wage schedule Still others, the remainder of the year, raises for classified salary Ellen Mandell. a graduate student, who also is a new senator, was whose work has been superior, required unusually drastic employes will be approximately elected secretary. Elected to the Senate's Executive Committee were: may be rewarded with raises controls 7 5 per cent of the current Neil Henry, non-tenured faculty; Ulric Neisser and William C. Kelly, which exceed 7.5 per cent. These spending controls, tenured faculty; Robert Platt and Mark Wurzel. undergraduates; Peter payroll for this category. "This is an average figure, For non-academic employes in which will continue at least until Heywood. graduate; and George Peter, exempt employe Two more statutory (state) units at Cornell, . persons are to be elected at large at the next Senate meeting Tuesday however.'' Lawrence the state's fiscal year ends on increases were established by March 31. include: a complete (March 9) in Kaufmann Auditorium, Goldwin Smith Hall. emphasized. "Some classified employes will receive only the the New York State Legislature freeze on hiring; elimination of all During the final session of the first University Senate Thursday. last year, for a two-year period state funded rep'agr work; a basic $125 increase Others will February 25, Mrs Desdemona P. Jacobs was elected as trustee from These specify a raise of $525 or drastic cut in funds available for receive an adjustment to bring outside the Cornell community. 6 per cent of salary, whichever is Continued on Page 7 their pay in line with the new Continued on Page 7 7 greater, in addition to a years-of- service increment provided in Larency Rising on Campus state wage schedules, where applicable. Salaries for faculty in the statutory units have not been George Suggests Anti-Theft Precautions established. Salary increases for non- Thefts on the Cornell University campus continue to Lowell T. George. Safety Division director, attributed much of the classified, non-academic skyrocket, with incidents of larceny during the first month of theft to "pure carelessness" on the part of owners of the property employes in the endowed units the second semester mounting to more than half of the stolen. will be based entirely on merit, entire first semesters total, according to Safety Division He also pointed to the new pohcy of open dormitories, with 24- with approximately 5 per cent of figures. hour visiting privileges, as a factor which makes it almost the current salary total in that impossible to control access to private rooms category set aside to finance "This open policy makes it doubly important that persons living Continued on Page 17 in dormitories take added precautions to safeguard their property." he said From Safety Division reports for the fall term, figures show 261 Chronicle incidents of theft. 11 5 of them from living units. 36 from Willard Capsule Straight Hall (exclusive of food theft) and 110 elsewhere. CORNELLS 1915 mad "With the open dorms," Safety Division Captain Ralph Coskey bomber said, "we have had several reports that go like this: A boy opens Page 2 HISTORY department the door to a girl's room, sees a girl studying at the desk, and says. names first woman to faculty Hi, is this Patty's room?' When the girl says she doesn't know any Page 7 Patty, the boy says. 'Thanks,' and leaves You know and I know AGILE gymnasts — a that if the girl hadn't been sitting at the desk, the guy probably Chronicle photo feature would have taken anything of value." Page 5 George said that another serious problem is the lack of security- SCULPTOR Jason Seley's latest works on display in consciousness in academic buildings. Berlin "We have administration and faculty people operating today the Page 3 same way they did 20 years ago, and it just doesn't work." he said WILSON Foundation LOWELL T GEORGE RALPHJ COSKEY honors 26 Comedians. Captain of the Division Continued on Page 11 Safety Division Director Page 2 2 CORNELL CHRONICLE Thursday, March 4, 1971 Academic Recognition for COSEP Dorm Room Selection Process Begins for '71-2 Accomodations for about upperclassmen and graduate 5.200 single undergraduate and students interested in increasing graduate students will be Continued on Page 7 / available at Cornell in the fall of 1971, according to Ruth W. Darling, associate dean of Mary Norton students. This is up about 400 from the number of Appointed To accomodations available at the History Faculty start of the current year Mary Beth Norton, a specialist Information sheets about in American history, has been available housing and appointed an assistant professor applications for housing have in the Department of History. been distributed to residences on Currently on the faculty of the campus. Additional information University of Connecticut, Miss sheets and applications are Norton received her doctorate available at the Office of the from Harvard University in 1969 Dean of Students. , When she comes to Cornell July the Housing Services Office. 223 1, she will be the first woman Day Hall, the Willard Straight faculty member in the history desk and the Noyes Center desk department. Upperclassmen will have first Miss Norton's fields of interest choice in selection of rooms, include Colonial American although the range of choices History, the American may be limited if the volume of Revolution. American Intellectual room requests makes it History, and the American COSEP HONORS — Six of the students enrolled in the COSEP (Committee on Special Educational Projects) Program, impossible to provide the Constitution. above, were among some 40 COSEP students honored for achieving a "B" or better average. Sunday evening at a approximately 2.700 spaces . Born in Ann Arbor, Mich.. Miss dinner in the Straight's Memorial Room. Delndge C. Hunter, center. COSEP director, presents honor certificates to needed to house incoming (left to right) Frank G Washington. Anna C. Walker, Edna A. Salter, Freida G Jones, Kenneth A McClane Jr. and Norton received her bachelor of freshmen. Gabriel Garcia In left background is Mrs. Conne Galvm of Ithaca, one of the speakers at the dinner. The dinner was arts degree with high honors hosted by the staffs of the COSEP Office and the Africana Studies and Research Center, with Center Director James E. Room rates for the 1971-72 from the University of Michigan Turner serving as master of ceremonies. year will be from 3 to 10 per cent in 1964. and a master's degree above the 1970-71 rates. The from Harvard in 1965. prices vary according' to room Her dissertation "The British- size, the number of occupants in Americans: The Loyalist Exiles in a room and the common 26 Named Wilson Fellows England, 1774-1789," is facilities available within the scheduled for publication this Cornell University ranks Thomas P. Grumbly in political professors, with 15 regional various residence halls. Reduced year by Little, Brown It received second in the nation in the science, Naomi S. Guttman in selection committees rates may be available to the 1969 Allan Nevins Prize for number of students who have biophysics. Robert P. Kraynak in interviewing candidates and students who wish to rent a large the best written dissertation in been named Woodrow Wilson political science. Marc W making"the finarselections. The single as a double, or a large American history She has also Fellows or Finalists, with 26 Kruman in history, Roger N foundation seeks to encourage double as a triple. published a number of articles compared to Harvard's 33 in the Lazoff in psychology. James S. outstanding young people to Application deadline • for She was a teaching assistant 25th annual competition May in American studies, consider careers of service, renewal of occupancy of the at Harvard from 1966 until Next in line are Yale University Terrence S. Millar in primarily in college teaching same quarters is 4 p.m.. 1969. when she was appointed with 17, and the University of mathematics, Mrs Keren D. Rice This year 29 per cent of the Wednesday, March 10, in the assistant professor at the California, Brown, and University in linguistics, Mrs. Eve J. Fellows and Finalists are women, Housing Services Office, 223 University of Connecticut of Chicago, all with 16 Sedgwick in English literature. a percentage that has remained Day Hall. The deadline for group Three hundred and five college Mrs. Lisa M. Steinman . in about the same for the past five requests for on-campus housing L. Pearce Williams, chairman seniors will receive support from English, David M. Van Leer in years. Men were elected from is 4 p.m., Monday, March 15. in of the department, said the the Woodrow Wilson National English-American studies, Vassar and women from Yale for the same office History Department "is quite Richard Velkley in political the first time. pleased to have Miss Norton join Fellowship Foundation for a first Two voluntary residential units science, and Walter F Zukowski us, not, of course, because she is year of study at the graduate Fellowship winners and might be formed at Cornell in the in classics. a woman, but because she was school of their choice, while 741 Finalists represent 330 colleges fall of 1971. A proposed unit decidedly the most qualified of Finalists are recommended for More than 10.000 college and universities in 46 states and with the theme of- personal the eight outstanding applicants fellowships and assistantships seniors were nominated by their all 10 Canadian provinces. development would house both awarded by graduate schools. we interviewed for the job." Cornell's 12 Fellows are: Miss Norton is a member of Richard G. Berman in English, Mad Bomber the American Historical Ronald M. Childress in Association, Organization of government. Mark A. Cordover in American Historians, Society of political science, Hazel S Instructor Opposed W.W. l American Historians and Phi Freeman in history, Timothy S. The bombing this week of the U.S. Capitol accusations by the exploits of Erich Holt, Ph.D. Beta Kappa. Greening in economics, Robert was the second in the Capitols 150-year '14 and instructor in German. He deposited in E. Hannigan in history. Carol A. history the United States Senate a suitcase, which Ktlgbeil in English. John L. Oddly enough, there is a bit of exploded He then went to Long Island, and CORNELL Longeway in history of associated with the first bombing in July. 1915 called on J. P. Morgan. Jr., chief organizer of CHRONICLE | philosophy. Arthur M Melzer in when a U.S. Senate reception room was slightly munitions shipments to Britain. Forcing his way :•:•: Published weekly by the •:•: philosophy, Thomas L damaged by a bomb planted by a Cornell into the house, he shot Morgan in groin and hip, Richardson in mathematics. Mrs instructor named Erich Holt. Ph D. '14 who was but the dauntless financier fell upon him, the Office of Public •§ Susan P. Sanger in psychology, protesting United States arms sales in World British Ambassador (Cecil Spring-Rice) wrested Information of Cornell and Gary J. Wolfe in Slavic War I. away his revolvers, and the butler, named University and distributed free of charge to faculty, studies. In his "A History of Cornell", in the chapter on Physick. administered the coup de grace with a students. staff and The 14 finalists are: Mrs "The First War", Morris Bishop, the Kappa Alpha lump of cannel coal. Holt was carried to the employes. Mail Marilyn B. Cane in anthropology. Professor of Romance Literature, Emeritus, Mineola jail, where he committed suicide by subscriptions $10 per writes: throwing himself head downward eighteen feet year. Editorial office 110 "On. the faculty passions ran high. The to the concrete floor. It was then discovered that Day Hall. Ithaca. NY. Professor of Latin tried to have the Professor of Holt had begun his graduate studies at Harvard, 14850. Telephone 256- Sage Notes German expelled from the Town and Gown under the name of Erich Muenter. When his wife 4666. Editor. Arthur All graduate students Club, on the ground that any reader of the New died suddenly of arsenic poisoning. Muenter should remember that the Yorker Staats-Zeitung was a traitor. Dark stories removed to Mexico, to emerge later under the Brodeur. Managing Editor. last day to drop a course or were privately whispered about certain pacifists name of Holt. He had a new and phenomenal Michael Rosenbaum. change from credit to audit and German sympathizers, tales of concrete scholastic career, doing four undergraduate Photo Editor. Russell C. is April 16. If you are going tennis courts designed to serve as gun years in one in the Fort Worth Polytechnic Hamilton. to drop a course, do it now emplacements, tales of bomb manufacture in Institute before coming to Cornell to take his rather than relying on your faculty cellars. Some color was given to these Ph.D." memory to do it later S£::SS:;:;:::W:%^^ Thursday, March 4,1971 CORNELLCHRONICLE 3 Two at CUMC Improve New Seley Works Exhibited in Berlin

Schistosomiasis Surgery Sculptor Jason Seley's latest Two researchers at the Cornell University Medical College have works, now on exhibit in Berlin, improved and simplified a surgical technique for treating a tropical mark a new stage in his art. disease the World Health Organization (WHO) considers "the most "My previous works have been important infectious disease of mankind." described as organic, but these The disease is schistosomiasis, which affects an estimated 80.000 latest pieces are modern to 90.000 persons of Puerto Rican background in New York City abstract," explained Seley. A alone. Cornell professor and chairman Dr Edward I. Goldsmith, clinical associate professor of surgery, and of the Department of Fine Arts, Dr. B. H. Kean, clinical professor of medicine, have improved the he has earned international fame method of removing a parasitic worm, whose eggs cause liver with his sculptures constructed damage and varying degrees of debilitation, from the blood of of automobile bumpers. schistosomiasis victims. There are fourteen new works Until recently, the standard therapy for the disease involved the use in all — wall reliefs constructed of various drugs, such as antimony, but these have produced serious of new bumper guards, and side effects. For this reason, the two researchers had develsped a attached to sheet metal forms. surgical approach of removing the worms. Three of them go around The procedure, which they have now improved, makes possible corners. They were done filtration of the blood outside the body to remove the worms. between June of last year and this January while Seley was In addition to proving to be effective therapy with little risk for the Artist in Residence of the City of patient, the new technique is also comparatively simple and Berlin under the sponsorship of inexpensive to perform. The latter factors are especially important if the Berlin Artist Program of schistosomiasis is to be fought in the impoverished and German Academic exchange underdeveloped parts of the world where it is most prevalent, and if Service (Berliner we are to make the treatment readily available to thousands of Kunstlerprogramm des DAAD). patients in New York who have contracted schistosomiasis while The works went on exhibit in living in Puerto Rico, the two researchers said. January. They will be exhibited in Bermen this summer and possibly other locations in Humanities Society Offers Germany. Summer Research Grant Seley said these latest works are interesting for him from Non-tenured faculty members familiar with the applicant's work several standpoints: "I designed in humanities departments should also be asked to send a them in my studio on a drawing within the University are eligible confidential letter of support board I had the sheet metal for $2,000 Summer Research (with two carbons) to the director forms prefabricated and painted Fellowships in the Society for the of the Society. to exact specifications. It's the Humanities Copies of applications for first time I haven't welded my According to its director, Henry Cornell Research Grants own work and it's the first time I Guerlac. the Society expects to Committee Awards, suitably BUMPER TO BUMPER — One of the new works of sculptor and Cornell h3ve left the bumper guards award two more such post- supplemented if necessary, will professor Jason Seley. above, now on display at a museum in Berlin. exactly as they were doctoral fellowships for two- be acceptable While application manufactured." Seley used month periods this summer. The for the Cornell Research Awards Cornell Libraries Join Volkswagen and Opel parts fresh Fellows will be provided with will not prejudice an applicant's from the factory. offices in the Society's house and chances of obtaining a Society with secretarial assistance. for the Humanities' Summer Chicago Research Center Like so many artists, Seley Applications for the fellowships Fellowship, the latter may not be Some three million volumes from the various reference declines to discuss what he is must be submitted to the Society held concurrently with other of highly specialized research librarians on campus and in trying to say with his work on the not later than March 1 5 research support material are available to Cornell particular from MJSS Barbara premise that the art is its own The applications (in triplicate) Election to the Summer students and faculty through the Brown in the reference depart- language and speaks for itself. should include a curriculum Fellowships will be made as University's affiliation with the ment of the Olin Library. Her He says the idea of making vitae an outline of a research soon as possible after the Center for Research Libraries in extension is 6-3319. sculptures from car bumpers project, and a statement of other deadline of March 1 5. Action will Chicago. "just sort of evolved existing support .or sources to be taken by the executive Requested materials usually which requests have*'been made committee of the Society, on arrive in Ithaca within three or Linda Paterson, "Around 1958. I started using A Cornell faculty member recommendation of a selection four days via either United Parcel all sorts of scrap metal shapes as committee, in late March. Service or Air Parcel Post. The Ithaca Soprano, armatures (forms) for the plaster The Society observes the non-profit Center was organized To Give Recital casts of bronze sculptures. following guidelines in awarding in 1949 to acquire and house, Gradually I began to use car Chronicle Items Linda Thurston Paterson. the fellowships: research materials of such bumpers exclusively for soprano, will sing selections by Items for inclusion in the —Preference is given, in specialized use by scholars that armatures and finally I Handel. Beethoven and Chronicle's calendar must accordance with the Society's the preservation of a single copy eliminated the plaster and Schumann at 8:15 p.m. Friday be submitted to the Office established policy, to research centrally would likely meet the casting and worked directly with (March 5). in Barnes Hall of the Secretary of the projects of interest to more than needs of the more than 60 uni- the bumpers. Now I'm hardly Auditorium. University. 312 Day Hall, one humanistic discipline. versities and research conscious that I use bumpers. at least one week prior to organizations that operate and The program will begin with They are a part of my existence, publication of the —Fellows are expected to be maintain the Center. songs from "Serse" and like breathing," he said. in residence for at least two "Rinaldo" by Handel. Also on the Chronicle This process Cornell University Libraries has months. The grants, however, program are Beethoven's "La both registers the event on a teletype connection between are not summer salaries, but partenza." "In questa Tomba the University's master Olin Library and the Center in fellowships for research. oscura," four settings from calendar, and also assures Chicago. This assures prompt "Sehnsucht" (Goethe). two Houses for Sale inclusion in the calendar —The Society cannot support transmission of requests for "Gellert Songs." and "Aus ji;i Cornell Faculty and staff •••; printed in the Chronicle. work for the doctorate or work materials A pamphlet covering Goethe's Faust (Flohlied). Op. j: are reminded of the :§ This system is necessary done in preparing a textbook. the subject areas of the 75. No 3;" and Schumann's existing book in Day Hall "$ since the Chronicle staff is Further information may be collection and additional 'Frauenliebe und leben. Op. 42." that lists houses currently fj unable to process the large obtained by calling 256-4086 information may be obtained number of "late " calendar William W. Austin. Goldwin for sale in the Ithaca area. $• items that have been Smith Professor of Musicology. This is a worthwhile •$ submitted recently. will accompany Mrs Paterson on service for both buyer and :•:• All items for publication the piano. seller. It is an immediate •:•: in the Cornell Chronicle Birth Control Survey Participants Mrs. Paterson. who has sung reference free of cost and •;•• must be submitted to the with the St. Louis Opera Theater, also provides the i^ The results of the survey Chronicle office. 110 Day 102. or by sending a note has performed locally with the opportunity for business -g on Birth Control Measures Hall, by the Monday to A. van Tienhoven (102 Ithaca Opera Association In conducted on a direct from •;•• have been published previous to publication 1968 she performed the title role owner basis. Those who want to receive Rice Hall) requesting the Only typewritten of Celti's "LOrontea " at Cornell This book is available for :•$: a reprint can ask for them reprint of Education and information will be She is currently a visiting part- use in room 223 of Day $ either at Rice Hall. Room the Population Explosion accepted time lecturer in Cornell's Hall. $ Department of Music. 4 CORNELL CHRONICLE Thursday, March 4, 1971 Japanese Drama Here Sat Poll Shows Ag Grads Favor Business Fields More graduating students are majoring in agricultural business management and marketing than in any other field at the New York State College of Agriculture, according to a survey of the 1970 graduating class The report, compiled by Howard S Tyler, professor of personnel administration in the College's Resident Instruction office, represented the first survey of fields of study for any one graduating class Although the students had a wide variety of vocational interests, more than half the "graduates were enrolled in four fields: agricultural business management and marketing, animal science, biological sciences, and general agriculture. Tyler found that one-third of the 423 June 1970 graduates "Right to Die" changed their fields of study sometime during their -college Bio, Society course. Changing majors in mid- stream is common among Panel Topic students at the College, A three-member panel will according to this report discuss "Man's Right to Die" in Almost all. or 97 per cent, of the next session of the Biology the students who began in and Society series The agricultural business discussion will be held at 8:15 management and marketing p.m Monday. March 8. in Bailey continued in it through Auditorium, rather than in the graduation Over the four year Statler Auditorium where the MALE CHAUVINISTS? — The all-male cast of the National Theatres of Japan performs a scene from "Funa Benkai."period, the department attracted lectures in the series are usually a classical "No" drama The troop can be seen on Saturday. March 6. at 8:15 p.m in Barnes Hall an additional 43 per cent of its presented graduating class from other The National Theatres of the oldest and greatest living beauty: sumptuous and Panelists are Bentlev Glass, departments, yet lost only one Japan will present an evening of theatres of the world. Its origins elaborate costumes add to the vice president of the State student to another field traditional Japanese drama this stretch back to the classical court spectacle. The play's text is University of New York at Stony Saturday evening. March 6. at dances of eighth-century Japan, chanted to an accompaniment of One-third of these additional Brook and for many years one of 8:1 5 p.m. in Barries Hall. and it took essentially its present both a chorus and a small students transferred from the nation's leading geneticists; Leon Kass, a physician- The 24 actor-dancers and form in the fourteenth century orchestra of ancient instruments, general agriculture. The others biochemist and currently the musicians will perform a No play Its all-male cast wear valuable primarily drums and flutes came from 12 other fields within executive secretary of the as well as a Kyogen. or comedy masks which are often museum the College, but no significant No theatre is for a special Committee on Life Sciences and The classical No drama is one of pieces because of their age and number transferred from science- audience Because of the slow related fields, the report noted Social Policy in the Division of and deliberate movement, Behavioral Sciences of the The Department of Animal stylized gestures, economy of National Research Council, and Science had a large turnover of Veterinarians Develop New setting and monotone chanting, Diana Crane, an associate majors, but 'more students the dramatic frame of reference professor in the Department of graduated than first matriculated Concepts in Canine Surgery is that of medieval Japan, and Behavioral Sciences in the reflects the influence of austere Three out of four of those Two new concepts in spinal School of Hygiene and Public broke off. Dr Brasmer said meditative Zen Buddhism on the originally interested in animal surgery are helping injured dogs Health at the Johns Hopkins The new technique of plating developing dramatic form. The science continued in the field to walk again at the New York University. was developed by the two expressive criteria differ from through graduation However, State Veterinary College Glass, who is a biologist- veterinarians during a research anything in Western theatre the department gained 40 per project reported a year ago in philosopher, will deal primarily One technique involves the use cent of its graduating class from which an entire vertebra was The troupe performing at with the biological meaning of of a special plastic plate and a other fields, especially from the replaced by a plastic one The Cornell is under the sponsorship death. Kass. who is devoting all new method of attaching it to College's former two-year improved method for spinal of the Foreign Ministry of Japan his time to the ethical problems bones which makes it course. plating was necessary, Dr and Pacific World Artists, and raised by advances in biology unnecessary to drill holes in the Brasmer said, because the plates includes some of the greatest The Division of Biological and medicine, will speak on bones The second concept have to support the entire weight performers in this genre. Three of Sciences trimmed its list of some of the philosophical issues involves a localized cooling of the dog the group have been honored majors considerably by underlying the legal and ethical process, something that has not with the title of "cultural graduation, yet gaiped some concerns involved in hastening previously been done in The second surgical innovation treasure" by the Japanese students from other fields. or delaying the moment of death veterinary medicine is a variation of an old tech- nique called hypothermia. government Almost 40 per cent of its original Diana Crane will report on her The first technique was Hypothermia is the process of The production is being majors graduated from non- current studies of attitudes developed by Dr Timothy H cooling the body during an brought to Ithaca by the science fields such as general toward death and dying as seen Brasmer, associate professor of operation to minimize chances of Departments of Theatre Arts and agriculture, communication arts in two different hospital wards small animal surgery at Cornell, ill effects Total body Asian Studies, and by Risley and rural sociology On the other concerned with the care of and Dr W V Lumb of Colorado hypothermia has been used in College Tickets are on sale at hand, the Division attracted 20 patients suffering from fatal State University. The cooling open heart surgery since 1952 the Willard Straight Ticket Office per cent of its final class from illnesses. technique was developed by Dr and in brain and heart surgery for and at Mayer's Smoke Shop. departments such as science The discussion ends the Brasmer Both developments about a dozen years. education, agricultural portion of the series dealing with Six parolees from San Quentin have been reported in the Dr Brasmers surgery engineering and animal science man's diseases The remaining take the stage in Statler next Journal of the American technique, however, uses a two general topics in the series Monday, March 8, at .8 1 5 p.m.. General agriculture, the non- Veterinary Medical Association localized cooling process in are "Problems of the Black in a production of The Cage, by specialized curriculum, both The special plastic plate and which only the spinal column is Community" and "Man's Use of Ron Cluchey gained and lost students Over new method of attaching it to-the cooled during an operation and Other Men " half of those starting as freshmen spinal bones gives extra support not the whole body This drama of prison life is The panel discussion, part of a written, produced, directed and in general agriculture graduated to the spine. Dr Brasmer said In "This is a new concept in two-hour credit course, is open acted by former convicts It was in other fields They specialized the older method, bolts were veterinary medicine." Dr to the public The series is first seen at San Quentin in a in such areas as agricultural passed through the bones to Brasmer said sponsored by the University's prisoners' drama workshop As business management and attach a stainless steel spinal To achieve the cooling, a slush- Division of Biological Sciences, members were released, they marketing, rural sociology, and plate into position on the like frozen solution is packed the New York State College of formed Barbwire Theater The animal science backbone In the new method, around the bared spinal column Agriculture and Cornell's group is now a full-fledged acting the plastic plate is held to the and the spinal cord temperature, Tyler plans to make similar Program on Science. Technology company in San Francisco and. backbone by a friction grip made normally 39 degrees Centigrade studies for each graduating and Society with federal help, works with possible by a machining process is dropped to six degrees class. "These reports help to give Events in the series are prisoners in the area through the Because it is not necessary to Centigrade mif>imizing chances the College a clearer and more broadcast live over WVBR-AM on medium of drama. drill holes in the bones, the for ill effects. accurate picture of each a closed-circuit program to the The play itself moves with strength of the bones is not Both of the new surgical graduating class than we have University's dormitories. Station reduced. Drilling of holes in techniques are now used in the economy of setting but had before," he reported "We WHCU-FM will broadcast a tape former method weakened the college's Intensive Care Unit, the maximum of intensity and even can better understand how the of the discussion starting at bones so much that in an active only such facility of its kind for brutality It gives a prisoner's fields of interest shift for one 10:05 the night of the panel •ioquentlv jls Continued on Page 7 / class over its four years here." discussion. Thursday, March 4, 1971 CORNELLCHRONICLE 5 Those Magnificent Men on the Parallel Bars ...

Lucky Holloway performs the floor "X'

Russ Wiggin competes on the side horse

The faces of members of Cornell's Gymnastics team, as well as one of the squad's ardent fans, mirror the concentration and determination necessary for success in this most graceful, yet demanding, of sports. The agile Cornellians last week won their fourth straight title

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Photos by David Robins and J. Blaze, Jr. Jim Hauser completes the long horse vault. Lynn Williams works out on the par 6 CORNELLCHRONICLE Thursday, Human Affairs Program, Part III —An Assessment This issue of the Chronicle Appeals to change its decision experience. To quote a student's (From the report on the Health programs at the last minute. agencies such Bo prints the third part of the The December meeting of the report: We have gotten to know Group) "The field focus The most satisfactory projects, Economic o r t Educational Policy Board's Board, which led to a unanimous one school very well. We've demanded an integration of from the point of view of the Corporation a he assessment of the Human Affairs vote to grant the variance, was learned that merely packaging a learning which is seldom integration of theory and Planning Coun d h Program (HAP) at Cornell. This attended by more than 150 standard curriculum in a new achieved in regular courses For experience were those dealing general encoun fa\ portion of the report deals with people. more open way is not the answer their projects the students were with the schools and welfare, response Om ght an evaluation of the projects run During the time that the to this sixth grade's problems (and will be) required to bring probably because it was easier to expected even i c°nti by HAP and their benefit to the garage was open it received We have learned more about many subject areas to bear in define the subject areas In the than has community extensive use There were about their parents and their one particular problem Health Storefront. Elmira, Groton. and experienced 25 people attending the expectations, about local school- has economic. manpower, Communications projects the Linkages bet1 the Community Saturday morning classes, and board politics, and about the organizational, technological, "subjects" involve the whole tower" and the1 e we even more used the facilities problems of ' a dying urban and many other components. All structure of the community. The not new But Auto School during each week. It was used by community " of these must be brought to bear Health group was engaged now being estf ^ b No of students: 3 Cornell students and high-school (From the report on the on any health problem, and the mainly in the planning phase are indeed Whe Courses: City Planning 649 — students, but also by adult Welfare Group) "..Of primary consequent bringing together of The problems in the Housing. professor, exten1 Deci 3 students — 9 credits townspeople, including some importance in evaluating the these areas gave the course the Half Way House, and Community graduate stud und Staff: Professor Benjamin temporarily unemployed factory welfare section is pointing out breadth needed to provide the Auto School groups have already field projects ge Nichols workers and some who were that those enrolled learn how to student with the integrated been mentioned involved in cof'ty Students in this project have directed there by the Storefront. cope with welfare and related picture of the whole range of The individual project leaders community been engaged in the creation The garage appeared to be filling societal problems on a variety of subject areas bearing directly on are all making plans to provide a assume that tl're and operation of a new a community need, and the levels: how to make the welfare the health field Overall, there is more analytical framework for with a partially Ully institution in Ithaca — the responses to it appeared to be bureaucracy more responsive to no question but what the HAP their students next semester In professional, Community Auto School The generally enthusiastic. human needs; how to relate to Health section, formally B & PA most cases this will be based on give them ice project was proposed to HAP by The students involved in the low-income people whose life- 464, was a stimulating, highly reading lists and guest speakers information. No the students themselves and was project spent considerable time style, values and expectations educational experience for the In addition, the over-all program can be m< re; originally thought of as a in the actual operation — getting may be quite different from your enrolled students will include for all students a undergraduate "Us component of the Storefront it ready, teaching classes, and own; how to relate theoretical (From the report on the Half series of seven lectures, each are likely to be program However, as the school performing eight hours of regular material discussed in class to the Way House) "...For all of them, it followed by m-project motivated, buttf^d developed and the garage duty during the week. Much actual experiences encountered is the most meaningful learning discussions, aimed at putting the about the became an actuality. the more time was devoted to the in the field..." they have ever done, which they general questions faced by all organizational P ^ connection with the Storefront problems associated with (From the report on the see as part of a socially the projects into a larger context .studying before Will became tenuous. and the creating the institution, including Storefront) "...In the course of important activity as well." Taken as a whole, the program position to pi' Cor students formed an independent those of taxes and the zoning the "helping" process, students has provided a unique members with ul group The task-force reports also, of law They have written a report learn how a problem is perceived course, called attention to the educational dimension to most tion. The school is operated by an reflecting on this experience for by both the clients and the areas in which the potential students participating The The structu'f th informal group of about 25. who the benefit of those interested in providers of service They begin educational benefits to the students themselves are projects attend meetings, set policy, and similar institutional development. to see some of the constraints students had not been fully generally enthusiastic and eager same as provide a base of support Their upon both, and they learn to ask realized In most cases these had to pursue the questions raised by between indivi^'e purpose is to provide a nonprofit III. Assessment of more sophisticated questions to do with the failure to put the their experience more deeply. and cc facility that is at the same time a about how helping works, or field work expe'nences into a The weaknesses are those college studefl' school, a garage, and a Activities to Date doesn't work, and why To learn broader context in which they associated with a developing close and co^ = fWr community sharing of skills. For Since HAP is conceived of as about unemployment, to cite an could be interpreted. In the program, and plans are well from a staff ( those who need it, there have a combined educational and example a student used, from the Housing Project, however, the underway to attempt to correct already made been regular classes on Saturday service program, the first test to perspective of the Public weakness was just the opposite; them.. contacts in mornings on the basic principles apply to its activities to date Employment Service, of the there was ample material for Secondly, the I of operation of cars, with specific should be the educational value personnel officer at an Ithaca study but little group fielc Benefit to the Community part of an on? instruction on simple to the students who have been in factory, and from a newly laid-off experience. The problem is one that does no' maintenance, tune-ups and it The second should be the factory worker, and to master the of achieving the most effective When the HAP program was initiative and repairs.. being planned, two of the value to the community Finally intricacies of the unemployment balance appropriate to the new student snr The garage has been open for there is the degree to which the compensation laws, is to engage particular project and- the time assumptions made were that the program Th^ct nu use every day of the week, except projects are integrated with the with the complexity of. a problem available The short-comings are students, mainly undergraduates, therefore be , i r0 st Sunday, from 1 1 am to 5 p.m. other divisions of the university in a way that challenges the reflected in the following would be accepted by the cumulative. F 7 ' People who bring their cars into learner to synthesize and try to comments: community and that their work of the communf* te the garage are expected to do Educational Value make sense out of much data could in fact be useful validity of an (From the Alternate Jr. High the work themselves A volunteer to Students Several of the students report As to the acceptance by the has been e School report): "During this mechanic is on duty to help if Taken at face value, the task- changes in their own groups they are attempting to through the semester it certainly has been needed, and tools are available force reports on the various expectations about people and serve, that assumption has been students is difficult to detach oneself from for free use. If parts, oil. tires, anti- projects are generally glowing in institutions with which they work unqualifiedly verified In every of the organ1 the pressures of the work and n''! freeze, etc are needed, the their assessment of the (all of the people, not just clients, project the students appear to members frof attain a theoretical view of the person repairing the car is given educational benefits to the but the agency personnel and have established a close rapport and the incfl development of the school ..." a slip to purchase these from a students involved The faculty members of the Chamber of to the community residents with Cr those membe(i o local auto' parts distributor at a members were particularly Commerce, the V.A. as well). (From the Storefront report) whom they work This is true in leadership discount rate that is midway impressed by the enthusiasm They report, in other words, a "...The students were unanimous Groton, Elmira, and the the organization between the wholesale and retail and dedication of the students to breaking down of stereotypes, in requesting that more Storefront It is true for welfare If the organ' cost Thus the car owner saves whom they talked The general and a learning to engage with structured learning be built into recipients and in the schools survive a'1 money. The difference between tone of the comments is some of their own assump- the project, that the group be This is not to say that all developmental ^ the charge to the "customer" reflected in the following tions ..." assigned some common members of the community have the active part1^11 c and the • wholesale rate quotations: readings and discuss some of the been satisfied There was public (From the Groton Project broader issues _ of goals and students, then represents, aside from donations, (From the report on the opposition to the role of students report) "... The advantages to the strategies involved in projects has not proved* the only direct income to the Alternate Junior High School) in the Alternate Junior High students are obvious They get such as the Storefront They from the school. "Most students have felt the School, but the proposal won the first-hand insight into what is asked, in short, for more explicit community. experience invaluable Radical acceptance of the Board of The school has. had only a really happening to low-income framework — a clearer context HAP short history, but has already educational theories have Education and the school is people in a rural area. They are to interpret the Storefront..." out to try to demonstrated considerable frequently been tempered by the strongly supported by the not treated as outsiders, but have in the success and attracted wide realities of life in the school It (From the Communications parents of children in it. Early been accepted by the Cornell The support After'extensive search in has been a major challenge to report) "The pressure of having issues of the Tompkins Chemung community..." to produce an 8-16 page paper Bulletin were felt by many to be •to help conn September' iqr a suitable work effectively with kids on a 1 every week made it extremely irresponsible. But the increased things for then " F location," a building.was found on daily basis in diverse learning (From the report on the Elmira difficult for students to devote maturity apparent in later issues is a good filbert Linden Avenue, and ihe garage activities In other words, it has Project) "We are impressed much time to the study of the has brought about growing and commun1 opened in October Continued bee.n an intensive experience We think the students, especially communications problem in community acceptance and Students existence in that location, which will undoubtedly influence those who immersed themselves general, or even to an adequate appreciation There have been simply going ' tt however, depended on the' the ways the T.A 's approach the in the community and its survey of the social composition letters in the Ithaca Journal from good to peop1 ' granting of a zoning variance, remainder of their college problems, were impressed with and recent history of the local a prominent member of County unhealthy for c< which was at first denied. careers " what they had learned We are k community. ." government attacking the t£in resulting in the closing of the sure that some students have organization (From the report on the Human Affairs Program, and this garage in mid-November: Most come away with immensely dependent Schools Group) "Most of the The Half Way House and view undoubtedly has some of the activity since that time has greater understanding of the dents. students feel that they have Community Auto School groups support. On the other hand, been devoted to the legal and complexity of human social sl learned much from the suffered from a lack of sufficient members of the staff have met These stall public activity required to organization, but not overawed Sl interaction of their reading and staff direction associated with with various established applied in '1 persuade the' Board of Zoning discussion with their field by it either the acceptance of ongoing organizations1 ' fM 1971 CORNELLCHRONICLE 7 State Units'Budget t Continued from Page 1 the state supported area at Chronicle Comment Cornell is in the General Services played a major role in bringing hourly wages; cutting inventories Chronicle Comment is a forum of opinion for students, staff and em- I Board of budget. It is scheduled to Ort u n i ty into being, with the possible to minimums; elimination of all ployes Comment may be addressed to Michael Rosenbaum. manag. increase by some 14 6 per cent ing editor. Chronicle. 1 22 Day Hall. exceptions of the Storefront and travel outside the state and a N Social to a level of $4,378,000 These have in the Alternate Junior High School. considerable reduction of travel funds, however, are almost Professor R. L. Liboff in his letter I8 favorable The Storefront was designed within the state; elimination of all On Tenure overtime work; postponement of totally earmarked for wage to the Chroncile. published 4 '9ht have specifically to provide benefits to Editor: any new program or service increments or increased utility February 1971. Controversy Cornell students and faculty as- As it has been discovered that scheduled to begin within this charges. The waste of the potentialities FV been" well as to Ithaca residents. The many of Cornell's young faculty period; and a cutback in Although the budget proposed of the FM medium, as expressed planners of the project felt that it will be denied tenure, a communications budgets for next year will enable the by the WHCU-FM programming 'he "ivory would be difficult, if not Statutory colleges to hold the committee for the Re-evaluation policy criticized by Professor 6 impossible, for students to affeting use of telephone pub- world are line. serious cutbacks in of Tenure has formed to examine Liboff. is compounded by the 3 establish effective working lications and printing of linkage allocations for capital the existing system of granting station's low technical standards relationships with people in Peterson explained that the by HAP construction will bring building and denying tenure. Our For example, it is virtually downtown Ithaca from the base cuts hit all state operations when i the activities to a virtual standstill preliminary investigations with impossible to receive WHCU-FM of the community on the hill. The it became clear in Albany that department chairmen and |Decialist. or Of the $14-million previously in stereo with acceptably low value of the Storefront, therefore, income was not coming up to professors of the Arts college Undertakes okayed for state supported distortion, apparently as a result must be considered in terms of expectations. have revealed that there is no get him construction projects at Cornell of the incompetent installation of the opportunities it offers for For next year, "if the budgets adequate measure for the :of'ty affairs, in 71-72. only $1 8-million has a new transmitting antenna over developing a series of projects in recommended by the Governor evaluation of teaching ability, can survived budget cutting sessions a year ago. In addition, one which Cornell students and for Cornell's statutory units are while there is a much more dealing in Albany. The amount remaining channel of WHCU-FM constantly Ithaca people work together. approved by the Legislature, the thorough process for the Nly trained will pay for one small planning carries a low warble or whistle Similarly, the Alternate Junior restrictions will no longer be evaluation of a professor's Qualified to effort and the only major project - The amateurishness which High School is conceived as a necessary," Peterson said publications "ce and still on the books for next year: characterizes the technical side school in which professional "However, it is important to assumption the Veterinary College's In larger departments, a few of WHCU-FM was exemplified by teachers and Cornell students recognize that those budgets are regarding multicategorical research select senior faculty members the live broadcast of the would work closely together already quite austere" its. They building. Work on all other appraise the candidate's written Beethoven's birthday concert last The total 71-72 budget for and highly These standards do apply to projects, including the $3-million work and largely base their December 16; the WHCU statutory units at Cornell to learn such projects as the Groton large animal research facility for recommendations for tenure on control facilities at Bailey Hall includes an increase of some or community organization effort, the College of Agriculture this alone Rarely is the opinion consisted of a Sony tape $2 4 million in state .funds but pltTls they are the welfare rights organization, campus, the $10-million large of the junior faculty and students recorder, and signal transmission almost all of this amount is re *ill be in a and the Tompkins-Chemung animal research farm in Dryden, considered The result is that between Bailey and the required to cover salary Community Bulletin, but none of these and $3-million of new teaching is not considered a downtown studio was via u adjustments for classified ih ' informa- projects has as yet had more construction at the Geneva legitimate manifestation of ordinary narrow-band telephone employees mandated by the than a few months of existence, Experiment Station, has been research. A professor's lack of a lines, which are hardly adequate Legislature last year There is the HAP and it is surely too soon to judge stopped. large quantity of publication does even for Sam Woodside's deadly their long-term community practically no money for new not necessarily reflect his lack of be the Peterson, who during his 32 hockey prose. The resulting viability. independent from programs, new services or new enthusiasm and research in his Relationship years at Cornell has specialized sound as broadcast by WHCU- Cornell. If a year from now such people subject, as many of our young, /idfofessionals in budgeting for state units as FM might have been projects are as dependent upon The budget proposed for the untenured teachers reveal to us '°ups The well as the endowed portion of characterized as stereo wax the input of Cornell students as College of Agriculture is up $1- in their informative, interesting receive the University, does not predict a cylinder. they necessarily have been in the million, an increase of 6.1 per and relevant lectures. jfy guidance sudden infusion of funds for In short, it seems that WHCU- r early months, then the value of cent over last year It provides for Consequently, their loss of jobs f^ who has program expansion in state FM is run rather halfheartedly at the projects to the community one additional academic position will be a great loss to the student je| necessary supported units in the immediate best. and rather as a must seriously be questioned and five non-academic. The body ^Community. future. convenience to its staff than to remainder of the new funds will The Committee for the Re- i ^ must be HAP staff members who have Budgets now being developed the community It seems time for ela go into raises for classified evaluation of Tenure is currently n!>r tionship played major roles in these for 7273 are based on a change: as far as the n employes Similar spending devising a program which would ot* d on the projects are fully committed to expectations of continuing technicalities are concerned, patterns are projected for Human alleviate the ills which a 1^9e of each applying these standards of austerity (An irony of state must it be dictated by the FCC. or e Ecology. Veterinary Medicine presently inadequate and nt ' ring the evaluation They are in fact financing is that work on budgets can WHCU-FM clean its own and I&LR although they have no biased system produce. We must assessing the success of their two years hence must begin nest? nuin money for new positions Two propose some objective j 2 9 and efforts, in part, in terms of before final approval is received Jeffrey Frey new positions are budgeted for mechanisms to more adequately ^ standpoint whether the organization is for the next year's budget) Nor Assistant Professor the Geneva Experiment Station appraise a professor's teaching test of the increasingly developing the does the Controller expect the Electrical Engineering which resources necessary to carry out but the bulk of its 8.5 per cent abilities, such as mandatory funding increase will go into Governor's controversial tax m part its activities independent of student questionnaires. mandated salary increases The package to alter this prospect if it More WHCU of Cornell Cornell. " „ We also propose that the largest percentage of increase in passes the Legislature. ^ ability To this point, there appear to opinions of the junior faculty, To the Editor; IP'T ^ attract have been significant benefits "We will continue to need graduate and undergraduate Recognizing property rights, already for the community from fairly substantial increases in students be influential in tenure the owner of a radio station jif: community the extension program in the program. Most of the present funds merely to hold our own on decisions. As various should have the sole authority of c'Y ability of Chenango County will begin this 0f projects will be continuing, and existing programs as long as the departments employ different determining what is to be ie'^ ovide the spring new ones are in prospect There wage spiral continues. There is criteria for tenure appointments, broadcast on his station. Cornell \e^ to move Despite the co-operative will probably be a section on Day no indication wage demands are we propose that a basic skeletal University has this authority with i not going much stronger if more professors Career Center Assistant will continue its research in the intellectual standards of Cornell were involved. Many could, of Director David Cullings has hope of providing concrete University Since Cornell also around course, add much knowledge RELATION issued the following request to recommendations for change to ' owns WHCU-AM. I believe that are trying and expertise In addition, they The program has developed faculty and student advisers for the Arts College WHCU-FM should be a non- to do could modify present courses or some ties with academic courses assistance to students seeking commercial, entirely cultural Here there add new ones that would take summer jobs: Jim Newman '71 and a beginning relationship with Ira Salzman '71 station, with its current AM type ^ ucational advantage of the students' Students are experiencing extension This fall there were Mike Silver 73 programming reserved for jn^'ce va|Ues. experience and motivation. The considerable difficulty in seven faculty members in • Jerry Wa'sserman. Grad WHCU-AM. I'ttle from Industrial and Labor Relations. interplay of theory and negotiating summer jobs, Martha Zaslow '72 This is essentially the vmgtobe Rural Sociology. Human experience needs to be a two- particularly those having real f Rivalyn Zweig '71 arrangement of WOI-FM and l would be Development and Family way street educational content Should you Re-evaluation of Tenure AM. owned and operated by o' community Relations, and Education, some have contacts and/or leads for' In its original conception, the Committee Iowa State University in Ames. for long of whose students combined program also anticipated a close possible placement, but find r Iowa For the most part the nell stu- HAP projects with their yourself without sufficient time to involvement in the activities of HCU Programming programming on WOI-FM is of a academic study The extension people. While such check out the situation, we'd be happy to do the footwork for you. • Dear Sir. cultural nature, with WOI-AM nii should be arrangements seems to have relationships continue to be 3 I would like to add some handling the non-cultural i^ase of all worked well and will be explored, they have been slow in The Career Center phone comments to those made by s HAP has continued The relationship with developing number is 256-5222. Continued on Page 8 8 CORNELLCHRONICLE Thursday, March 4,1971 Barton Blotter Penn Siezes False Spring Thefts Heps Crown; While temperatures rose to near-spring heights last week, the Red Fifth number of campus thefts rose as fast or faster. The Safety Division Cornell's indoor track team, blotter was almost entirely filled with theft reports Other types of coming off its first undefeated incidents simultaneously fell in number season in dual and triangular From the incidents reported, thieves were most active in two areas: meets since 1958, tied with 'stealing wallets, and breaking into vending machines, but greater Army for fifth place in the 24th values were to be had in miscellaneous thefts. annual Heptagonal Games held Requests for medical — Routine checks last last Saturday in assistance dropped to 39, or Thursday by a patrolman and a The ten-team meet was won about half last week's total building guard showed two for the first time by Penn, which —The most profitable vending vending machines on the north accumulated 46 Vz points. Near- machine haul occurred* end of campus had been est competitor was Harvard, last sometime during the weekend in tampered The coin box from a years winner, with 28 points, University Halls 6. according to a soap dispenser was missing from followed by Navy and Princeton. report made by Housing and the Hasbrouck laundry The The biggest crowd pleaser of the Dining Tuesday 203 packs of amount of money and evening was pole vaulter Tom cigarettes valued at $101 50 merchandise missing from the Blair, a junior from Penn who were reported missing fr«m a machine is unknown Hungry cleared 16-7 to set a new Heps cigarette vending machine. Cost thieves also stole some candy and Barton Hall record. Blair of repairing the machine was from a vending machine in Clara then tried unsuccessfully three $10 Dickson Hall, but the coin box times to clear the bar at 17 foot —On Sunday, the Safety was intact barrier — a height in pole Division received a report that —An electric roto-hammer vaulting similar in importance to two unknown males were worth $200 was taken from the the four-minute mark in the mile breaking into the cigarette Social Science construction site run vending machine in the February 18. according to a Cornells only winner of the basement of University Halls 3. report made to the Safety meet was Tom Baker, '72, who The front of the machine was Division on Friday by the T H. fought off Army's Lou Catti and damaged and an unknown Green Electric Co Penn's Julio Piazza to win the amount of cigarettes taken The UP AND OVER — Penh pole-vaulter Tom Blair uses the flexibility of his subjects fled when investigating —An unknown person (or fiberglass pole for all us worth as he clears the 16-6 mark at Saturday's "1,000 yard run in 2:12 8 Baker officers approached persons) is now sitting on a Heptagonal meet also anchored the two-mile relay leather upholstered chair taken team which lost be inches to first Westing to Talk from the formal lounge of Mary place Penn after senior Charlie Donlon Hall February 22 or 23. Human Ecology Institute Ferrell, running the third leg of On Ecocide The value of the chair, and of a the race, brought Cornell from table taken at the same time, last possition to first. In Indochina was set at $27 1 by the dormitory To Discuss the Aged supervisor, who made the report Senior Jon Anderson led the Arthur H Westing, professor of "Aging: The People and the annual institute for community field for 14 laps of the two-mile biology at Windham College in —A Noyes Student Center Process" is the theme of the leaders run only to be edged out by Putney, Vt. will discuss "Ecocide deskman reported Saturday that 1971 Institute of the New York The one-day program is Harvard's Tom Spengler at the in Indochina. A Report on the a four-foot by four-foot abstract State College of Human Ecology planned to help community finish The winning time was Effects of Herbicides" in a public painting had been stolen the The event, set for Tuesday, leaders gain an awareness of the 8:56 6. lecture next Tuesday The previous evening from the March 23. from 9:30 am. to special needs and unique illustrated lecture will be Center's third floor. The 3:30 p m. in Alice Statler contributions of the elderly, and The Reds Glen Fausset, last presented at 8 p.m. in the Alice painting's value is unknown Auditorium is the college's 1 1th to understand the rote of the year's IC4A long jump champion, Statler Auditorium individual and public policy in took third place in the event with Westing has taught forestry or helping to solve some of the a jump of 23-1 1/2 biology-related subjects at problems related to aging Junior Don Alexander, who Purdue University, the University Morris Named Romance The Institute program will had posted a 4:10 3 rrule in of Massachusetts and center around three speakers: previous competition, lost to Middlebury College He spent a Studies Professor Prof Donald Kent, chairman of Harvard's Jon Enscoe, who won month in 1969 in Cambodia Edward P. Morris, a member served on the Faculty Committee the Department of Sociology at m 4:12 5 studying the effects of herbicides of the University faculty since on the Arts; the Faculty Council, The Pennsylvania State for the Scientists' Committee on Other winners included 1961, has been named professor the Committee on Academic University; Dean Juanita Kreps Chemical and Biological Warfare Brown's Lee Thompson in the of romance studies in the Affairs; and the Ad Hoc of Woman's College. Duke He spent another month in 1970 600-yard run (1:11.5), Yale's College of Arts and Sciences. Committee on the Arts In 1969- University; and Dr' George on a similar mission for the Don Martin in the 60-yard dash A student of French literature 70 he headed a special Warner, director of the Bureau of American Association for the (6.1). Navy's Wayne Kennard in of the Renaissance. Morris committee of the Arts College to Long-Term Care in the New York Advancement of Science He the 60-yard hurdles (7.4). received Cornell's Clark Teaching consider the educational issues State Department of Health also has done research on Browns Doug Price in the shot Award for 1969 He is a faculty raised by student-run and Kent will talk on social policy herbicides for the US Forest put (56-6 1/2) and Ed Nosal- fellow of The Society for the student-initiated courses He has related to aging; Kreps, the Service of Harvard in the weight throw Humanities for the academic also served as chairman of the economics of aging; and Dr Westing has published more year 1970-71 Honors Program in French since Warner, the health of the elderly. Missing from the Cornell than three dozen scientific and While at Cornell, Morris has 1961 An institute luncheon will be lineup because of illness was technical papers. dealing Morris earned his bachelor of served at noon in the Statler junior Phil Ritson, who had primarily with growth and arts degree in 1945 and Ballroom Reservations are previously run the best two-mile development of trees His talk at doctorate in 1954 at Yale necessary time of any Heps contestant Cornell will be sponsored by the University, and taught at Bryn In the afternoon Mrs Arpie (8:562) University's Program on Science. Mawr College, at Wesleyan Shelton, extension associate in Technology and Society and by University in Connecticut, and at the Department of Community This Friday and Saturday, the Committee on University Harvard before joining the Service Education at the College Cornell trackmen will compete in Lean Cornell faculty. of Human Ecology and director the 1971 IC4A championships at Princeton At Bryn Mawr, Harvard, and of research for the Isagella- Corson on TV Cornell. Morris has directed and Genatric Center in New York produced a number of classical City, will serve as moderator for a "Cornell Community Chronicle and modern French plays He panel discussion on the Report," a weekly five has published modern French responsibility of the university to Comment minute visit with Cornell translations of medieval French aging Continued from Page 7 President Dale R Corson plays, most recently. in will be aired at 8:45 Each year the College of aspects In this way the FM collaboration with Alain Seznec. tonight on WCIC-TV. Human Ecology brings to Cornell listener does not have to put up professor of romance studies at lei 2 on the Ithaca prominent speakers to present with what he dislikes on the AM Cornell, Rutebeuf's "Miracle de system This evening various viewpoints on current station, and vice versa: everyone Theophile " Seznec and Morris in Corson will comment on issues of importance to New is happy. But in Ithaca many are 1962 founded the Cornell the cost of higher York families, and of particular unhappy because of the mixed French Players, an informal education as it relates to interest to community leaders programming practice applied to association of students and the Cornell studi EDWARD P MORRIS The program is free and open WHCU-FM and AM. Named Profe. faculty members to the public Dennis Edwall - grad Thursday, March 4, 1971 ILR Book The Senate Page Examines Cagey Women Migrant Labor The Senate Page is the official bulletin of the Cornell University An in-depth look at the migrant Senate. Publication is supervised by Kay R. Hanna. Senate labor system based on the first- administrator. 133 Day Hall, 256-3 715. hand experiences of black and Legislation on of several committees, and in white students from Cornell Committee Membership many cases recommending University and Tuskegee Institute Guidelines decreased percentages of appears in a new book published by the New York State School of Pursuant to Article V of the senators on committees Industrial and Labor Relations Constitution and in accord with Non-Senators Needed For (ILR). Title XII; Sections One. Five, and Thirteen, the Senate authorizes Senate Committees The analysis depends largely the Committee on Committees to Applications from non- on tape recorded and determine the membership of Senators willing to serve on handwritten notes made in standing committees Senate Committees are needed upstate New York migrant labor The following apportionment immediately This completed camps by students who worked shall be regarded as a guide to form should be returned to the in the fields and lived in the the Committee on Committees Senate office, 133 Day Hall as. camps as farm laborers. The with regard to percentages of soon as possible. Additional paperback book is entitled "On non-Senators on a committee copies may be obtained from the the Season: Aspects of the and the balance of seats among Senate office. Migrant Labor System." The various constituencies. The sizes author, Dorothy Nelkin, wrote the of committees indicated here Senate Calendar book based on research shall be regarded as maximum Friday, 5th — Committee on performed in the summers of 1966, '67 and '68 At the time limits Committees Meeting, 4:30 p m , The changes in the committee 701 Clark Hall; Committee on she was a research associate structure which were made on Campus Life, 4:30 p.m 609 working for William H Fnedland. 23 February 1 97 1 were aimed at Clark Hall then a professor in the ILR reducing the work load on Tuesday, 9th — Senate School and now a professor of senators by consolidating some Meeting. Kaufman Auditofium, sociology at the University of committees, decreasing the sizes 7:30 p.m. California at Santa Cruz Mrs Nelkin concludes her book by distributing the blame for the migrant laborer's plight in SENATORS PER SONS FROM OUTSIDE THE SENATE the following way: "Thus the migrant labor system is Is.. Stu. Fac. Other Chosen by Senate Not Chosen bv Senate perpetuated; by growers through Admissions 10 2 2 1 5 appalling labor practices, by Calendar 9 1 1 1 6 migrants through their (Campus adaptation to a situation they Life 7 3 3 l)-not chosen by Committee on Committees cannot control, by government B.O.S.H. 9 3 1 Director of Student Health, Chairman of through benign neglect, and by m Mental Health Section, 2 persons chosen by the society through sheer indiffer- ence." Health Services, Vice President for Campus Copies of the 80-page book * Affairs can be obtained by sending a IF IE check or money order for $2 25 TWO POINTS — Cornells Ann Kerwick lets fly with a jump shot over the Counseling 9 2 1 IE 2S 2F to the Distribution Center. New outstretched hands of a Keuka College defender in a game played Monday on 9 2 1 IS IF 2E, 2unspec. Dining York State School of Industrial the Helen Newman hardwood court Red Marylin Porter (15) and Sheila 9 2 1 1G 1U IF IE, 2 unspec. Housing and Labor Relations, Cornell McGuirk (under the basket) look on Cornell trounced the Keuka team. 59-7. Org.&P.E. 11 2 1 1A 2S 2F 1 other 1 by Dept. of Music 1 by Dept. Theatre Arts University. as Miss McGuirk led all scorers with 1 5 points Parking & Traffic 9 1 1 IE 2S 2F 2E Phys. Ed. 11 1 1 IE 1A IS IF 2E 1 by and from Women's Bullwinkle Athletic Assoc, 1 by and from Sports Advi- sory Comm., 1 by and from intramural athletic managers Rel. Affrs. 9 2 1 ', 1A . 2S 2F IE Camp. Plan. 111 2 2 1 5 Codes 10 2 2 1 5 (Con Comm. 11 3UIG 2T2N 1NAE) 1NPA) - Nol chosen by Com. on Committees 1NVS)

Com. Affrs. 9 1 1 1 6 Ed. Innov. 9 1 1 1 6 ' (Exec. Com) 9 2UIG 2TIN 1A2E) - nol chosen by Com. on Committees

SENATORS PERSONS FROM OUTSIDE THE SENATE

Tot Stu. Fac. Other Choi en by Senate Not Chosen bv Senate AJU

Int. Oper. 11 4 4 3 Judiciary 9 2 1 1 5 Military 10 2 2 1 5 Minorities 13 2 2 1 8 Plan Rev. 10 1 1 2* 6 Pub. Aff. 10 2 2 1 5 Employees 9 1 1 1 2S 2F 2E

TOTALS 239 49 41 30

Definitions

S • Student; ^-undergraduate; G*graduate student t • Faculty; T- enured faculty; N-non-tenured faculty I •• Non-academi( and academic employees (Including NAE • Non-academl( employee NPA • Non-profess onal academic NVS •• Non-voting ;enator Other • Alumni, exempt and non-exempt employee, non-professional academics, .he vice president, the Provost and non-voting Senators.

Notwithstanding the above rec ommendations, no Senator shall be de nted the opportunity to be a member of at least one committee, if he so desired.

* Includes Provost 10 CORNELLCHRONICLE Thursday, March 4,1971 Biological Sciences Division Installs Sponsored Research Interactive Computer in Stimson Hall Examines NSF Budget President Nixon's fiscal year fundamental life processes. An interactive computer facility with provisions for ticketed reserve time arrangement has been 1972 budget has recently been Physics research funding is being installed in Stimson Hall by the Division of Biological Sciences submitted to Congress, that is increased, principajly to provide Howard C Howland. assistant professor of neurobiology and behavior and faculty advisor in charge of funds requested by the for additional operating cost the facility, said it is Cornell's first computer center established primarily for undergraduate use and the administration for the year requirements of new facilities, first one whose primary aim is educational rather than research-oriented beginning July 1. 1971 Within such as the Indiana cyclotron, An interactive computer is one this budget the National Science and for the increasing number of in which the operator, in this Foundation is asking for $622 physics investigators turning to case, the students, can "talk" to million, $116 million above the NSF for support as other their machines. The computer is fiscal year 1971 amount of $506 agencies redirect their research used like a calculating machine million. programs and errors in programming can The attached breakdown of the In the Social Sciences, be corrected immediately. The NSF budget, provided by the emphasis will be given to the other method of computer use. Office of Sponsored Research, study of the basic factors the batch process, requires the indicates several major changes underlying social change and processing of computer cards in which are of interest to Cornell economic productivity, batches during which time the since Foundation supported particularly the wage-price- student or user has no cc^ptrol programs are a significant part of mflation cycle, and to social, over the computing process. our sponsored activities. For science data collection and The computer, designated a example, there are increases for analysis. Engineering research PDP-8/L. is on the second floor research project support in most will stress work on superhard of Stimson Hall, adjacent to a areas but reduced budgets for materials and material room which contains four certain phases of science processing, areas in which the teletype terminals for student education and institutional United States appears to be use Students in the Biology 106 programs Direct support to both falling behind the technological computing course taught by predoctoral and postdoctoral achievements of other nations; Howland may use the computer students'- in the form of bio-medical materials; and the without paying since their charge TOUCH TYPIST — Howard C Howland, (left) assistant professor discusses a fellowships and traineeships is effects of wind and other natural problem with Jack Cassidy '71, who is, using a new computer in Stimson is paid by the course Students being substantially reduced or phenomena on buildings and who are not taking formal course Hall. The computer is the first at the university to be installed primarily for undergraduate use phased out. In fact, the etructures Chemistry research work, however, may use the Foundation expects a 47 per will emphasize analysis and computer by purchasing tickets cent reduction in the number of instrumentation techniques in at $2 50 a half hour Martin Catherwood Named graduate students receiving the areas of molecular processes Open from 9 am. to 5 p.m direct support They do however and configuration. chemical Monday through Friday, the Cornell Trustee Emeritus expect the increase iru research dynamics, and enzymes. computer facility may be used by Martin P. Catherwood has of the New York State School of project support to provide for Oceanography research projects any Cornell student provided he been named Trustee Emeritus Industrial and Labor Relations employment of more graduate will concentrate on ocean makes prior reservations. The after 18 years of service on the (ILR School) at Cornell from assistants • dynamics, currents, salinity and reservation information is kept Cornell University Board of 1947 until 1958 ocean ecology." on tickets which are hung oh a Trustees. The following is quoted directly In November 1970, the ILR Dr. William D McElroy, giant board in the computer Catherwood was a member of from the NSF budget summary Schools library, the largest and Director of the Foundation, room, enabling one to tell at a the Board of Trustees in his to indicate the areas of emphasis most comprehensive university further indicated that "the glance what the flow of capacity as New York State in the project support area: library in the labor field, was Foundation proposes to develop computer use will be. Industrial Commissioner, a post named in honor of Catherwood "preferential emphasis has and support research focusing he held from 1958 until his on major problems of society A Howland said the PDP-8/L is a been given to increasing retirement January 1. He also A long-time resident of Ithaca. principal objective of this new fast machine but has a small fundamental research in the served on the Cornell Board of Catherwood earned his emphasis is to couple the memory, making it economical. biological sciences, engineering, Trustees from 1941 until 1947 doctorate in business capabilities of science and The small memory is satisfactory chemistry, oceanography, and while he was New York State management at Cornell in 1930 technology more directly to the in this case, he said, because the the social ' sciences Particular Commissioner of Commerce. He was a member of the faculty solution of those problems machines are not used for attention will be given in the In addition to his service to of the Department of Agricultural Much of this research will involve complicated research projects Ibiological sciences to biology of Cornell as a trustee, Catherwood Economics at Cornell until 1941 teams of scientists and engineers Student use may range from human cells, to broaden our has been a member of the when he became Commissioner working in broad cooperative working problems in basic understanding of diseases, University's faculty and was dean of Commerce efforts" sciences such as physics or genetic damage. and chemistry to running statistical tests on data he has originated himself SUMMARY OF FISCAL YEAR 1972 PROGRAM CHANGES

(Million! of Oolljr.l On hand to help students are Edward Groark, graduate student MAJOR PROGRAM INCREASES CUOtiET mOGRAM COMPARISONS FISCAL Yi£AR 1'J/0-1972 who manages the facility and |,'.Ml,onto! Oollixl assists Howland in teaching the Scientific Research Project Support Increased NSF Share of Research Support $67 J course, and three student Interdisciplinary Laboratories 12.8 Aetul monitors who can help computer National Magnet Laboratory 1.8 Programs bY 19 ;o FYI'HI FT I'm users with minor problems and National anJ Special Research Programs take reservations for use of the Research Applied to National Needs 47.0 Scientific Research and Facilities Support XI 68.2 SI8I.7 $263.6 machine. Antarctic Logistics 19.3 National and Special Research Programs .. 78.6 117.7 International Biological Program 3.0 Nation::! Research Centers : 27.2 37.1 40.4 International Decade of Ocean Exploration S.O 44.7 34.5 12.0 "We've tried to make the' Institutional Support for Science Oceanographic Research Operations and Facilities • 6.1 Science Education Support 120.2 100.6 77J computing facility a pleasant as National Research Centers N. Program Development and Management .. 21.7' 23.7 27.0 well as a useful place to come," National Center for Atmospheric Research 619.2 Howland said "We have books (Balloon Launching Pad and Calibration Equipment) 3.4 Subtotals 460.6 495.3 Miscellaneous Adjustments -22.6 8.6 -0.2 and publications and even coffee Computing Activities in Science Ed'ication and Research for the students who come Computer Innovations in Education ' 2S Total Salaries and Expenses 4.1S.0 503.9 619.0 here " Intergovernmental Science Program 0.6 Foreign Currency Approptuiion 2.0 2.0 3.0 Science Education Support Students wishing to make ^ College Science Improvement [Black Colleges/ 5.0 Total NSF Program* 440.0 505.9 622.0 reservations for use of the Development and Management computer may call 256-3994 (Increased Personnel and Relalcd Cos(s) 3.0

MAJOR PROGRAM DECREASES

National Sea Grant Program Keep Up with Cornell: Program Transferred lo NOAA-FY 1971 $ -6.2 Institutional Support for Science Read the Chronicle Science Development . -20.0 Institutional Grants for Science '. -2.S Thursdays Science Education Support Student Development -16.2 Instructional Personnel Development -8.8 Thursday, March 4, 1971 CORNELL CHRONICLE 11 New Senate Meets Room Selection Continued from Page 1 Maintenance of Public Order, Continued from Page 2 graduate students who desire Mrs Jacobs, a native Ithacan and the University Review Board, Straight their understanding of personal rooms in Balch. Baker, Comstock and Supervisor of Counseling to hear appeals of cases heard by development and integrating Donlon, Dickson V and VI, North Aids at Boynton Junior High the Hearing Panels of the Scoop :• academic interests with personal Campus houses and University School, won the election over University Hearing Board concerns for growth as human Halls will begin room selection Charles E. Goodell. former US Until the new system is fully March 4 and 5 in the beings according to priority number Senator from New York and approved, the current judicial The response to such a unit Monday April 19. in the Aaron Lemonick, professor of system will be in effect. Memorial Room the Roten will determine whether it is Memorial Room. Willard physics and dean of the Graduate A South African investments Art Show and Sale will be established in the fall. Persons Straight Hall. School at Princeton University bill passed by the Senate displaying a variety of interested in it should leave their Additional information An active member of the recommends that the Cornell graphics and prints Come names with Lori Lafian in the concerning housing may be Ithaca community. Mrs. Jacobs administration inquire about the in and shop or browse Office of the Dean of Students or obtained from the Dean of was a founder of PRIDE, an racial policies of several from 9 AM to 1 1 PM Tom Pniewski in Risle'y Students Office organization of black Cornell companies in which the U niver sity Unions Residential College. students and community University holds stock and which Craftshop continues its Another proposed voluntary TheftS are major U.S. investors in South residents interested in the annual crafts exhibit and unit would be based on an Africa education of black students, and sale of ceramics, jewelry, ecology theme and would house Continued from page 7 a former chairman and member If satisfactory answers to the. and leather. The exhibition upperclass men and women. It is "They leave the doors open to of the Human Rights questions concerning equal is located in the WSH Art anticipated that each student their offices and storerooms; Commission She is currently a opportunities for job training and Room and is open from 9 would take the Biology and secretaries leave pocketbooks on member of the Board of unionizing are not received, the AM to 9 PM Society course to give a center of their desks; laboratories and Directors of the Southside Senate recommends that the cohesiveness to various ecology- storerooms with equipment are Community Center. Administration vote Cornell related activities that would be still being run on the honor "I'd like to work to bring about University's shares in the carried out by residents of the system, with the doors unlocked a much more effective town- corporations to initiate Forgers Warned unit. and a checkout sheet for gown relationship," said Mrs immediately the suggested Illegal use of the ne"w Cornell Further developments will be students to sign when they take Jacobs. "I am particularly programs for equal opportunities University dining credit cards has determined by the response to equipment Many times the interested in things that will or all subsidiaries and agents in led to a firm warning from the this proposal Those interested in equipment is taken, but there is affect the community." Southern Africa should cease Office of the Judicial the ecology unit should leave no signature on the sheet operation Mrs. Jacobs said she hopes to Administrator and the Student- their names with Nancy Neal, "We have also had instances serve as a liaison between the The Senate also passed a.bill Faculty Board on Student Office of the Dean of Students. of professors checking out a Board and the community. Many recommending special graduate Conduct (SFBFC). The deadline for applications movie projector to show a film to persons in the Ithaca community, fellowships to be offered to Hartwig E, Kisker. deputy to the International Living Center one of their classes, then leaving she said, feel hostilities towards blacks from South Africa. judicial administrator, said that in North Campus dorm 8, was the projector in the room When the University community Better In other actions, the Senate two recent cases of students Wednesday (March 3). someone asks them several days relations between Cornell and recommended that the picking up someone else's dininq Risley Residential College has later where the projector is, they the community might be University hold emission of air credit card and using it over a been filled for the 1971-72 say, Oh. yes. I left that up in developed through better pollutants below state and period of time, forging the real academic year However, those Room 200." Of course, it's not communication, she added. federal minimal levels and that owner's name, have come before interested in living at the unit in there any longer when they go to In other actions at the the University take action to the board the future may contact Elizabeth get it." George said February 25 meeting, the Senate insure that the Ithaca and "Both the board and our office McLellan in the Office of the "Another repeated source of passed a Statement of Student Geneva campuses and their consider this forgery and Dean of Students or Pniewski at loss is in petty cash funds and Rights, portions of a new surrounding areas are as knowing misuse of University Risley Hall coffee funds. Too often everyone judiciary system, two pollution free as possible. records a serious offense, and Risley Residential College is an in the office knows where the recommendatory resolutions This bill recommended the stiff penalties are being assessed experimental unit that combines petty cash is kept, and that it is concerning Southern Africa and heightening of the University's in these cases," Kisker said. activities in the creative and more often than not unlocked." resolutions concerning air smoke stacks and the control of performing arts within a co- Both George and Coskey spoke pollution and the replacement of particulate and sulphur emis- educational residential setting of the necessity to report all trees on campus sions. All others who will be thefts promptly to the Safety The Statement of Student The Senate also passed a bill sophomores, juniors, seniors and Division. Rights, which will become that directs its Committee on graduate students in September "We know that a lot of thefts effective as soon as judicial Campus Life and Planning may draw a priority" number for a are not reported." George said procedures and penalties for Review Committee to secure • room from 8 a.m.-4 p.m , "Many times they are reported, violations of the stated rights are additional funds to provide for at Tuesday, April 6. and but not until a couple of weeks defined, details the student's least 40-50 trees to be planted Wednesday. April 7. in the later, when the victim discovers rights to study, to speak, the right on the campus each year. Housing Services Office. A that his loss is covered by of association, the rights to schedule available at that office insurance but he needs an listen, to private records, to will direct each student with a official report of the loss to make private quarters and to redress of specific priority number to the a claim If we had all reports grievances. The sections of the Salary time and place to select his promptly, we might be able to statement that have to do with housing accomodations for the establish a pattern and figure out Continued from Page 1 academic areas will be operative He said a merit-increases-only fall. a way to nail the thief." only after consultation with the raises. "Again." Lawrence said, policy seems necessary this year, Graduate students of all They said that before every faculty or its representative body. "the 5 per cent is an average because previous across-the- priority, numbers who wish to live vacation period, thefts increase, The parts of the judicial system figure. Some increases will be board raises have had the effect in Sage Graduate Center, probably because those doing approved by the Senate provide greater. Others may be less than of unduly equalizing salaries at Cascadilla Hall or Thurston Court the stealing have overspent, and for a judicial administrator to be that." various faculty levels Apartments, should repori for need money for the vacation. nominated by the President and Lawrence said funds for "In many instances this has room 'selection from 4-6 p.m., "We're convinced," George approved by the Senate The selected salary increases were eliminated proper reward for Tuesday . April 13, to the said, "that a large percentage of judicial administrator would budgeted in order to keep pace outstanding performance," Plane Memorial Room. Willard Straight the things stolen are resold for investigate complaints with competition for good said "To compensate for this, Hall. money. Radios, stereos, cameras concerning alleged violations of people, to reward good work, we are basing this years raises Those undergraduate and —' anything with a good resale the Student Code and the and "in recognition of the totally on merit, particularly for value — are prime targets for the Regulations for the Maintenance inflationary pressures on all of current performance not Risley Plays thieves who have been active in of Public Order, and would prefer us." previously recognized It follows, Continued from.Page 4 our dormitories." charges regarding such viola- In the academic area. Robert therefore, that while some view of the question of He said that the open policy in tions. A. Plane, provost, said increases members of the faculty will get responsibility for crime—the dorms also has brought a will be based on approximately substantial raises, a significant A judicial advisor would be burden, whether society's or {he number of non-students, 3.5 per cent of current faculty portion of the faculty will notget selected by the Senate to advise individual's—and ways of particularly teen-agers. into salaries. raises." individuals about the charges treating it student housing, where they brought against them by the Plane said, "It is clear that The announcements by Plane After the play, the actors have an opportunity to steal. judicial administrator and to classified and non-classified and Lawrence, in memoranda to return, now in street clothes, to The situation is extremely inform the individuals of their employes, since they are deans, directors and department "confront" the audience. This serious, both George and Coskey rights and the options open to generally in the lower salary heads, are in line with a policy part of the evening is as thought- said, and getting worse They them. ranges, are much more adversely announced early in the 1971-72 provoking as the play, and urged all students and faculty to Still to be approved by the affected by inflation Whereas the financial planning process by becomes a forum for discussion take a fresh look at security Senate are the composition of average percentage of increase President Dale R. Corson. who of the play's issues. measures in their rooms and is lower for faculty than other the University Hearing Board, to said that Cornell must continue The production is being offices and make things as categories, the average dollar hear cases involving alleged to strengthen its strongest brought to Cornell by Risley difficult as possible for the thief figures are approximately the programs by a policy, of violations of the Student Code College Tickets are available now who might be eyeing their same" "selective excellence." and the Regulations for the at Willard Straight and Mayer's. property.- . . . 12 CORNELLCHRONICL.E Thursday, March 4, 1971 Monday, March 8 Friday, March 12 4:30 & 8 pm Film Romance and Reality Third in a 4 pm Psychology Colloquium "Recall of High-priority Calendar series entitled, "Civilisation-A Personal View" Cornell Events " Dr. Endel Tulvmg of Yale University Department University Lectures, sponsor Room 200, Baker Hall of Psychology, sponsor 340 Morrill Hall 7 & 9:15 p.m. 'Film The Hustler, starring Paul 7 & 9 15 pm "Film Cactus Flower, with Walter March 4-14 Newman (limited to Cornell community) Cornell Matthau and Ingrid Bergman, (limited to Cornell Cinema, sponsor Ives 120 community) Cornell Cinema, sponsor Ives 1 20 8 pm "Cornell Duplicate Bridge Tournament Sage 7 & 9:15 pm "Film My Night at Maud's. Cornell Thursday, March 4 Hall Cafeteria. Cinema, sponsor Statler Auditorium 11:15 am Baker Lectureship Earl L. Muetterties (see 8:15 p.m. Biology & Society Lecture Series Panel 8 pm Symposium "Vietnam War Teach-In." Members Mar 2). Baker 1 19 Discussion. "Man's Diseases Man's Right to Die" of Cornell Veterans, speakers Sponsored by Cornell 4 30 p m Joint Seminar: Applied Mathematics Center Robert S Morison, Richard J Schwartz Professor of Veterans Memorial Room. Willard Straight Hall. and Department of Ecology and Systematics "Statistical Science and Society. Moderator Panelists: Dr Bentley 8 15 pm, •Cornell University Theatre Series The Wild Mechanics in Ecological Communities." Professor Egbert Glass. Vice President, State University of New York at Duck (see Mar 7.) Leigh, Princeton University. G-1 Stimson Hall Stony Brook; Dr Diana Crane, Associate Professor, 9 p.m. Discussion. "On Communicating with the 7. 8:30 & 10 p.m. 'Films Bombshell and Red Dusi School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins Ancients" Gordon M Messing. Associate Professor. (see Mar 3) Ives 120 University, Dr Leon Kass, Executive Secretary of the Classics Classics Department, sponsor Sage Lounge 8 pm 'Cornell Duplicate Bridge Tournament Sage Committee on Life Sciences and Social Policy, National Hall Cafeteria Research Council, Washington, DC Bailey Hall. 8:15 pm 'Cornell University Theatre Series. The WHO 8:15 p.m. "Dramatic Presentation The Cage, by Saturday, March 13 Duck, by Hennk Ibsen. University Theatre, Willard Barbwire Theatre, a group of San Quentin parolees. Straight Hall. Risley College, sponsor Statler Auditorium 7 & 9:1 5 pm "Film My Night at Maud's (see Mar. 1 2) Statler Auditorium Friday, March 5 Tuesday, March 9 7 & 9:15 pm * Film Cactus Flower (see Mar 12) Ives 3 p.m. Lecture. "Bible Translation Problems with 120 reference to the New Jewish Version and the New 11:15 a.m. Baker Lectureship. "Dynamic 8:15 pm "Cornell University Theatre Production. The English Bible " Baruch Levine, Professor of Hebrew, New Stereochemistry " Earl L Muetterties, of du Pont de Wild Duck (see Mar. 7) York University. Semitic Studies, sponsor The Greek Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware Baker 8:30 pm "Square Dance, Roger Knox. calling Cornell Outing Club, sponsor. Memorial Room. Willard Straight Civilization Room, Uris Library (9th floor) 119 Hall 7 & 9:15 pm 'Film. The Reivers, starring Steve 7 & 9:15 pm 'Film, Akira Kurosawa Series Rasho- 10 am Cornell Regional Meeting of the American McQueen. Sharon Farrel, and Rupert Brosse (Limited tc Mon. (limited to Cornell community). Cornell Cinema, Cornell community) Cornell Cinema, sponsor Ives 120 sponsor. Goldwin Smith D. Society of International Law. Two panels: Unification of 7 & 9 15 pm 'Film The Great Chidago Conspiracy 7 & 9:15 pm "Film The Hustler (see Mar. 8) Ives Private Law (10a.m.) and Unification of International Circus Cornell Cinema, sponsor. Statler Auditorium 120 Trade Law (2.30 p m ) Luncheon at 12:30 pm 8:15 pm 'Cornell University Theatre Series. The Wild Duck (see March 4) 8:15 p.m. 'Varsity Basketball Pennsylvania. Barton Hall 8:15 pm Concert Music by Beethoven and Schumann Linda Paterson. soprano; William Austin, piano. Barnes Hall Auditorium 9 p.m. Discussion The Cult of the Dead in Minoan- Mycenaean Times, illustrated with slides. John E. Coleman. Assistant Professor, Classics Classics Department, sponsor Sage Lounge. Saturday, March 6 2 pm "Varsity Hockey Brown 7:30 p.m. Cornell University Senate 2 p m Varsity Fencing Penn Teagle Hall Meeting sunday, March 14 Kaufmann Auditorium. Goldwin Smith Hall. 7 & 9:15 pm, "Film. The Great Chicago Conspiracy 8 pm. Lecture (illustrated) "Ecocide In Indochina: A 11 am Service The Reverend Richard Circus (see Mar 5) Statler Auditorium Report on the Effects of Herbicides " Arthur H. Westing, Unsworth. Chaplain, Smith College. Northampton. 7 & 9:15'p.m. 'Film The Reivers (see Mar 5) Ives Professor of Biology, Windham College, Putney, Vermont Massachusetts 120. Co-sponsored by the Cornell University Lectures 12:01 pm "Cornell Sports Car Club Ides of March 8 p.m.-3 am Concert Featuring Colonel Bleep, rock Committee and the Program on Science, Technology and Rallye Registration: 10:30 a.m. (Pre-registration, March band Maxwell, sponsor Informal Lounge. Mary Donlon Society. Statler Auditorium 11. 12. and 1 3. in Willard Straight Lobby) Rallye starts at Hall. 12:01 p.m. from "B" lot 8 pm Lecture The United Nations and Disarmament 4 p m Concert Cornell Chamber Orchestra, conducted Leonid Kutakov, member of the Soviet Union's Wednesday, March 10 by Karel Husa. Barnes Hall Auditorium delegation to the United Natrons, and Undersecretary 7 & 9:15*pm "Film High School, by Fred Wiseman General of the Security Council for Political and Security 10 am - 12 noon Campus Club Meeting Program: "Innovations in Housing," by Joseph A Carreiro. Cornell Cinema, sponsor. Professor and Chairman. Design and Environmental Exhibits Sunday, March 7 Analysis (attendance open to those eligible for M.P. CATHERWOOD LIBRARY, School of Industrial membership ) Collyer Room. Malott Hall 11 am. Sage Chapel service Erwm D Canham, Editor- and Labor Relations: "Items from the Joint Railway — 3:30 p.m. Composition and Theory of Music in-Chie{. The Christian Science Monitor, Boston, Labor History Projects"; Industrial and Labor Relations Colloquium Nick Altenbernd will play and discuss Elliott Massachusetts Labor Management Documentation Center Carters Piano Sonata Department of Music, sponsor 4 pm Concert Woodwind Quintet Recital Preston MUSEUM OF ART 121 Lincoln Hall Richards, flute; Jerryl Davis, oboe; Susan Hohenberg, Russian Art of the Revolution (closes March 25) Guided 4:30 pm Food Science Seminar "Food Related clarinet; Mel Bienenfeld, horn; Carey Beth Hockett, tours available by appointment. Hours: Tuesday through Aspects of Anthocyanin Pigment." presented by bassoon, Elaine Sisman, piano. Program: Anton Reicha: Saturday, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.; closed Professor Geza Hrazdina, Experiment Station at Geneva "Blaserquintett Es dur"; George Green: Woodwind Monday Stocking Hall Auditorium. Quintet (7955); Ludwig van Beethoven: Quintette, opus JOHN M OLIN LIBRARY History of Science 16 Barnes Hall Auditorium 8 15 p.m. University Lecture (illustrated) Collections: Health of Scholars "Architectural Discoveries of the Thirteenth Campaign at MCGRAW HALL. Department of Geological Sciences 5-8 pm Continental Buffet "The Common Market" Sardis " Andrew Seager '65, College of Architecture, Ball (first floor, center hall): Geologic Environment and Man. Statler P.M.. School of Hotel Administration, sponsor State University. Statler Auditorium. Use of Naturally-occurring Earth Materials-Pegmatites; Five dollars per person; reservations suggested Jackets Fossils, Edible and Unusual Mollusks. Geological Statler Main Dining Room Thursday, March 11 Oceanography Training Cruise (Duke-Cornell). 7 & 9 15 p.m."Film ska Cassius Clay, starring 11:15 am Baker Lectureship EaTI L Muetterties (see ART LOUNGE. Willard Straight Hall (March 1-19) 9 Muhammad Alt. Cus d'Amato Cornell Cinema, sponsor Mar 9) Baker 119 am - 9 p.m. University Unions Craftshop Exhibit and Statler Auditorium 4:30 pm. Microbiology Seminar "Control of Reaction Sale of ceramics, jewelry, and leather 7 & 9:15 pm "Film King Murray, directed by David Center and Bulk Chlorophyll in Photosynthetic Bacteria " "Admission charged. Hoffman and Amram Nowak (limited to Cornell W R. Sistrom. Biology Department, University of Oregon Attendance at all events is limited to the approved community) Cornell Cinema, sponsor Ives 120 Section of Microbiology. Division of Biological Sciences, 7:30 pm Lecture "Morality and War" David W sponsor 204 Stocking Hall seating canacity of the hall Connor, University Catholic Chaplain, Cornell United 7 & 9:15 p.m. ' Film Lemonade Joe Cornell Cinema, Items for the Cornell Chronicle Calendar should be Religious Work Scabbard & Blade Society, sponsor sponsor Statler Auditorium. submitted to the Office of the Secretary of the University, Barton 201 8 pm "Cornell Duplicate Bridge Tournament Sage 312 Day Hall, at least one week prior to publication of 8 15 pm "Cornell University Theater Series. The Wild Hall Cafeteria the Chronicle. The Calendar is prepared by the Office of Duck, by Hennk Ibsen University Theater. Willard 8:15 pm "Cornell University Theatre Series. The Wild the Secretary and the Office of Public Information. 7 10 Straight Hall. Duck (see Mar 71 Day Hall.