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The thI acan, 1952-53 The thI acan: 1950/51 to 1959/60

10-24-1952 The thI acan, 1952-10-24 Ithaca College

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TOUCHDOWN TWIRL FOOTBALL GAME SAT. NIGHT TONIGHT 8:00 AFTER FROSH FROLICS PERCY FIELD SENECA GYM atan Ithaca vs. Lockha ·en

V,>I. 24, No. 4 Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 IC Elects Eisenhower by 3 - 2 five "Ithacan" Editors I.C. Students and Faculty Attend Press Conference Al N. Y. 's Hotel Staller Favor '' Ike" by· 126 Votes · Five members of the lthat•an sta'.t by Jim McGeever are attending the Associated <'ollegi­ According to the results of the Straw Poll sponsored by The Ithacan, Dwight D. Eisenhower will be the next occupant of th_e White House. ate Press Conference beinJ?; held at General Eisenhwoer with 357 votes to 231 votes for Adlai Stevenson, was the Statler Hotel in New York City, the choice of the st~dents and faculty. The following is a break down of Oct. 23-25. The delegates arc: how the votes were cast: .Joe Palmieri-Editor-in-'.'hief Grand Totals: Votes .Joan N. Staub-)lanaging Editor Cast Percentage Eisenhower 61 Phil Corse-Business ~.lanager 357 231 Stevenson 39 Sally Breit-r-iews Editor Female: Eisenhower 69 .Joel Levy-)Iake-up Editor 139 62 Stevenson 31 The Itlmc1111 is a n emher of tll'i )!ale: Eisenhower 55 Associated Collegiate Press. This is 209 168 Stevenson 45 the first time any of tile staff ha~ a:­ Percentage Total Votes !or Percentage tended the conference. The moue:, Department: Voting Eisenhower Stevenson Eisenhower Stevenson used to finance the expedltion was o'i­ Physiotherapy 47 23 17 57½ 32¼ General College 67 67 56 55 ·15 tained from ad\'ertisin!; clpne in th" Business 76 55 45 55 45 lthn<'nn. Physical Ed. 71 81 53 60 40 "This is the first time," said Sen. Nixon froin the Ithaca Red Wagon, ~lusic 71 99 42 70 30 The managing editor of E~1111lrt• will " ... that I've ever spoken from a Truman platform ... with a piano Faculty 23 13 64 36 open the proceedings Thurs.. Od. on it!" It should be noted that the senior class of the Physiotherapy Depart­ 23, at 1 p.m. There will follow a co:11- -Photo by Rovrrztinr ment could not vote as they are in New York City. One vot~ was cast for plete program covering the editorial. Freud. Ten ballots did not indicate the sex of the voter. Smee the total business, and other aspects involved vote was large the effect of these ~exless ballots in the final breakdown in journalism. Included among other 4500 Republicans Hear Sen. Nixon Assail was negligibile. The departments included under General College are: speakers will be )Ir. Thomas Barn­ Radio, Drama, Speech, and Liberal Arts. hart, a professor of journalism at thP. Truman Administration As Corrupt University of )linnesota. )Ir. .John Sen. Richard Nixon, Republican Scott, an editor and correspondent for Analysis of Election vice-presidential candidate, assailed Football, Music Selling The most interesting trend in the · Time magazine, wilt address the group Kostenko, Ackerman the Truman Administration Sat., Straw Poll was the tendency of women at a banquet Oct. 24 at the Statler Oct. 18 at the Lehigh Valley Station for "Touchdown Twirl" to vote for General Eisenhower. Of Hotel. Vignette Co-Editors in Ithaca, N. Y. It was the first of his Immediately after Frosh Frolics, the total votes cast by women 69% Plans are under war for "\'ignette," whistle stop campaign speeches .Joe Palmieri, editor, commented: "I Oct. 25, the Ithaca ('ollege )!arching were for Eisenhower, as opposed to the college literary magazine, with the think we will obtain a wealth of through upper New York State. An en­ 55% by the men. Among the theories appointments of the editorial staff. Band will sponsor a dance, "Touch­ knowledge by attending this confer­ thusaslic throng of approximately 4500 advanced to account for this trend Dorothie Kostenko. Editor; Pat Acker­ down Twirl," which will be open to ence, and I hope that next year more people were out at 8:40 a.m. to greet were the uniform and career of Gen­ man. co-editor; John <'iaboiti. Busi­ students will be given the opportunity the Senator and hear him speak on all students. The dance will be held in eral Eisenhower. \Vomen may find Uis ness .\Janager; .Jacqueline Kelly, Cir­ of going to the conference. I regret the corrnption in the present adminis­ Seneca Gym from 10 p.m. until 1 a.m. uniform and background attractive. culation )!an age?'; and Bob Belfance. tration and the Communist infiltration that everyone on the staff will not with music by Andy Dougherty and The men who voted included some have the opportunity to attend our Publicity .\Janager. .\Ir. William Ter­ in the State Department. his orchestra. Girls have 1:30 a.m. per­ veterans and many potential veterans. first affair." williger is the advisor. The pro-Republican gathering re­ Army life and an Army offic('r would This year's "\"ignette," will be in missions. There will be a donation of ceived the Senator with cheers and be Jess likely to attract this group. printed form rather than the mimeo "We Like r-iixon" banners. Nixon lash­ 50 cents per person. The committee Adlai Stevenson has campaigned on copied form of last year. ed _out at the Truman )Jew Dealers chairmen are as follows: Social Chair­ a Jess emotional level than did the The editorial staff hopes. by me:in, 100 Testing Centers when he said, "Seven years ago when man-Jerry Usdane. Ticket ('ommittee General. Women arc inclined to be of a forth-coming contest, to obtain a II Truman took over the administration more emotional than men ancl there­ . 115 . high standard of compositions. The -Douglas Little, Decoration Commit­ T o G1ve erv1ce he had everything on his side for fore Eisenhower's campaign llll'thods contest will start soon and is open to tee-Bob Williams. and Bond rommit­ peace and prosperity. What's he done'! would ap11eal tu them to a gT,'ater de­ Exams -December 4 all students. The editorial sta:f will Today we Jost our military superiority tee-Lois Guthrie. The chaperones for gree than the campaign waged hy c-hoose the manuscripts to be accepted. whereas before the rommunists "Touchdown Twirl" will be )Ir. and The of students taking the Stevenson. numbered 9 to 1 in our favor, they now Sdective Service College Qualification .\!rs. William Terwilliger and :\Ir. and The .\lusic De1iartn1ent slu,w,•d t.lic number 5 to 3 against us. That's tl)C Test will swell to approximately half )lrs. Howard Rarig. greatest majority for Ei~,·nhu,,er. Absence Committee record and nothing can change it, )Ir. amillion with completion of the third Radio, Drama, S1icech. all(! Lil>t'r.il Atcheson's excuses, )Ir. Stevensons' The setting for "Touchdown Twirl" s,,ries of tests to be given Dec. 4, l!l52 Approves Plans for Arts. as a group, was almn~t cllvic!ed jokes or 1'rnman's lies, nothing can will be done in blue and gold forming and April 23. 1953 at 100 testing in it ·s vote•. Both of th!'se ,;ections l'hange the record." an appropriate background o[ football centers throughout the country. Class Attendance an• forms of art, yet tiH'Y showed a The college- committee on absences On the Red seepage in the State and musical symbols be.cause u[ the d(•cidecl differen<'e in political tempt>t'. In announcing dates of the third has approved the following plan to Department, :-.:ixon stated that we The students in the .\lusic De11an­ series, :\1ajor General Lewis B. Hershey close coo11eration betwet>n the )!arch­ go,·ern class attendance: were UJJ against "ruthless, shrewd men ment are reeruitcd from the widest said that 413,395 students have already ing Band and the Football team. "Students are expected to attend of the Kremlin and we seem to under­ g_eographical area as compared to tlw _taken the test. He reported that the ch1~scs regularly. If, for any reason. estin,ate them. We need able, shrewd other departments. The second group Educational 'festing Service of Prince­ the student must be absent from class men to deal with them." The Senator of students find their of inter­ ton, New Jersey again has been desig­ he is expected to consult the instruc­ declared that we haven't won a ('Oil­ have to mount a great offensive, a est in Xew York ('ity. ·1;his is due to nated to prepare and administer the tor immediately about making up the ference in the last seven years and moral and spiritual offensive, and Wl' the fact that till' city b the c-enter ut test on the basis of submitted bids and work missed. Instructors have the the "Communist containment" school need a moral and spiritual base to radio and theatrical life. ~!any 01 to send each examinee's score to authority to accept or reject student of Atcheson and Stevenson shows no mount it on; we have to sweep out the these students come from the N, w selective local boards. excuses and to make whatever require­ improvement. second raters and sweep into office a York City vicinity or large commun­ Students currently deferred on the ments may be necessary to insure Dwight D. Eisenhower, pointed first rate president and that's just ities. The Democrats greatC'sl strength basis of test scores or class standards prompt and regular attendance. Ab­ Nixon, is the man to meet the threats what we'll have in Dwight D. Eisen­ is in communities of 100,000 or rnnre. number about 190,000. sences which have the approval of of the American way of life and de­ hower." It has already been pointed out that General Hershey emphasized that the student's dean must be excused, feat them without a war. He said, Nixon then boarded his s11ecial train women trend to vote for General increasing manpower demands make it but in all cases the work is to be made "We have got to keep America strong and headed to Geneva, N. Y. to con­ Eisenhower and the )lusit- Depart- (Continued on page 6, col. 1) up." at home and productive and free. \\'e tinue his campaign tour. (Conti1111C'd 011 page ;!, col. ;!)

J Page 2 Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952

At times the action of the charac­ Iy, accordil~p to p1·cfercnce), but 1101 Theta Alpha Phi Fetes ters seemed incom1irehenslhle. the act­ much can he stated on• grounds of our The Theater inp; and directing of the production ratio of 61 to :!9. -~howc1i. l felt, an excellent combina­ It is interesting to compare the v,11- Drama Critic by Mona Bizzori tion of interpretation anll technique. ing- ratios I Eisenhower-Stevenson, The rapidity of the scene shifts anrl among different groups of voter~ 'fhe Scholar, a two-act, 16 scene the i,imple but imaginative settings Grouping these voters into those he. play, opened on Oct. 15, for a four had dramatic appeal; howe\ er, the low and above the total college ratio, day run in the Ithaca College Little llghtm!!; ar. a whole sacrificed visibilit~· WP find that the ~lusic departnwnt Theatre. Although :\Ir. Alec Grendale's for eiTeC't. :\Ir. Greendale's technical intentions were to write a tragedy, <'i0% E. :rn~, S.) the women voter~ skil, i howed imagination and sensi­ 169'1, E. :no/, S.), and the faculty (6-io/,; the result was only a detective story. ti\·i~y. turning of the wheel in the tl,., K 36'1,- S.) have voted more heavih l lound myself being primarily con­ bit".\ c ll· sho1>, the backstage noises of for I~isenhower than the college a~ ;, c·erncd with the problem of bringing the students after Dr. Sedgewick's whole while male voters (55% E. -1,,S, a murd,.rer to justice rather than lecture, and the 1n·esence of the sha­ S.), Physio-Therapy I 57'/c K 13% S.l ' with thP fate of a tragic hero. I dowy gunman on stage during the the general college ( 557,- E. 45;":,' couldn't shift my attention away from second ~el•ne in Eleanor Ilix's a1iart- the struggle between the good and 1m·nt. On the whole, the play was a S.). and Business (which is, of cours~. evil forces of society as they tried to ll•05t Jl!'O,'c,cali\'e experiment, although a part of the General College, but determine what should happen to the this lirnt production revealed a num­ not for which we have separate fig. criminal. If :\Ir. Greendale had written ber of problems which ~Ir. Greendale ures, 55'1/. E 45% S.) have voted rel­ a tragedy, he would, of course, have will 1mll.oubtedly be able to solve by atively more favorable for Stevenson had to create a real tragic hero. Ac­ rew1·;ting. Only the department for Physical Ed­ cording to ??? in his book. ucation has voted almost in accord­ Aristotle's Theory of Poetry and ance with the college average: 60% E. f'Jne .\rt, "The Function of Trag­ Wagner Analyzes IOo/, S.). edy": "-the tragic sufferer is a man Next to "music" the female vote like ourselves and on this inner I.C. Straw Poll Dr. Krutch, eminent drama critic, is flanked by Mr. Eugene Wood, D_irec­ was most favorable for Eisenhower likeness the effect of tragedy mainly Ed. Note: Mr. Ludwig Wagner is while the male vote tends to the other tor of IC Drama Dept. and Mr. Alex Greendale, author of IC's recent hinges. Without it our complete sym­ production, "The Scholar," discuss the dubious future of the modern the Professor of Statistics and Eco­ extreme. I would guess (and nothing vathy would not be enlisted. The theater. nomics at Ithaca College. but guessing seems possible) tint 1 esemblanuce on which Aristotle in­ First of all, I am not an expert on among the male students the draft sists is one of moral character. His On Oct. 14. in the )!en's Lounge, cupies the realm of reasoning, and public opinion analysis. And even the and the status of veterans had SOllle Theta Alpha Phi held a tea in honor forms of nature form the beginnings of hero is not a man of flawless per­ expert~ have been proved spectacular­ influence on their relatively low of Dr. Joseph Wood Krutch, world artistic design, Today, playwrights fection. nor yet one of consummate ly wrong during the last presidential Eisenhower ratio. It is an open ques­ vlllany; by which we must not un­ known drama critic. seem to say that man is a product election. But this does not mean that tion which l like to raise without derstand that he has merely aver­ Following the refreshments, Dr. rather than a being, society is radical­ straw votes are absolutely useless as answering it myself whether the above age or mediocre uqalities. He rises, Krutch answered various questions ly unjust, there is a realm of obses­ long as we remain very conscious of average ratio of women vote had some­ indeed, above the common level in concerning the theater. He expressed sion rather than reasoning, and the their specific limitations. thing to do with the personality ap­ moral elevation and dignity, but he his desire for the theater to be "re­ machine is greater than man. "The On the average, faculty and students peal of the Republican candidate. But. Is not free from frailties and im­ born." This would not be possible in tendency of today is to destroy the voted according to a very rough ratio of course, any conclusion from our perfections.-So much human nature the Broadway theater. It might come Renaissance man, and· whatever is of 61 % for Eisenhower and 39% for very limited figures would be mis­ must there be in him that we are about through small theaters such as trying to be put as a substitute can Stevenson. Does this mean an increase taken. able in some sense to identify our­ college, subsidized, or community gain no sympathy from me." for the Republicans or a gain for the theaters. They might be able to try­ selves with him, to make his mis­ Let me finally com1iare our vote to Dr. Krutcb concluded with the state­ Democrats? ,ve have no figures to com­ our community, Our ratio of 61 Re­ out new playwrights which the Broad­ fortune our own." % ment that while Shakespeare asks the pare with. Professor V. 0. Key of Har­ way theater is not willing to do. The intentions of Dr. Sedgewick, the publicans to 397,- Democrats is quite question in his tragedies are the vard University offers in a recently When asked what has caused the professor, were admirable, and the different from the Ithaca ratio which heros victims or could they have done published book (Politics, Parties, and theater of today to be in the state that audience felt willing to identify itself is something like 75% Republican to something about it, the audience will Pressure Groups), a statistic of Re­ it is, Dr. Krutch said it might be with him, but, unfortunately, he 25'/r Democrat-or even more so in come to a conclusion because the au­ puhlican-Democratic votes in 19-18 by economical reasons, it might be com­ seemed to lack the intensity and pas­ favor of the Republican vote. But, or thor has clearly set down the facts. "educational groups," According- :o munications, or it might be the ideals sion which are so necessary to a course, Ithaca College (like any other Major playwrights of today seem to be him (p. 234) 7'lc of the Democratic which we are living with today. He tragic hero. In the first act, the pro­ college) could not be expected to con­ confused in their own minds about vote came from people with college further stated that the Renaissance fessor had the sort of vigour essen­ form to the local pattern since it their heroes and carry that impression education, while 43% of the Repub­ man, which was the ideal man until tial for a character of such great draws so many students from the out­ lican vote was ascertained as deriving 50 years ago, was created on the sup­ across to the audience; thereby mak­ stature, but as the play progressed be side. As far as the percentage of vot­ from people with college education. positions that man is dignified, life in ing it difficult for the viewers to come seemed to lose this quality. I believe ing and non-voting is concerned, we that thi:l flaw was the playwright's But this does not help as much since this world can be rewarding, man oc- to any definite conclusion. have done pretty well in our "door fault and not John Kontrabecki's in college education refers clearly to all bell ringing:" our \'oting is probabl) people who are or ha,·e been in a col­ his acting. Perhaps because Dr. Sedge­ a little above the state average, And Analysis lege. Has Stevenson changed this pi('­ this is some comfort we can take no Campus Notes wick discovered that Eleanor Bix was (Continued from page 1) ture? One may affirm or deny it (most- matter how we voted. by Sonya Morris ment has the largest female enroll- a finer, more mature woman than bis ment. The Stewart House officers are: wife, h·.· did not appear to be suffer­ The Business Department with a President-Joyce Spero, Vice Presi­ ing wi,h the necessary intensity. If ratio of four to five in favor of Eisen­ dent-Doris Herting, Secretary­ ;J hower showed a close decision. '.\!any Ele:mo1· Dix had refused to help him :\lidge Peck, Treasurer-Terry Crane. of the students in this department <,ut in I.is tight against the crime Hilliard House officers are: Presi­ come from a background of small busi­ i.,yndic:att', the audience would have Offers You dent-Dolores Reina, Vice President 11 ness and working class. According to -Renee Corey, Secretary-Roberta folt that the professor was suffering statisties small business and the work­ FORMALS FROM $19.95 to $29.95 Poster, Treasurer-Helene :\Iresse, i;1uch more as he passed through his 11 ing- class are inclined to favor the Social Chairman-Sandra Spitzer, ordeal alone. I~rthermore, Sedge­ and f:t>mocratic Party. '.\lany of the stu­ ;1 Phi Delta Pi House officers are: t:.cnt~ ,ire from Tompkins County wick doesn't suffer at all once he has CASUALS FOR CLASS WEAR AT MODERATE PRICES President-Joy Stowell, Vice Presi­ I which is usually favorable _to the Re­ made up his mind to take a stand ~ dent-Alwina Genesis, Secretary-­ publican candidate. These factors against crime. As he himself said, he Open Tues. Night 5til 9 :oo;; I Phyllis Zipes, Treasurer-Patricia may have contributed to the near Shiner, F'rosh Rep.-Sylvia Solomon. was then without fear and had passed split decision. -· Newman Hall officers are: Presi­ from darkness into sunshine. This con­ The vote in the community of Ithaca dent-Alice Babcock. Vice President cept, however, is in direct contradic­ is generally about 75% to 25':'r in favor -Gretchen Carichner, Secretary­ of the Republican Party. Ithaca Col­ tion to the pattern usually believed ITHACA COLLEGE'S Diana Dower, Treasurer-Carole lege, which voted 61 '7o to 39 1;/o in favor necessary fo1 the tragic hero. He must C'hapman. of Eisenhower,. acted independently suffer fo,· his principle-even after he Pin :.\lu Alpha and SAI are holding COMING ACTIVITIES of the community. has made up his mind. When ;\Ir. open house at the respective houses The Ithucnn wishes to extend its Greendale puts his hero above fear on Thurs., Nov. 6, from 8-10. A closed gratitude to :\Ir. Ludwig \Vagner for Oct. 24--lthaca vs. Lock Haven and suffering, he is really writing a party will follow at the Phi :\lu House his help in compiling the statistics righteous story, The professor's 11 11 foe members of both organizations. used in this report. Because we lacked Oct. 25- Touchdown Twirl the time and data necessary to verify death at the end is not sufficient to Egbert Hall. 404 E. Buffalo Street, 10-1 - Seneca Gym the Straw Poll returns this column rescue the play, for even then the hero will hold an open party on November Donation 50c general observation and seems to know no fear or suffering. 7, from 8-12. There will he refresh­ 11 11 ments and danring. Oct. 25- Frosh Frolics Ithaca Collegr Christian Fellowship 8:15 P.M. -Theater will meet Oct. 29 at 7: 00 p.m. in the Y:.ICA-East Room. There will Oct. 29 & 31-NYSSMA Divisional Music Festival be a series of talks on '<"hristian Ideals IRV LEWIS College Theater of Love and :\larriagP," Everyone is invited. MEN'S SHOP CORNER BOOK STORE Stewart House is having a hayride (In the Middle of the Block) on Hallowe'en night for the girls and 120 _E. State St. their dates. After the hayride there EARL DEMOTTE will be a party at the house, 404 Stewart Ave. ,, Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 Kaywood ie Pipes A. C. P. Offers Prizes For New Shapes

Designed to encourage c·x .. 1, · 1 ,', .... CAMPUS AND CAMPAIGN and artistic designs for toha- , . ' II'~,' a national sculpture ,·,,111, .. , .,, .. •: The ('a1111111l-> l'olil'!,l'iall, l'niversity of Kovember. Despite this appeal-one among Ameri<:an and ('anadi:·'I ., .,.,_ Tolpdo, asked two top student political based on loyal devotion to a great hero teur and professional sculp10r·, !,. - leaders om, Demol'rat and one Repub­ of World War II-Governor Adlai ing sponsored by the Kaywoo,ii, r.: 1- pany, makers of Kaywooclie pipe,. a,,_ lican. each to write a short piece in Stevenson is the better presidential cording to an announcement thb ,•;,-,.k support of his candidate. Here's the candidate. by :\!orris L. Levinson, president result. Stevenson's career has been devoted Cash prizes totaling $2:ifJ() ar" lio­ For Eisl'nlunwr: First thing you no­ to civil government. Eisenhower is a ing offered to winning sculptors, with ti<:e about Eisenhower ls a reddish­ military man. Stevenson is a great the first, second, and third prizes tan sunburn, eyes a striking blue. You political leader. Ike isn't. amounting to $1000.00, $500.00. ancl $250.00 respectively. Five Honorable will not get an impression of height, Adlai Stevenson is the leader of his :Mentions of $100.00 each are also in­ size or grand manner when Ike goes party. Senator Taft controls the Re­ cluded. by. He looks solid, walking with a publican party. Stevenson has proven Among the judges serving on the rapid bouncing effect. his political intelligence. Ike hasn't. Kaywoodie Jury of .Awards f'o:nmit­ Ike is usually surrounded by many tee are: Wheeler Wil!fams, President Left to right, Phil Corse, Joan Staub, Joel Levy, Sally Breit, and Joe Adlai believes in federal control people. He seems to be quite good at of the National Sculpture Society; Palmieri as they leave the "Ithacan" office for New Yo~k City and the when state authority fails. · Eisen­ Nathaniel Choate, Fellow. :'llational carrying along two or three trains of Associated Collegiate Press Conference, Oct. 23-25. hower's "corruption" campaign com­ Sculpture Society; and Associate of thought, a few words here, a few there. -Photo l,y Roq•t'11ti11r mites him to states' rights. Eisen­ the National Academy; Cecil Howard, You get the strong feeling he stands hower has accepted the support of internationally renowned sculptor; for no monkey-business when he's l\1ichael Lantz, leading American men like :McCarthy. Stevenson does working. sculptor and medalist; and l\lr. Levin­ not want or need that kind of support. son. The first three men are members On the other hand, it's an altogether Americans want Eisenhower to lead of the editorial board of the National HAZING STILL CONSIDERED 11leasant picture to see Ike shake the their army, But Adlai Stevenson to Sculpture Review. hand of a kid who's been up half the lead their government. The Competition was formally an­ RUGGED INSTITUTION night getting out a job well done. nounced to sculptors in a full page in There's nothing put on about Ike's the September issue of the National The time-honored eustom of ha>dn~ p;rin and the. vigorous handshake. Sculpture Review. This advertisement is still a long way from rc>finenwnt on listed, among other requirements, the He's giving all he's got and he many campuses; but at somp <·ollc>~cs Coaches Advised following: wants those around him to do the Russian Students Delay hazing is actually bec•oming d,·i1izc>1l. (1) Competition begins Oct. 16, 1952. To Quit Show sa:ne. If there's a single word to de­ (2) Entries must be received at the At Yalparaiso university, Incl .. tlw Pootball coaches will no longer Final Test Taking scribe his appearance, it must be Kaywoodie Co., 6400 Broadway, West c:ustom is somewhere> in hctwl'en. The• double as entertainers. according to "c·onfidence." The :\Ioscow newspaper, Iswestlja, New York, New Jersey, postmarked l"11lp11rnlso. 'l'ofl'h last wl'ek proud!·, no later than· January 31, 1953. the new code of ethics laid down last For Sl'n•nson: The emotional ap­ is greatly disturbed because so many pointed to its "class float. stunt night." (3) Entry blanks and tags are ob­ peal of General Eisenhower is the graduate students have postponed tak­ and other e,·iclences of sanity, winter by the American Football tained by writing to the Sculpture only factor that could win for him in But the paper averted itH eyes from Coaches Association. The code must ing their final exams. No student can Competition Director, Kaywoodie Co., 6400 Broadway, West New York, New the "brick parties, gang wars, J)aintecl get a degree unless he has passed this be approved at this winter's meeting. Jersey. signs and nocturnal processions of im­ From then on, says the Association, exam, but he can't take the exam until (4) Any medium may be used. prisoned freshmen women ..." it will be unethical for coaches to DEFERMENT DOINGS he has served !or three years in a (5) Minimum and maximum lengths concluded with a J)lea to of entries are 3 and 18 inches, re­ The Tofl'h position designated by the state. "let this thing (hazing, that is) slide "piC'k weekly game winners or to spectively. :\fost students seem to be taking slowly down hill. It's so much quiet<>r partici1mte in football polls or rating Since most of these assigned posi­ (6) Entries will be judged for artis­ that way ..." their deferment status seriously and tic excellence rather than commercial systPms ..." and to "show movies of tions are in isolated parts of East But there was not quiet on the are concerned with maintaining good design, Princeton campus. where f1·esh111en critical plays to sportscasters, sports­ grades; but there were some who felt Russia, the majority of students like and sophomores clashed in ,•arnest writers. alumni and the public which they wanted to get in as much fun as to stall the proceedings as long as <·ombat. Fifteen students were sent tll may indte them to label officials as possible before being drafted. possible. However, if students don't TUMBLE IN the infirmary for treatment. The report concludes that should Two of them. sophomores. had see­ ineornpetent ..." accept the assigned work, or if they 817 N. Cayuga St. the government drop the student defer­ ond degree burns, intlicted when a The Association advises eoaches to leave the position early, they must group of freshmen used boiling water ment plan, without supplying a sub­ LUNCHEONETTE rc•nwin "as inconspicuous as possible'' accept heavy penalties. to discourage a sophomore "invasion.'' stitute, there is little doubt that rest­ Said the l>aily l'rhu•t•lonhm, "Ad­ during ganws. and to refrain from lessness and anxiety would return to n:inistration officials have expressed <·riticizing officials to players and to the campuses. c•oncern over the widespread use of R.C.A. VICTOR the public·. In an ACP Student Opinion Poll sC'issors in the popular scalping activi­ 11 11 i tiC's practiced by both warring calllJ)s." Aecording to the Associated Pres~. taken last year it was learned that New! 45 R.P.M. Records i with Extended Play But, "The use of electric razors ha:; there is also a 1110,·e afoot to keep more than half the nation's students official encouragement." One man w:is sportswriters out of the team dressing feel that "only the better students More Music for Less Money i hadly slashed near the eye as a result rooms at halftime or right after the should be deferred," while 22 per cent : of a slip of the scissors. He required Up to 8 Minutes per Side • 11,·e stitches. game. think all students should be deferred. Classical $1.57 each ! Poular $1.47 each • •I LENT'S 210 N. Tioga I STUDIOUS SAL MONARCH RESTAURANT );ow, Studious Sal from Southern ('al­ Down in the mud was her chance for "When you are with Einstein out in lt must be admitted, was quite a gal; ,1 guy. space. Try Our 65c Blue Plate It's clear you overlook your face. She knew her math and physics, too, Meal Tickets Save l 0% 206 S. Cayuga St. And with each year h<'r knowledgl' In su<'ial circles Sal wasn't advised, Instead of reading Roman tales. Why not polish and trim your nails'/ grew. So she went to a doc to be analyzed. She wanted to know. and she wasn't "Instpad of looking for calculus tips, \\'ith angles obtuse and circles round. coy, Why not paint and shape your lips'/ "Why the heck can't I get a boy?" CHANDLER'S Sal could cover academic ground. Go out of doors, acquire a tan, Latin, Spanish, even Greek. For after the sun will come a man " She did a semester in Jess than a week. "You're tenibly smart, your chem is ======-=--=--=-=J EWELERs======great," So Sal did what the doctor said; Her marks were known throughout the The doc replied, "but before it's too Now she wishes she were dead. Bulova, Longines late, Although dates each night have be- DIAMONDS school, Hamilton Watches. And Sal would never break a rule. f'orget the stuff that comes in hooks, come her rule, Though promise of work was right And use your brains to improve your Her marks dropped so low. she flunked 202 E. State St. First Nat. Bank Bldg. nearby, looks. 011 t of school. Page4 Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October U, 1952 Satisfied Grads Create Goodwill Because Ithaca College is a professional school in physical education, Roving its athletes must play football to be eligible for football coaching positions. This is true whether the sport be , baseball or soccer. 1.nc. I Reporter When J.C. has had losing teams, a negative correlation existed so far By John Kontrabecki as placing its graduates into coaching jobs. High school administrators shy away from poor performers, although every player may be a poten­ By Jim Clarke The cold winds wrap their claws love, no joy, and we are driven to t 1~ tial "winner." ahout the caves of home, and all the roaring seas that wait to wash the ibst world is clothed in dead desires of a 1~ Athletes come to Ithaca to develop a vocation, therefore it is only "Do you think the liberal arts withered scrap of our decay into t proper that LC. exercises every possibility in placing its graduates into courses required in present day ('Ol­ million souls surrendering hopes of depthless waters of oblivion. good coaching positions. leges Interfere with specialized st url­ the world's futile And have we forgotten? All? All? Thus far, Ithaca's physical education teaching program is well intcr­ ies ?" destiny. Beneath Do we remember, ever, how it w: s. grated. The program teaches good principles of physiology; it teaches Sharon Whitney: the sodden graves, then'/ the worms gnaw at good principles of body development; it teaches goo'd principles of mor:il have the firm he­ Do we remember, ever, in the dark. the bowels of ethics. lief that liberal arts sad moments of our nights, how it w 1s Death; eyeless Ithaca College also exhibits a well developed physical training pro­ courses are vita]. r" when every daX._;was new? When all sockets receive In­ gram except for one big deficiency: no training table. the development of the moments of our rich lives was t:1e to darkness and Training tables will not make I.C.'s athletes gymnastic giants, nor intellectual growth. happy reaching of fondling hands for forever the world will they produce Peter the Powerful from Wallace the ·weak, nor will they People should havp the unnameable ecstacy of sound and of man's deception. The grave is sure­ guarantee a winning team, but the introduction of training tables into a variety of inter­ sight that filled our searching soul, ly cold and bleak with mournful howl­ LC.'s ahletic program will be a move in the right direction. ests in life, and the with new, exciting days? Do we re­ lings of bitter winds; yet it gives sure­ Ithaca College will more than likely never become a large competitor best place for the creation of these member, ever, how it was when we ly the heart that treasured years of in the sports field because it's a professional school for training professional interests is in college. were unafraid? When we laughed and fruitless dreams, a haven for Its fears coaches, not professional athletes. · Ed Gimzek: I am loved and dreamed, and laid our soulH and hopes. The dead, at least, are Few "Red Granges" or "Gippers" will clamor at its doors to become convinced that the upon the earth's breast, and knew that home. an outstanding athlete. so-called "general every second of our being was strain­ \Ve have lived so many years in thii; What LC. has though is a good bunch of boys who will make good education" definite­ ing towards the clouds, and we were our empty world; we have drPamed so coaches in all fields. Take care of these fellows. ly interferes with young and filled with the song or many false desires and let them rot Satisfied students make satisfied graduates; satisfied graduates make specialization! It deathless life? Do we remember, ever. into eternity with the stench of our men of good will for L C. usual Iy has no the time when grass blew green about compromise. We have beat the soft bearing on one's our toes. and skies danced blue before field what-so-ever. delicate beauty or our souls into a our eyes? Oh. cannot we touch for When Are You Going To Grow Up? The world of today Is so complex that Hordid. hardened mass; we have one fleeting second the ghost of what it is better to do a few things well mashed our dreams into senseless we were; the dream of how it was? "How old arc you?". is a question asked many times for various blobs of mocking and hurt. We have reasons and usually answered with a physiological age. Very few ever than many things poorly. Can we forget'/ Even in the hollow Suzanne Pa1·k­ let the world into our sours fastness; moments of our sterile Iaughter?-the consider the mental side of the story. and the world has kicked and smasherl You sec everywhere about you people who are supposedly adults, hill: We need lost faith, the dead years, the wasted things besides one our fragile shells, broken down the demand to be treated as adults, but conduct themselves as children. The breaths·? And where will all the tears specialized field. walls of our love, left us bleeding amt college student, especially, is supposed to be superior to the average per­ corrupt upon the plains; and wind,; fall when rememberance floods tllP son of his age. Anybody who is so howl and rains fall, and there is no rotting cellars of our brains? And yet, incidents continue to crop up to make people wonder just narrow as to not what the college generation of today is being taught in school. Incidents want a good gen­ such as the "panty raids" of last year. Even more recent is one that effec.ts er a I background Ithaca College. seems more like :1 MUSICALLY well-trained dog than a well rounded Sometime last week, a small group of energetic I. C. students decided By Jerry Usdane that the colon; on Cortland State Teachers College's buildings were not human being. II to their taste. They then proceeded to paint the buildings themselves. The Jose Polansky: Did the question: "What makes true. There are interval combinations result? A rankling emmity between I. C. and Cortland as shown by their It is definitely nec­ music sound?" ever occur to you'/ Why which are sometimes termed heavy or retaliation of battleship grey paint around our campus. essary to have lib­ is an anthem stately, or what struc­ grave. The loud ponderous dynamics The Halloween pranks may have been all right when we were young­ eral arts courses to tures combine to make a march mili- plus the heavy interval sequences sters, but some of us have grown up... Or have we? round out one's tary? What makes help to create the sad or mournful Deliberate destruction of property is termed vandalism for most of education, but there music light and gay mood. The intervals and tones com­ us, but for a few, it might still be called juvenile delinquency. should be an em­ or heavy and sad? monly associated with trumpet calls So to those few to whom this applies, the question "How old are you?" phasis on the per­ Why is jazz not often establish a pompous, triumphant might easily he changed to "When are you going to grow up?" son 's specialized dixie or a blue tune or military mood. The light interval. field . . . !\lore emphasis than exists not a Beethoven fast tempos, and fast rhythms tend to now. Sonata'? It doesn't establish happy, gay or light moods. Letter to the Reader Paula Kleinman· just happen, and it In all forms, including popular musil'. As Editor-in-Chief, I accept full by students as well as faculty mem- People in drama­ isn't only the pro­ lyrics are important to mood changPS. responsibility for the quip directed hers. tics who merely duct of definite tempo changes or The musical plane is as dependent musical scheme. It isn't merely a com­ toward Physical Education which ap- Sincerely yours. want to specialize on all n:usical structures as is the bination of musical tones or a se­ peared in the Ithacan Oct. 10, 1952 J. G. Palmieri could go to one of expressive plane. However. added to quence of rhythm patterns. It is, how­ on page six. I wish to have no harsh Editor-in-Chief the numerous spe­ this plane is musical form. The mos! ever, a combination of all these things: reflections cast upon any member of cialized schools appropriate thing to be said for J)OpU­ a definite plan, musical tones, tempo the lthn<'an or upon the organization. throughout the ]ar music is that 95 per cent of the changes, harmonic differences, rhyth­ llnder no circumstances was the re­ 'BEIZBOL' IS RED? country. At J.C., time. it requires a very definite beat. mic scheme, dynamic (soft and loud) mark entered into our paper with ma­ The Russians are now claiming that one gains varied knowledge . . . a The difference between dlxie and bop level. and the composers own inspira­ licious intent. It was not printed to they. and not Abner Doubleady, in­ broad education . . and I think this can most simply be described as diff,·r­ tion. "Rlap" the physical education depart­ vented the game of baset&n. A Soviet is better. ent rhythm, interval, and phrase Lue of the most amazing musical ment "in the face." It was not intended youth magazine told its readers that Dave Dick: There groups. The ad-lib or "ride" chorus 1>henomenon is the process of a com- to he "blocked out" in heavy print "beizbol" is not American but just is no doubt that we has become a series of instantaneous 1>osers conception and the ability of such aR a notice nor was it intended a distortion of the Russian village all need a good musical ideas. The biggest charact('l'­ putting on paper that which is con­ to be printed without an acknowledg­ sport ·called "lapta," which was play- general back­ istics of bop and bo1> forms are t!1e ceived. Inspiration is the most abstrac-: ment, and a caption such as "daffy­ ed centuries before there was an Am- ground. Yet at the chord progressions and the resulting level in composition. It is a cognitive nitions." It was nsPd as a .two-line erican on the map. same time, we must intervals. Dixieland is <:ltaracteriz.,d structure, and beeause of its internal space filler. American baseball, said the youth be well versed in by added slurs and f\"eneral count, r· beginnings can only belong to onP I regret deeply that this uninten­ magazine, is a "beastly battle, a our field. Things !lllntal (harmonic melody lines) play­ J>erson; the composer. Composing is to tional provocation has resulted in so bloody fight with mayhem and mur- are quite well bal­ ed by each instrument. In the rno?·c anced in r.r. There should be no more the composer as writing a story is to mnch ill-feeling toward the ltlUll'UII der." <., ligitimate musical forms, the figu1 c. sacrifice of specialization to general the author or as is a line of poetry to motive, phrase, and period grou i, a poet. Therefore this highly seled education. tend to create the musical moods. Barbara Rich: group is closed to those without the This is a very simplified breakdo\'·n Member There aren't too natural or educated inspiration. In­ Associated Collegiate Press many general spiration is very dependent on society of musical analysis. The general sta1c­ courses in our col­ and era. It is very improbable that mcnts are necessary because it is i111- f~DITOR-IN-Cl!IU' ...... , .... , ...... • J. G. Pnlmieri lege. We should music such as Bach 01· Beethoven wrote possible to pin down all mush al ::IIA:-IAGl:-IG IWITOR ...... , ...... ,Jonn ~. Stnub will ever be written again. Thus if we BUSDIESS MANAGER ...... •...... •.•...... •..•••.. Phil Corse have more courses structure. Every statement made in STAFF ...... Chnrlcs DeZutter, John Matso!' in spelling, read­ lived in a past era, we would under­ :SEWS EDITOR ...... •...••.•...... •.....•....•...... Sally Breit this column has been contradicted in STAFF-Annette Thomns, 1Inrv FiulkofT. Hnrry Booth. :!\fol Schorr, Mary Burton. ing and composi- stand its music better than we do to­ Gloria Hcnlmuto, Jim ::\tcGccver, ~ick De llnrco. literature time and time again. How­ FEATUR!, EDITOR ...... , ....•...... •...... ••.•...... Monn Bizzarl tion. There are not day. This also explains why we gen­ ST AFP-Art Roventme, ,John Kontrabccki, Milly Ebert, ,Tim Clarke, Jerry Usdnne, many people graduating from High erally favor contemporary, especially ever, these methods when used in the ,loy,·,• Fullci;nr. Phyllis Zipes, Art Rovcntino. . SPORTS EDITOR ...... •...... Ralph Rnrrick School who can write an intelligent American, music. For the music from combinations mentioned, do tend to STAFF ...... Burt Mnslcino, Del Harvey, l'eg Weaver, Ge~rge Sulkess letter and spell properly. Debussy to Hindemith was inspired by REWRITE Ell!TOH ...... •....•...... Marilyn Kaplan establish the listed moods and partial­ STAFF ...... June Bullock, Joyce Spero, Faith Fitch Bert Sliker: We the latter era of our western civiliza­ MAKE-UP EDITOR ...... •...•..•...... Joel L. Le".y ly answer the question: "what make, CIRCULATION EDITOR ...... Sonya Morria must have liberal tion and therefore is closer to us. STAFF-Jerry Usdnne, ,Judy Shuler. music sound?" PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR ...... •...... Art Rovcntinc arts courses to give The expressive plane of music is STAFF-Ford Reinlieb, ltoy H111<11111an. us the well round­ _most often determined by interval COP1T~i,~D~-~ : ·.. : ·. ·. ·. ·.: ·.: ·. ·. ·. ·. ·.: ·.:. ·.:. ·.:: ·.: ·. ·.:::: ·.::::::::: ·.::. ·.:: ·.: :j~~~eBul?o~~ ed background ex­ (tone) combinations, tempo changes, Ad in the UCLA Daily Bruin: Will FACULTY ADVISOR ...... ••.....••..... E. W. Terwilliger and dynamic levels. The minor mode is pected of a college the blonde young lady who wore sun· grad. These courses very commonly associated with sad, Published l,H,cckly Cor the students and !acuity of Ithaca College. Contrlbutlona nod glasses Thursday morning (besides suggestions ure invitl'fl but will not be printed unleos oigned. Signatures will be withhold also give us a base gypsy, foreign, and ancient religious upon request. Views e:-..prcBM·d lJY <"olumniete within their signed columns do not neccaenrily for our respective music. 'fhls ls ,·ery fnr from always other things) be in the cafeteria be­ refll'ct editorial policy or opinion. specialized subjects. being so, however, often as not, it iR tween 11 and 12 a.m. ------Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 make many of the physiological prin­ ·-, Hilliard Housemother ciples that we study in class visahl<' to us. You're welcome to attend these ALUMNI NEWS I Publishes Original Verse experiments . .Just inquire when they By Phyllis Zipes I I will be held. Try Our Delicio . I by Betty Patterson flass of •;;2 HELEN YOHN, music, is teaching I Righteous living is to aid those who Since she was eight years old, :\In;. vocal at :\Iorrisville, N.Y. ! need you. And the ('ommunity Chedt .JOE KAHN, physio, is now engaged Cube Steak t .\!bee, the mother of Hi!liard House, in private practice' at 1422 Lincoln 0J)en house for I.C. Alumni was helcl I drive now in progress needs your I has been writing poetry-jotting down Place, Brooklyn. N. Y. lHs wife, the last Sun., Oct. 12 at the Alumni Office help. That dime or dollar you give I ;erses as they eame Into her mind. former .JOYCE HER:'IIAN, music, is from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. It was attended 85c I For many years her work was pri­ to the drive will help those who neP.r!. I taking her masters at Queens College. by representatives from classes span­ 0 narily to entertain her children or for News Item I BILL STRAUB, P.E. is teaching at ning the years '04 to '52. Among those I ·lrnrch and school proJ?;rams. However, I.C. Physios ,to Attend Important :\leet­ present were :1IARION REEVES, P.E. T I :\larlboro Central School. 0 ,Jrs. Albee has recently decided to pub­ lng '·Hi, who has been teaching in .Johnson I BARBARA HONER, speech, is now 'ish a collection of her poetry which City for quite awhile. Also present waH I A meeting of the Upstate New York :\!rs. Roger H. Coye. Barbara is with I :s expected to be ready for sale by the KAREN RASK, music '52, who is teach­ Our Specialty I and New York City groups of physio­ her Lt. Army husband at Fort Lee. I ;irst week in Dec. ing at the Griffith Institute in Spring­ I therapists will be held in Albany, Virginia keeping house. I The content of the book contains a ville, N.Y. Homemade New York, on Oct. 26. RALPH SAUSVILLE, P.E., is at­ • wealth of subjects and mood written It's interesting to note that :\IA.RY The purpose of the meeting will be tending Albany State Teachers Col­ I with a great variety of !'tvle and <"A'.\IPF'IELD, former assistant Lib­ CHILI-CON-CARNE to iron out difficulties which have lege taking his masters. ~tructure. i\Iuch of the poetry is of a rarian here at I.C. is studying now hindered the merging of the two and religious and philosophical nature HELEN LEHN, physio, is employed at Syracuse U. groups into one stronger organization. at the N.Y. State Rehabilitation Hos­ penned, as :\!rs. Albee expresses it, Serving our armed forces are: TEXAS HOT "just as a mother and a teacher." In­ pital at West Haverstraw, N.Y. where :\Ir. Dingwall, in a letter request­ KENNETH LONG, P.E. '52, who is cluded will be three long narrative she is working primarily with polio ing his participation at the meeting. in the Navy stationed at Bainbridge, works dealing with her own experi­ patients. also received an Invitation for the of­ :'llaryland. ences as her children grew up, many ficers of Pi Theta Phi, Professional .JANE :\"ORTON ROSA, music, is KENNETH SPENARD, P.E. '52, who thought-provoking cinuains. and a Physiotherapy l~raternity, Inc .. to at­ playing "'.\lomma" right now to her is in the Army at Ft. Leonard, :'lli~­ I number of short verse poems. tend the confab. daughter Katrina who was born on .July 13. ,Jane is still living in Ithaca. sourl. The appeal of :\lrs. Albee's writing Rudolf C'ondoluci, Elmer Schultz. Busy Bee :\!ARILYN WORDEN, physio, was FRANK STANLEY, business '52, who would seem to be its simple, unaffect­ and Richard Fredericks, together with married recently to Robert E. Hordies is in the army at Camp Gordon. Next to Greyhound Terminal ed wording which gives tbe reader an Foster Lacey who will cover the adimiration for its underlying honesty of Syracuse. :.\Iarilyn is working in the Georgia. S. Aurora St. meeting for the Flzzlo Follies mag-a­ and beauty. The poems provoke com­ Physical Therapy Department or the .JUSTIN PALTROW, music '52, is al­ fortable images-a sunset in the zine, will represent the fraternity. Syracuse :'l[emorial Hospital. so in the Army at Aberdeen, :'.Iary!and. mountains, a sleeping child, a rainy day-and leave one wondering at the ::;reatness of ou·r everyday world. ·'-e. history- h oroe. ~ us \'"' us \i\c.e psyc ' However, l\lrs. Albee's literary abil­ S P.. d some. of bel-1:er ,taste ity is not limited to poetry. Some time n . ..J. ;ea\\ like ~\'tuck\j Strike~ BUL£B'l'IN! ago she wrote an operetta for children O"'~ of good o\d of the sixth and seventh grade. This work deals with the imaginary hap­ College students penings in :\[other Goose Village. .) There is also a novelette among her prefer Luckies in works as well as verses for several religious hymns. nation-wide survey!

Physio Facts A nation-wide survey based on actual student interviews in 80 leading col­ by Mel Schorr leges reveals that more smokers in these :'lledical doctors prescribe 11hysio­ colleges prefer Luckies than any other therapy for Arthritis, Neuritis, Scia­ cigarette-and By a wide margin. The tica, Sacro-iliac disturbances. Polio. No. 1 reason given for smoking Luckies? f'erebral Palsy, Paralysis, and Post­ fracture treatment, along with other Luckies' better taste. What's more, this nenro-musculo, musculo-skeletal dis­ same survey shows that Lucky Strike orders. gained far more smokers in these col­ Because the doctor knows that the leges than the nation's two other prin­ physiotherapist is trained and skilled cipal brands combined. in Actino-therapy-ultra-violet rays; Hydro-therapy-water, including elec­ tric and medicated baths and colonic irrigations; :'llechanotherapy-manip­ Yes ... LUCKIES ulation and therapeutic exercises; and Thermo-therapy-heat, short wave diathermy, ultra-violet rays, the doctor TASTE BETTER! often refers his patients to a physio­ therapist after he has made the diag­ nosis. At the last meeting of Pi Theta Phi V<:IT important business concerninp; tl1e advancement of the fraternity, which indirectly will lead to the ad­ vancement of the physiotherapy pro­ fl•ssion as a whole, were discussecl. Desire to expand the fraternity by add­ ing new chapters. and desire to be af_­ f1liated or associated with the Cere- 1,ral Palsy Association's Ithaca local in their activities were among the 1:1ost important things discussed. Dr . .Job! All we ask for is a secre­ t,try to help fill the gap left in the de­ partment by the resignation of :\liss lianson. Incidentally, a nice blond sec­ l't

AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURltR OF CIGARltTTltS Page 6 Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 A.. C. P. Releases

It's :Sk(• 'Out There' ... lrrutionul lfatlo ... Freedom to Criticize GI Bill Regulations Draftees Take It The probing fingers of survey con­ )!en, if you think the ratio of males ductors have unearthed a hand-full of to females on your campus is too And to Puff Tightened for Vets But Don't Like It hope for the college student who looks steep. try attending Davidson college College students are meeting the tcward graduation as "the end of the Its enrollment: 825 men. one woman. College editors across the nation The new GI bill is tougher than the draft situation with a minimum of pro­ \\ r•rld ... have been having trouble expressing old one. A veteran now must declare test and even less enthusiasm, accortl­ Apparent!; all is not dark on the Brush Off ••• ing to a poll taken on 11 campuses by outside. In fact, only one per cent of themselves, according to an article by his major as soon as he enters school, The l>111ly 'l'<"xan editor wasn't really Cornell university. the national collegiate class of 1951 Tom Tomizawa in The Jlnsthellll. and he's entitled to just one change complaining; but she had a problem: The poll compares the draft-vulner­ is currently unemployed, according to The trouble is, says Tomizawa, that during his college career. a survey taken by the National Scien­ "Along with press releases from rail­ able student with the income tax-pay­ roads, manufacturers. political parties, whenever they deal with a controver­ And the change is not easy to get. tific Register. ing adult. He meets his obligation, but and an occasional letter, the editor's sial topic, somebody-administration, The vet has to show he is not guilty he doesn't necessarily like it. The Register, a federal agency, found ·that 63 per cent of the male mail includes free subscriptions and student government or alumni-is of misconduct, neglect or lack of ap­ Ninety percent of the students, says trial samples. graduates are employed, 18 per cent likely to stifle them. plication. Then he must take a battery the report, would return to college if are in military service, and 17 per Such a one came the other day. in He cites many examples, a few of of tests. If he gets through unscathed. inducted before they finished, and only cent are in graduate or professional a ne~t interesting little box. To an) one in four though military service other editor it probably would have which we, have space to print: ":\liss he can change his major. school. would be a major disurption in his Almost all those employed are doing been welcome. But this editor ls find­ Sara Woods, editor of the Unh·ersity Here are the main points in the new life. work which requires college train­ ing it difficult to create uses for a bill: The veteran will be paid a lump of Oklahoma Daily . . . this spring ing. The remainder are engaged in trial jar of shaving cream!" went corruption-hunting in the stu­ sum each month. Out of this sum he such obviously non-professional jobs dent governing body, and called its must pay tuition and all other ex­ How To Graduate as "laborer," "taxi driver," of "tour­ 'rhls fa A Wardrobe1 ... ist guide." elections 'rotten, stinking and filthy.' penses. Tuition payments generally A recent article in Collier's maga­ zine called "Campus Cues for Cloth­ "'The student senate attempted to run about one-third of his total allot­ The Plagiary Way l'roxy Nee1lle • ing" has shocked the suspenders off Princeton university administrators stifle me when I was writing nasty ment. Registration usually causes a lot of the Unh·erslty Dally Kansan. discovered last week that two mem­ editorials about it,' she recalls now, It's up to the campus vet's instruc­ confusion, and a coed at North Texas Here, says the Kansan in hurt tones, bers of the 1952 graduating class somewhat with relish. ':!\ly life was tors to turn in monthly progress re­ State college almost got the worst of is what Collier's expects a student to forged their senior theses in "one of it. have in his closet: four suits, a tux­ even threatened."' ports to the Veterans Administration. the most flagrant examples of plagiar­ She was going through registration edo, two sport coats, eight pairs of Serious trouble can result if these re­ "When six students of a small east­ ism" ever attempted at Princeton. lines when she was ushered into a slacks, t.o sweaters, 12 dress shirts ern college recently were reprimanded ports are delayed or if they are not Both men, members of the English separate room. There a nurse told her and 10 sport shirts, 16 neckties, four and :\lodern Languages department, for drinking, the editor of the school turned ·in by the instructors. that since she had no record of a pre­ pairs of shoes, and 13 pairs of shorts were found to have submitted almost paper took advantage of the opportun­ viou~ vaccination, she would have to exact copies of master's theses stolen take one now. Concludes the editorial: "A Collier's ity for some barbed comments. A lot from the Columbia university library "But," the young lady stammered, representative is invited to inspect the the college has to holler about stu­ last winter. When faced with the evi­ "will that work? I'm registering for closets at KU for a reappraisal of his dent drinking, she said in an editorial Studentship: dence. both admitted the work was not my husband.'' sartorial guesswork." their own, but denied outside help or blast, when the school owns shares in having paid for the theses. a tavern and when it goes around 10 Eas.y Gambits No disciplinary measures have been soliciting funds from local pubs. announced. Two years ago there were Here are "10 ,vays to Get Through - A Lesson of Ignorance - "The editor found herself on the numerous reports of New York agents College Without Even Trying,'' as carpet-first in the office of the cen­ receiving up to $700 for the forging An editorial to freshmen from the University of Washington Daily: written in J>ugeant magazine by Prof. of theses for Princeton seniors. tennial campaign fund chairman, then Unless high school graduation exercises have changed, you've heard Robert Tyson of Hunter college: enough speeches about your journey into the great, wide world. You\·c in the president's office. She was 1. Bring the professor newspaper been encouraged, advised, warned, amused .. , and, probably, bored to warned to keep under control the l'ays To .\1hert.lse ... clippings dealing with his subject. death. 'impetuosity of her youth."' Ad in the UCLA Haily Bruin: "Will If you don't find clippings dealing We hope you've not hung out a mental "Do not disturb" sign . The article points out that most col­ the blonde young lady who wore sun because through the trite expressions, pompous phrases, glittering general­ with his subject, bring in clip­ glasses 'l'hursday morning (besides lege newspapers are very loyal to ities, there is often a little truth. pings at random. He thinks every­ other things). be in the cafeteria· be­ their school administrations and often A generation which gave us the roaring twenties, the great depression, thing deals with his subject. tween 11 and 12 a.m. ?" bend backwards to support them. and two world wars must have learned something. Not much, perhaps .. . 2. Look alert. Take notes eagerly. If but something. And we don't mean you should be docile note-takers .. . "But,'' it continues, "it is the school you look at your watch, don't S1101l System or just indulgentl}'I tolerant. You have a right and a duty to damn them editor's occasional flights into criti­ stare at it unbelievingly and shake Richard Nixon was last week elected if they are wrong. In order to do so intelligently you must know how they cism of school authorities which get arg~c. it. treasurer of the Young Democratic him into hot water. That is when club at the University of North Caro­ And ... they may know what they are talking about. 3. Nod frequently and murmer ."How lina. He is a distant cousin of the Re­ charges of student editor irresponsi­ true!" To you, this seems exag­ That generation has taught us how little we all know. If you lea111 publican vice presidential nominee. bility are made. And that is what the gerated. To him, it's quite ob­ as much, your college career will have been successful. Good learning! campus Greeley despairs of. He wants jective. to be free to criticize, as well as to -!. Sit in front, near him. (Ap1>lies puff, his school.'' only if you intend to stay awake). Tomizawa stresses the fear most col­ 5. Laugh at his jokes. You ('IIIl tell. If he looks up from his notes and leges have of "bad publicity" as a re­ smiles expectantly, he has told a sult of campaigns by student papers. joke. "Schools are sensitive to pressures of 6. Ask for outside reading. You don't public opinion .. .'' have to read it . .Just ask. compliments The editor attempts to refute this 7. If you must sleep, arrange to be with the claim that "it is the respon­ called at the end of the hour. It sibility of the school administrators creates an unfavorable impression if the rest of the class has left not to get into embarrassing situa­ of a_nd you sit there alone, dozing. tions." 8. Be sure the book you read during Probably never before, says the the lecture looks like a book from article, have so many college editors the course. If you do math in psy­ been so sharply aware of the problem chology class and psychology in of college press freedom. CampuH math class. match the books for size and color. editors from all parts of the country !l. Ask any questions you think he are writing editorials expressing their can answer. Conversely, avoid an­ abhorrence of controls. PARKIE nouncing that you have found the The Cornell nu.Uy Sun may be con­ answer to a question he couldn't sidered fairly typical of the college answer. and in your young~r daily viewpoint. It declares: "Any brother's second reader at that. ART and SONNY newspaper, unless it is founded on a 10. Call attention to his writing. Pro­ duces an exquisttely pleasant ex­ core of independence, might just as perience connected with you. Tf well fill its columns with comics or you know he's written a book or boilerplates as to call itself a real an article. ask in class if he wrote organ of truth.'' it.

I Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 j •! ..... t.! ' Student Council Ll'L ABNER Bv. Al . SENIOR SPOTLIGHT Outlines Plans By Joyce Fullager WE ALL JEST GOTTA GIVE ALL \if./ r The purpose of the I.C. Student Council is explained in its Preamble. "The Student Council shall act as a CAN TO THE SISTER KENNY POt. ._:·,; clearing house for any problems the nlAT student hotly and, by constant contact FOUNDATION SO MORE PEOPL2~ ( with the administration and faculty. WILi. BE ABLE TO LIVE ANO PLAY i to correct any situations requiring such action." NORMALLY ANO NACMERLY At present, the Student Council is a body of 15 representatives. Pres., Bob Rice, Vice Pres., Walter Carlin, Sec. and Treas., Nancy Widin: Howard Oaks, Kenneth Brown, Doris Hoyt, William :\leuzinger, Frank Bat­ tisti, .Joseph Dugan, :'llarilyn '.\lc­ :\leekln, Ted Schreppel, Burton Slider. Lucile Levine, Dolores Chiocco, and .Joan Staub. Advisor: Dr. Sydney Lan­ don. Annual committees have been set up for the first time to forward the work of the group more efficiently. One of these is the Orientation Advisory Com­ mittee with Walter Carlin presiding as DOI\' :\lUJ\'SON TED SCHREPPEL chairman. The purpose of this com­ President of Kappa Psi Alpha, Don Those of you who saw last year's mittee is to formulate complete plans is a married veteran with a business production of .\n Enemy of the People for Freshman Orientation with the ad­ education major. Don was born in Ovid will remember Ted Schreppel in his ministration during the school year. and was graduated from the Ovid portrayal of :\layor Stockman. He can therefore avoiding rush work when High School in 1946. While there Don usually be found working in the scene new officers take over in the spring. was a member of the band and played shop where he has been a student em­ The Elections Committee, with Joyce the clarinet and sax. He was in the ployee since his junior year. His in­ Spero acting as chairman for Howard Army for one and a half years, the terests are not merely confined ro Oaks, will handle all class and de­ major part of which he spent in Japan. stage productions, however, for Ted partmental elections. The first elec­ is president of the Ithaca College In­ He continued his music in the Army tions will be held by the freshman terfraternity Council. He is a speech by being in the 25th division band. after Frosh Frolics. He played a large assortment of instru­ major and hopes to become a profes­ To better inform the student body of ments. He played all the saxes that sional stage manager some day. Hol­ Don knows of plus the sarrusaphone, lis, Long Island is the place where the organization's duties and progress, a Publicity Committee, headed by and a saxaphone from France that Ted came into the world, but he liveo WELCOME plays in a key similar to that of the in 10 different New York towns be­ Lucile Levine, has been set up. tuba. He also played the oboe and the fore he and his family finally setlled At present, the council members cymbols. After Don received his dis­ in Jamestown, New York. He was have these goals in mind: Completion COLLEGE SPA RESTAURANT charge, he worked at an ordinance graduated from Hornell High School, of a successful campaign to obtain a depot for six months. Then he decided Hornell, New York where he was ac­ fight song, establish a new mascot and and to go to Sampson College. When he tive in the Three :\Iummers, the a new college seal; establish a strong­ found that Sampson wasn't giving him school's dramatic club. He also was er Big Brother system as well as an COCKTAIL LOUNGE what he wanted, Don transferred to a member of the football, track, and annual "Smoker", similar to the Ithaca College. He is going through boxing teams. Ted didn't break any W.C.C.'s Big Sister Tea; initiate a 216 E. State St. Ithaca, N. Y. school on a New York State Veterans records but he did break three ribs more effective system of departmental, scholarship. In April, 1948, Don mar­ during the course of his career as ,;_ and class elections. ried Elsie, whom he met in high boxer. He has worked for two Horne'! The Student Council is concerned school. They have a 2½ months old radio stations, WWHG and WLEA. with the problems of the student body. daughter, Donna Lee. They live in the The summer before last he spent at A student :with a problem or suggestion Veteran's housing community, or as the Theatre-By-The-Sea in :\[atunuck, must: it is more popularly known, Titus Rhode Island as general technician. 1) Present it to your class, depart­ ITHACA COLLEGE STUDENTS F'lats. While there, he also acted in several ment or other Student Council ARE HEARTILY. WELCOMED Don is doing his stretch of practice shows with Kay Francis, Joel Ashley, representative. teaching in Romulus Hig~ School, Eva Gabor, and Douglas Watson. He 2) Present it yourself at any regu­ AT ITHACA'S· LEADING where he is teaching Commercial sub­ worked last summer vacation at the lar S.C. meeting. The fourth Wed. TOBACCO SHOP AND NEWSTAND jects. :\fountain Theatre, Braddock Heights, of each month at 7: 30 p.m. in the Don wants to teach in a high school :'llaryland as technical director and Annex. in no particular place in the future finished the season at the :\lalden 3) Contact the Student Council with his permenant home in or near Bridge Playhouse, '.\lalden Bridge, New President Bob Rice, by phone or York. His interest in the theatre, start­ · the country. by putting a note in his box in Besides school, Don also works in ed with his first role in an eighth the Administration Building, re­ the A&P and he has worked on road grade operetta. He won an oscar for question a special meeting. construction plus working as an at­ co-starring in Room Service, a pro­ The next scheduled meeting is Oct. tendent at Willard State hospital. Don duction of the Hornell Civic Theatre. 29. felt that this last job was an interest­ Ted is a member of Kappa Gamma Psi, ing exeperience. He had 74 patients Theta Alpha Phi, Adelphi, Student under him and he learned a great deal. l 'ouncil and was staff photographer Don likes to do wood and metal for the Ithacan in his sophomore year. Freshman Smoker FROZ-N-GOLD work and also enjoys reading good He was officially engaged to Edith hooks and listening to good music. Wiltse in July and intends to be mar­ r HOME MADE ICE CREAM However, he doesn't care for many of ried June 26, 1953. Eadie, a graduate To Ignite Mon. 27 the abstract sounding records now of Ithaca College is now teaching On :\Ion., Oct. 27, the Sinfonians available. speech and dramatics in Johnstown, Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers, Frankfurters, Toasted Cheese, :'Jew York. After the wedding they will hold their annual Freshman I plan to live in Ithaca. Smoker. Festivities will begin at S and Cold Sandwiches p.m. and will feature a ,·aried pro­ Scampers Theme: A scene in the main salon will preced·e gram of entertainment and refresh­ one on the promenade deck. An under­ 433 N. Cayuga St. Just Over Bridge Ocean Voyage water ballet will close Act I. ments. Among the performers will be The results of the Scampers Rally In Act II, the first scene will take Peter Eckhardt, Bassoonist a'nd Rich­ that was held on Sun., Oct. 12, was place somewhere off the ship, pre­ ard Dennis. concertmaster of the the planning of definite outline for the ferably on some part of the Continent, Ithaca College Symphony. The "Cliff forthcoming Scampers of 1953. The such as France or Spain, or someplace Dwellers," Phi :\lu's own barbershop in the West Indies. The crew's quarters Production will be built around an quartet will be on hand for some ocean voyage. The show will be pre­ will be the setting for the next scene, Hented in two acts, each of which will after which the action will shift back lighter moments. Speaker for the eve­ include three scenes using full stage, to the main deck and then a cabin. ning will be a faculty member. Tuxedo Sales & Rentals and two scenes which will be played The finale of the show will be again Open house has been scheduled for off the ship, probably back in the in front of the tarveJer. The scenes Nov:. 6 at 7: 30 p.rn. :\lrs. Alice Sullivan,, staged in front of the traveler will not United States, at the end of the cruise. who is succeeding .Mrs. Rollo Tallcott be oleos, but will follow the continuity Completed scripts for those scenes ZACH DUTKY'S of the show as a whole. may be given to George Smith or put as house mother, will be present at Opening Act I, will be a scene on the in his box in the Administration Build­ that time. Refreshments will be served main deck of a ship followed by a ing. The deadline for Scampers scripts aud everyone is invited to attend. Phi 213 Dryden Rd. In Collegetown Phone 4-3833 -cabin scene In front of the traveler. is Sat., Nov. 15. :\lu Is located at 117 De Witt Place. Page 8 Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y., Friday, October 24, 1952 Cortland Smashes Bombers 39 - 6 game on the caml)us is a lot of hooey: . The soccermen of Ithaca were beat­ Dragon's Pellasang SPORTS REVIEW since ADOLPH RUPPturcd this belief en by the Sampson Sabers 7-4, Wed. by Burt Maskin when his Kentuckians clumped games Oct. 15. With the score tied 2-2 in tltt• in their own gym. second period, the Airmen bangeJ Stars In Victory The new theme song of Basketball, 6. Widen Dr . .James Naismith's cof­ across 3 goals to cinch the game.-.Jolrn The Ithaca Bombers absorbed their Let there be Integrity on the part "So Long, It's Been Nice To Know fin so he'll have enough room to Willams, leading scorer of the booter~. third loss of the season to Cortland, of parents, players, coaches, school Ya", will be very appropriate if bas­ turn over. accounted for three Ithaca goals, two Oct. 20 by a 39-6 score. The game was administrators, alumni, and spectators, ketball opens its courts to those play­ The basketball scandal was a ter­ on penalty kicks. A good pass from the feature attraction on the Dragons so that we can be proud of our great ers who did everything in their power rible thing, for we have seen some George O'Sullivan to Harry Graham Homecoming Day festivities. After be­ American game. to degrade and demoralize our great of. our greatest players gone astray. netted the last goal for the locals. The ing beat two seasons in a row the American game. I'm speaking about What hurts, is that at one time they Ithacans gave the Sampson crew a Cortland squad iced the game by half­ , . Bill Spivey, played the game for the game itself. stubborn battle before bowing. Thl· time with a 21-point barrage. Sherman White, and Gene l\lelchiorre. Surely as youngsters, they did not Booters Lose Twice boaters are in the stages of rebuilding The Bombers surprised the capacity There are many more, but at the play the game with a mercenary atti­ and are giving the topflight opposition crowd by scoring their only "T.D." in After 2-1 Win moment these names are In the "sllme­ tude. They played the game for the a go for their money. 3.52 of the first period. Nick :.\!amula !ight" because of the possibility of thrill of a nice pass; for the thrill of The College hooters racked up their recovered a Cortland fumble on the Over Rochester their reentering into basketball. a hook shot; for the thrill of a "give second win of the season over Roches­ Dragon 30 yard stripe. Two plays Groza, Beard, and White may play and go"; and for the thrill of that The soccer crew ran up against ter Oct. 11, by a 2-1 count . .John Wil­ later Cristello swept left end for 23 with .Jersey City. Spivey may play with melodic "Swish". Then their talents stern opponents Oct. 18 as they drop­ liams, leading scorer of the Ithacans. yards for a touchdown. The try for the Elmira Colonels, and Gene :.\!elchi- took them into a different world. Th<'Y ped a 5-0 decision to the Brockport kicked both goals for the locals in th.­ point was no good and the Bombers orre may play with the Wilkes Barre went from a world of fun loving bas­ Teachers at Brockport. The win was loosely played game. The Rochester led for the first and last time in the Barons. If these players (all of whom ketball and they weren't used to it. the 21 straight home field victory team was short out until the final game 6-0. were convicted of "shaving or fixing Their bicycles turned into converti­ for the winners. The strong Brockport minute of play. The Yavitsmen had Cortland was held by the green but games") are allowed back into bas­ bles; their corduroy knickers turned defense kept the Ithacans well bottled numerous scoring chances in the ganw. gritty Ithaca line in the first period, ketball, then it is only fair that they into eighty dollar tailored cut cuits; up during the game. The winners but failed to cash in on them. but the floodgates opened in the sec­ should also let all the other "shavers their handke1·chiefs knotted around scored two goals in the second an,l ond period. A 33 yard end nm by and fixers" back into the game. And their fifteen cents turned into bulginp; third period and added one in the final TOUCHDOWN TWIRL Pellasang of Cortland started the ball if this happens-goombyc basketball. genuine leather wallets; their soda quarter to ice the game. The Ithaca FRIDAY NIGHT rolling. Two heaves by Quarterback There are thousands of good clean pop turned into the real stuff; and record now stands at two wins anli Reidel of Cortland were good for SENECA GYM l 0-1 honest players, schools, coaches, and their pinups came to life. It was too three losses. touchdowns and the half ended with 50c Donation spectators in this country, and it i:;; much for them. Let's keep these play­ the Bombers on the short end of a to them that we owe the responsibility ers away from the game that has done 20-6 ball game. of keeping the game of basketball a more harm than good, and help steer The Blue and Gold offense was slow­ good clean honest game. For anything them into some constructive channel ed to a walk in the last two quarten;. else would be a sacrilege to those that of opportunity. Basketball has been Cortland's big, fast, charging line con­ have a true and sincere love for bas-. cruel to them, and they have been cruel tained the Bombers most of the day. ketball. If you have a bad tooth. you · t-o basketball, "and never the twain The Dragons pushed over a score in have it removed and insert in it::; should meet." the third canto as Pellasang banged place a new one. True, the new 01w over from 12 yards out on a off tackle What has happened, has happened­ might be false, but better a false on•\, and we can do nothing about the past. slant. than one that is rotten and will hurt. In the final stanza Cortland hit pay­ But we can do much with the future. dirt twice more. On a tricky end run If the basketball magnates are to The only answer I can see that will I handoff. Riedel of Cortland went· 27 overlook this and allow these former prevent further court mishaps, is in I two words. Personal Integrity. I yards for the T.D. yvith records to go students back into basketball, then Send HER a Corsage I they must draw UI> a new and different Let us not discontinue the giving of I in the game a :.\litchell to Arcaro pass r I was good for the final Cortland score charter: scholarships, for a scholarship is a I from I and a 39-6 win. 1. Import back into the l:.S., Luck~· wonderful thing to those that cannot I I The score fails to indicate the close­ Luciano and make him the new afford a college education. But give I I ness of the game. Long runs and long them a College Education!, and not I Czar of Basketball. PRATT'S FLOWER SHOP I passes sank the Bombers and not a just a pair of sneakers and a joh I grind-em-out attack. Better pass de­ 2. :\lake as the new head of Refer­ watching that no one will steal the ees, the honorable '.\1r. Salvatore Congratulaitons to IC's Marching Band I fense might have meant the difference football stadium. Also continue to play I in the game. The outstanding defen­ (fond of Gold) Salazzo. games in the big arenas-for it's not I I sive job was turned in by Red Tho­ 3. Excuse Alex of shaving since he where you play the game, but how vou 214 E. Seneca St. Dial 3471 I mann who played one of his best Groza Beard. l)lay it. This talk about keeping ·the .______J I games of the year. 4. Install new scoreboards that Clint l\liller and Pat Cristello, of­ automatically inform the players fensive halfbacks, were the ball carry­ and spectators how many points ing stars of the contest. Cristello was the favorite Is ahead (to the the only Ithaca casualty as he suffered fraction) so they don't have to a sprained left ankle. He is expected keep subtracting in order to see to recover in time for tonights game The Wash'n Shop if their bet is still good. with Lockhaven. The Bombers will be looking for their first win in five 5. :.\lake half the backboard glass. games tonight against the always since everything else will be half Downtown Laundromat Service tough Lock Haven crew at Percy Field G Lassed. at 8:15. 336 E. State Street Wilkes Downs Bombers were the workhorses of the Ithaca at­ tack. In 17 carries Soprano pickeci The Blue and Gold ran into the up 7i yards and Cristello made :17 At the foot of the Hill vaunted \Vilkes single power Oct. 11, yards in 7 trips. and came up with their second loss by a 26-0 count. Wilkes punched over a Bomber Briefs: Nick :.\lamula re­ pair of touchdowns in the second turned to action in the Cortland fra­ period and added a pair in the final cas . . . Cristello and Soprano are 9 LBS. WASHED FOR SOc quarter. Ithaca drove to the Wilkes pacing the backs in the rushing de­ S-yard line in the first period and were partment . . . Ed :.\langanelli played denied a score. A second period march in his first varsity contest in four 9 LBS. DRIED FOR SOc ended on the Wilkes 23-yard stripe years in the Cortland game ... Half­ when the Bombers fumbled the ball back Hal '.\lonroe is still hampered by away. The locals had a rough time the neck injury picked up in the '.\lans­ moving the ball out of their own ter­ field game ... Consolation to Bomber ritory for the rest of the game. fans over the loss to Cortland ,"wait HALF HOUR SERVICE Fran Soprano and Pat Cristello until wrestling season."

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