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The thI acan, 1969-70 The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70

1-30-1970 The thI acan, 1970-01-30 The thI acan

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Vol. XLII - No. 14 Ithaca, New York, January 30_ 1 1970 Price 15 Cents Ithacan Goes AA UP" To Probe Taber Case; Byrd Watching with Roger McGuinn Students Draw Up Plan Q: Recently, you passed into this type of music already, like a new style which some people Proco) Harem. call country-rock. Do you agree Q: Are the Byrds a corporat­ It should be noted that during with that interpretation? ion yet, li~e are now? this meeting. John Ryan, As­ A: No. I would call it just A: Not yet but almost. We sistant Professor of Political Sci­ music. We want to get away from will be doing producing and ar­ ence, said to all present: .. I have giving it a label, because six mo­ ranging. the urge to preface my remarks nths from now it will be entirely Q: How much difference did by saying Ron Taber's interpre­ different from what it is now. you find between European aud­ tation of the American Revo­ Q: How did you arrive at iences and American audiences? lution is a lot of baloney. and I : t!1is style? A: The Europeans are more don't mind saying that publical­ A: Through personal changes, well-educated than the American ly ." mostly through people leaving audiences. Ronald Taber, assistant profes­ the group. Also, it is a reaction Q: In what respects? sor of history has filed a formal to the madness of the psyched­ A: In all respects, except grievance with the Ithaca College Chapter of the American Assoc­ elic garbage thrown around by they're a little more hostile some­ iation of Uni, ..:rsity Professors, times. people who make noise just for charging that his academic freed­ Q: Were they ever hostile to­ the sake of making noise. It is om has been violated. Taber said, also a reaction to the hustle and wards you? "I have been censured for stating movement of society. A: Not in '67, but in '65 my opinion about and interpreta­ Q: Is this a step to something they were. I think that European tion of the American revolution. else, some other form of music? audiences like us better, mostly Academic freedom, however, wou­ A: No. !because in '67 our , "Dr.. ld dictate that no impedinlent be Q: What do you think of Byrd and Mr. Hyde," was No.78 permitted to interfere with the Crosby, Stills, and Nash? on the American Charts, and No. full expression of my professional A: Very nice, ha, ha, Cute. 1 in Europe. judgement." Q: The Band? Q: One final questi011: Why In a meeting organized by the Student to Save Ron Taber, Mon­ A: They're good, I like them, did you change your name from day night, the facts about the Ron Q: You started a trend by im- Jim to Roger? Taber Case were bought into the provising in the middle of "Eight A: It is because of a spiritual open before an overflow crowd Miles High, X". What trend do organization. The name of the in Biol. Present were member of you expect to set with this new organization is a shorter form of history department and students style'? a long religious word I can't even from all majors. The meeting was A: I would not say that we spell. Besides, a man has the ri­ continued on paae 7 are trying to set any trend. ght to change his name anytime Many other groups are doing he wishes. Student Krongel Resigns Congress From Campus Life· Sets Up Rights Group Junior Business major, Mike "we thought were meaningful K.rongel resigned as co-chairman problems." of the Campus Life Committee. With K.rongel's resignation, A capacity K.rongel made his decision some­ the Campus Life Committee falls people, the majority comprised time last semester and announc­ into the lap of newly appointed of physical education majors, sat ed it to the committee last week. Student Congress director, Pat in on the Student Congress me­ Krongel, who had been on Camp­ O'Connell. Miss O'Connell said eting held Monday night. The Students wote "yes." us Life for a year and a half, that she is in the process of purpose of this meeting was to The following motion was said, "'I felt it was time for me looking for somebody to fill discuss student rights at Ithaca to get off. There were personal then passed unanimously by the GUTS Krongel's position as co-chair­ College. reasons involved in my final de­ Student Congress members and man. The catch is that there So far, within the Physical State of Union Address 2 cision. also took a responsible ~~lery: I are "no" by-law that explain ex­ Education department, a com­ business position outside of the "Student Goverrunent sup­ actly how that is to be done. mittee of ten students and ten Scampers 3 college which would take up K.rongel was elected by the mem­ (acuity has been established to ports and respects the rights of all students: especially when and much ofmy time this semester." bers of the committee as co­ draw u'p a dress code for the Phy­ The resigning co-chairman said if any individual student is being Editorials 4 & 5 chairman to Kevin O'Brien. sical Education school. However , that he did not resign for politi­ discriminated against because of Ordinarily K.rongel would have the faculty still have the final cal reasons within the committee. color, creed, dress, personal ap- Craig Wolf 8 had to run again in the Spring say. However he added, "I would like . pearence, or point of view or for re-election to Campus Life. It was also pointed out that to see Campus Life consulted opinion." Museum of Art 10 He said that he · did not know the faculty in the Physical Ed­ more by the powers that be." This motion affects ALL de­ that O'Brien was planning to ucation Department were not He felt that during the time he partments in the college system. leave school before he made his unified on their position con­ worked with the committee Dean Givens told The Ithacan S(!Orts 18, 19, 20 final decision. cerning the issue. 1:tuch work was done on what continued on page 9 -·· . ID

The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 2 \1k,c1i111in mys.--.~=------ifor 1M111s •nd lodsl Nixon Says Nation First Ito ll•fs D,litat.ss,n · 1 are to be built. thus attempting. The President's major con­ our foreign policy is to brmg by Robyn Blaustein to end water pollution. HAL'$ cern was centered on the prob­ an end to the war in Vietnam in a way that our generation I 2. "'A variety of additional wea­ President Nixon, in his first lems of the nation, not the Delicatessen ~viii be remembered not so much pons-induding research incen- State of the Union Address on world. In proportion to the as the generation. that suffered tives and new regulations-to re­ January 22, asked the people nation's economic and social in war but more the fact that sist anc.' reverse contamination F 309 State St. of America to rescue their coun­ problems, he devoted little time we had the courage and char­ of the environment.'" I try from too many years of to our policies abroad (eg. Viet­ I acter to win the kind of peace 3. A doubling in the amount I Bring your d11t. apathy, and to show in the nam, Russia, Japan). He is quo­ I that the next generation was normally spell! in the fight a­ years ahead a larger concern ted on the Vietnam policy as able to keep. We are making gainst aime. for • ,,_, for"their fe.l,lW Americans. "The major immediate goal of tret1t progress toward that goal. The 4. An effort to redtu:e the prospects for peace are far grea­ cost of living by eliminating ter today than they were a unnecessary expentitures. --- 5. Congressional approval of two --- • year ago." Nix.on added that - each. nation of the world programs submitted in 1969 for welfare reforms and a program should undertake the responsi­ ri bility' for her own well being. to share frderal tax revenues I This does not mean, however, with the stale and cities. that the United States will dis­ 6. A pledge to develop a ··na­ regard her treaty committment~. tional growth polil.:y" that but will reduce her involvement would influence the population a~d presence in the affairs ~f movement of the nation and other countries. reverse the flow of people to Standing before the joint ses­ overcrowded urban centers and sion of Congress, Nixon spoke restore economic vitality to the Proud to sene you with line foods ah.:J beverages of a nation rich in resources, rural areas of the United States. but confused in purpose. He Although the President pled­ spoke of a nation robbed of ged the speech would be given Prime Ribs of Beef Steaks & Chops its natural resources by indus­ in a non-partisan spirit. one trial and human carelessness, could perceive the overtones of cheated in economic progress partisanship. The issues of crime) 'because of inflation, poorly ser­ inflation and pollution which lta-lian Food Seafoods ved by the fecfeial apparatus, Nixon stressed were the very and abused· by criine and pop­ problems the Democratic stra­ Sening Sunday from 1 - 8 p.m. ulation growth. tegists had relied on to keep 205 Elmira Rd. On S. Albany St~ The President offered the fol­ their strength in Congress during the November elections. At 273 - 0777 ExhtnJio11 lowing proposals: I . A ten billion dollar program times, Nix.on had the inclination .j financed partly by the federal of accusing the Democrats in ------government taking five years in office before him of leaving which waste treatment olants the nation's probh:ms unatten­ ded. "The decade of the sixties was also a period of great 1. I growth economically, but in ,------·····-······------,I I that same ten year period we I 1 witnessed the greatest growth I I of crime, the greatest increase j in inflation, the greatest social unrest in America in I 00 years. ! When we brew our beer, l Never has a natiori seemed to I I Ihave had more and enjoyed it less." "The answer is not to aban­ don growth but to redirect it. i we brew the bubbles, too : We should turn toward elimi­ I nating smog with the same re­ I servoir of inventive genius that I created it in the first place. I Genesee Beer is one of the few beers in the country Continued vigorous economic I I that comes by its sparkle naturally. The carbonation growth provides us with the I means to enrich life itself and I that gives Genesee its cool, clean taste is brewed right to enhance our planet as a I place hospitable to man. The I in by an age-old process called "kraeusening" great question of the seventies I is, shall we make peace with I (kroy-zen-ing). It's a slow, patient process of natutal I I nature and begin to make repar­ I carbonation that keeps the sparkle in the .ations for the damages we have I done to our air, to our land, I beer, makes the head last longer, makes and to our water'!" Nixon sta­ I the beer taste better. Kraeusening is just ted that this is a cause for all I Americans, especially the young I one more reason why Genesee is a little I people of the country who will I I I I more exciting than any other beer. I i suffer if this is not checked. I I ; Near the end of his speech, I Try one today. I I the President spoke of the I I ! young people again. He said I I i that it is up to the adults to i I I -l I i bridge the generation gap by We do everything to bring you better beer I committing themselves to solu­ I I GBCO, Rochestar, N.Y. to the problems that are I I Itions I I I ' bothering the children of Amer­ Iica today. ·------' I j 1 C i i ~ . ... ~- t. The Ithacan. January 30. 1970. Page 3 CLASSIFIEDS

Scampers Set For Know-Nothinj!s Assert lOt per word - co mlcl111um. Submit AD TO THE ITHACAN OFFICE (:Sue­ mcnt West Tower) or Call :?'H-J::'.07 - Eduucational RiJ!hts !\tea · Fd. l · 5 P.M. Fe/Jruary 'l-7 We maintain that all students tokenism. BE WISE have a right, a real right. to a qual- Students. demand a ri!!ht 111 , ~­ ity education and Ithaca College view hiring and firing of faculty. denies this right on many fronts. Stop the purging of popular and Quality education is not just do- radi,;al fa..:ulty and a proliferation· ing what you are told, not just of well conditioned non-thinkers. reading books and getting some • End a repressive grade system empty degree which says you can which makes a ioke out of. learn­ be a stooge for IBM or a, fifth ing and also the abolition of a ..:ut grade teacher for some repressive policy which denies the abilitv of school system. Education means students· to de~ide what"S wo1 th getting yourself together so you their attendance. can function as a free person. It means social development and such development demands par­ IC C/Jem Dept ticipation. Quality education can­ USE CLASSIFIEDS ! not be some passive exercise on a fi I Two BIU<' Buck<'t Scats For S:il<·. dull wit; it demands involvement Phone 2i7 -0283.

and active tho~ght. Education ca1_1- 1/ W(lfded .JOHN WAYNE st:irs ,n "St:ii:ecoach··­ not be contamed by some arti- $6,100, :i i:ood old-tune western :it the Box­ car Sund,,~· nii:ht. Shows :it 7 p.m ficial walls which keep you in and JO p.111. :ind "s always no cove, your place. Education should tear or n11nirnurn. down the walls and let the man be The National Science Found­ COUNSE:LORS-l\fale n n d femnw ation has announced the award Salary plus guarnntced i:ratuity free. Quality education produces Extrn compensation for Phvs Ed activists, free men not slave tools. of $6, I 00 to the Chemistry De­ maiors. Call or write: CAMP OLYM­ PUS, 1721 Glenwood Rond, Brook· Ithaca College seems more prone partment for the support of a Jyn, New York 11230. (212) GE 4-7147 to put out tools. She takes in program in Undergraduate Re­ .JUST A MtNUTE-Th.,t·s nil 1t tnkr.• S1aney Crispen, Le1es,ine DeSaussure. Rita Deioise Stith, search Participation. This is the for an nlert ITHACAN READER TO people, and says I'm going to edu­ SPOT YOUR ADVERTISEMENT. . Eugene Givens, rehearse for Scampers. cate vou: but reallv she takes in third year\n a row that the de­ and DECIDE TO ACT ------~------people, sends them through a four· partment .has received a grant FOR YOUR smooth d,1tr ton1J!hl tr<•al by Iris Goodman from the NSF in this area. The her to the dell,::htrul sounds of year macnme ana sptts out tools. Ton,·s Pleasure .,t the BOXCAR. We want to be free men not tools. funds will provide stipends and Alwnys srnooth 1nus1e t.'\'("l"Y F'r1d~1,· Scamper? What is it'? What black and white man's wish to :ind Saturday. and of coun,l' tnt•ndl_v STOP THE MACHINE!! support for four students during service. docs it do? Is Scampers a new make their own lustory and cre­ Assert your right to an edu­ the coming summer. The stu­ Super subs. fnmous dout,le dogs "Thr tl11ng. a movement or a word ate a personal revolution accord· dents who are selected for the Wm·ks." downtown oppos1l<• Ruths. cation not an expto1talion. child's. Open until rrndnrght 2,:1. coined by the youth generation'? ing to each man's method of get­ Students, demand a real ad­ program will do full time re­ 5600. Scampers is an annual student ting out of society's web. ministrative role in the college search with a faculty member in TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN­ problems of mutual interest. \Vhrrt.• 1n lthaC',1 <·:1n you hu.v rt.•t,t1I production presented by the In the second act, a white and an end to the now ruling ! leather. Ha\'" handhai:~ ana1rcd. Also the hc~t ~hoe' rtopa11 College drama depart- man is guided by a black man 1n to,1,,.·n. SLOTTEO'S SHOE REPAIR 111cn1. It is written and directed through the Harlem ghetto. The 506 W. St:ite St. 272-:t!l;l!I hy the students. This year. Scam­ street scene and tenement scene AUTOMOBILE FOR SALE-h,, nu1<·t.. pers was written by Keith Ripka, expose the black's frustrations Spt·~1.II. good L"Ol1d1l1on. Bl'Sl 01fe.•1 Cnll 2i:I-O!l114 a senior music major. who also and aspirations parallel to whites THE HEIGHTS RESTAURANT REWARD-20 J>l"<·<•nt off an.v wool composed the music and lyrics and other blacks. The interaction at tM Airport JJ.Jllls-at The PAHT SHOP. for his play ...Of Man For Man." of ideals, wishes and realities for FOR SALE-Wonwn·s f1i:1ire skates A portion of the play was ad­ all humanity captivates the a,;t­ Good t·nnd1t1on. $7. Cnll Paula :1742 .ipted from the novel, THE ME FLY 1111' fnendlv skrcs of Chart:111 ion of the play Congenial Atmosphere :?5ialti6G for ,1 S5 introductory f11,::ht NOBODY KNOWS - Childrens "Of Man For Man" is a doc­ lt·~~on Voices From the Ghetto. edited Chapter House-IO cent drn!ts every umentary drama. which stimu­ dav from 6-8 p.m. !)!J cents Spaghetlr by Stephen M. Joseph. lates the emotions within a frame OUR SPECIM.TY Tuesday thru Sunday, 5.9 p.m. The two act production is a work of actual day-to-day events. u·NBEATABLE PRICES·-·oN- TflE :HILL! THE GUITAR WORKSHOP. modern odyssey of the black and It tells it like it is. yet it also Pitcher of Sours 295 4211 Eddy Street I underneath the L,e:ither Guild) rn Collei:etown. Wt: suggests the way it should be. ,-p<•cr,111ze 111 frne quality ns•w and lJSed folk, cla~sr<· and electri~ i:urt:irs The performance will be shown ;ind amps. Autoharps. banios. dul­ cuncrs alw:iy~ in stock. Every 111- February 4-7. Tickets go on sale stnnncnt carefully adJustcd an_d {11\ly cuar:111tccd! E>.pert , cp .. ir beginning Wednesday. ,-<·rv1cc. Jnstructrons: 27:1-2888. Rumor has it that WE "YOU KNOW WH,1. .. .KUM BACK and see for yourself

Keith Ripka, author-compour. PERMANENT STOREWIDE PRICE POLICY white man's search for peace and humanity through the struct­ We GURANTEE the LOWEST PRICE in New Yorlt, New Jersey, ure of 1he underground revolut­ ion. The mood is set by the com­ bination of heightened emotions Pennsylvania, MmadJusetts, and Connecticut . . . ·-~ and delicate sensitivi1y. The first three scenes depict the revolutions in Russia. Yugo­ for all records t!'nd tapes. find a LOWER PRICE in any other Store slavia. and Cze..:hoalavakia. and 1he action is then transferred to City Hall in New York City. The wit/J compara/J/e llours, selection, and se,~ice anti &M~ will white demonstrators outside City Hall are pleading for an end to the war and an end to the moon REFUND the DIFFERENCE and PAY FOR Tli.t: CALL explorations, in ,;ontrast to the black man inside City Hall who YOU wanted the price ... demands new options for his • ALL ! ILLEGAL D'i'LAN-STONES peoples surviv:11 There is a rontinuous refer­ · YOU'VE GOT IT! 3100 NEW CLA&5ICAL LP's ence to the togetherness of the ------=====-:====!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!'fj_!!"'!!!!!!!'l!'!!!!!l!~l!II-·-----.1111

The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page4 Editorials-- Rhetoric Or llctualitv

" There is hardly an instution in the country to Save Ron Taber Committee, Ithaca Colleee where there is a greater gap between rhetoric and came extremely close to defining a quality educa­ actuality than the university." Harvey Cox, tion because students verbally voiced their right Theologian (CHANGE, 5/6/69, p.54) to choose their professors. For once, students The idea of a "quality education" is over­ understood the importance of academic freedom, whelming. It is so overwhelming that the and perhaps that is education. average Ithaca College student can easily ignore The ideas expressed during that meeting can be its meaning in what we have come to term The summed up in this statement by Sandy Wesman. Ivory Tower World. We have spoken with many He said, "What I'm laying on you is like this. If people on campus trying to define what a quaiity you don't trust students to vote, what are you eaucauon IS. We have thought about Its 1mpnca: doing here?Lay it on the line man. You've got to tions for a long while, maybe three. or four vears put your faith in students, put your faith in your­ since we have been here, maybe for you since self. That you are a thinking human being, that last week's Ithacan when the idea of a quality you do think that you do have opinions and that "Train 'em to kill, not masaacre .... got it?" education hit the printed page. you are a man, _you aren't just a coolie up here Education is a big word. So big that one hardly paying your way out of the draft. knows where to begin to define it. We say that Because when you boil down to it, if a fiaest Editorial . me university is an education. Ancr WC gobble up physical education student can be kicked out what is being fed to us, this so-called education because he's got hair on his upper lip, that says without questioning. something about academic freedom. u a pro1essu1 Hit the big time and ask for once, "What is can be fired with the students not knowing any­ Give Eartll II Cllance Ithaca College giving me?'? Man, in four years you thing about it, that says something about aca­ are going to be out of this place and what you demic freedom and there's only one way this is have teamed ·here is going to ·determine what Y.C?u goin'g to change and that's if the people here and Editor's Note; The following article was given to me by a friend do with the rest ·of your life. Your entire confi­ the people on the rest of this camous ect who went to the November Moratorium in Washington D.C. This dence in your field depends on the education you mobilized. Start tD,ii:iking. And get a plan put to- particular article was circulated at that time but no author's name gether and use the leg force of 3,500 paying stock­ get here. That's a frightening proposition. was given. Perhaps even more frightening is the idea that holders in the corporation of Ithaca College, with­ out which the institution would not stand five so many stuc!ents in the gingerbread world hold We are demonstrating against the war in Vietnam. But we are days, to back that demand, to get the power and with the old idea: If you don't like it leave it. demonstrating also against all war. Against the war of man against Picture h~f of this student body, say nearly 1,800 position that they deserve in this community. For years, groups like this Monday night meet­ everywhere, and of man against nature. dissatisfied students, pa'cking their bags to leave. We are demonstrating against systems that hurt people, as the Believe it or not, you'll be hurting. Whether Yll'l ing have tried to kindle a fire under Ithaca Col­ American system hurts peor,:e in our ghettos and in Latin America are willing to accept it or not, we. by our tuition lege. They have only found wet wood to put it are helping each other. We're paying for each mildly. Today you have a better chance." and Asia, and as the Russian system hurts its own people by jailing other's education, not the education of ourselves To determine who we are going to have teach poets, and by invading Czecholovakia. It is good for us to try to as individuals. Secondly, and this may be exactly us, to determine that we do have fights and we love one another, but it is not good enough. We must also change what you want, you are losing the thinking minds should have a voice, we all have to get up off the systems that tax us, put us in uniform and send us off to kill on this campus. You are leaving yourself with the our asses. "We all are getting screwed not so one another. much as individuals but as a group. We are gettmg conservatism that has left this campus unchanged We are out on the streets today to ask that we look at one a­ for too many years. And that conservatism did not nailed to the wall because we don't have a voice nother without labels. We are against putting labels on people-­ get liquor and intervisitation which you so highly in our own educ\ltion and when we as a majority like "capitalist," "commie," "hippie," "pig." Before anything else, value. of students decide that we have rights, then w,e men and women are alive, separate, individual. All of us can be There is too much talking on this campus, Too can approach the administration. We've got to do !turt, can die, get angry, want to be loved, and all of us on this much complaining and no action. Man, it is time it together." (Steve Rathe) you get involved because that is what education You aren't going anywhere in this world if you planet, this life raft we call Earth, will make it together or we won't is all about. Education is realizing that what hap­ can't even do anything on a college campus. If make it at all. pens on this campus can make or bieak you. It's you don't act pecause you're affraid, then that Time is running out for all of us on this planet and we have now­ understanding that you as a thinking individual says something · about you. It says you don't here else to go. No nation has the right to build atom bombs, or have rights, including choosing the professors you know what you are all about, Jet alone know use napalm, or pollute the air we breathe, or the water we all want and the cour~es you want. what the hell education is all about. drink. In a meetmg Monday night with the Students We are saying today all across America, that the war in Vietnam is our number one problem, and it must be ended now, by total, immediate American withdrawal from Vietnam. But once that war is over, our real job will begin. The job of disarming all nations, and l/1iing and Firing A liberation of nursing our cities, our forests, our rivers, our air, our peoples, and our children back to health. I t Give earth a chance. There will be no second chance. A group which I feel can best be ured and six untenured faculty mem­ described as a Students Liberation bers, hence the hiring and firing com­ Front grew Monday night from a meet­ mittee would be composed of three ing and the rough outline of a plan. tenured and two untenured faculty mem­ This group is attempting to effect a bers. Students would be elected by the c.,.s. basic change in the power structure of departments majors at a ratio equal to tile ith1ca1 tt Ithaca College. We seek to redefine the total number of faculty (tenured and MEMBER the nebulous term professionalism, untenured) seated on the committee. Published weekly by students of Ithaca College and the criteria designating a given Thus the hypothetical department would professor as good or bad. elect 5 students from among them­ Even more basically we are seek­ selves to sit on the departmental board. ~ Each member of the committee (stu­ ing to institute new procedure in the EdUor.ln.Chlef .. ... Jean Sll1Wano areas of the hiring and firing of all dents and faculty alike) would have one Bmlneu Manaqer Al Greene Hews -·-··-· ...... Gre,:, Llndaay faculty, in all departments, in all equal vote. 'There will be an all campus Features ...... Pearl Mruka Sp0rt _ . . -· ..... - . ·-· ...... Roy Leff schools. - reviewing committee composed of one Ari, and LayouJ ...... Jim CuUnello Photography ...... Barbara Goldberg One rough draft has been submitted tenured and one untenured faculty mem­ AdverUslng .. Steve Robinson. Blll O'Brien. Chuck Miller and I place it before you now for your ber elected at large. from the all col­ Copy ...... Tlna Saxton inspection. I will use a hypothetical lege council of faculty, and two stu­ department for demonstration pur­ dents elected at large from the entire The Ithacan office is located on the ground floor or West 'rower student body. In order to avoid any Rm. 203 ·on the Ithaca College South Hill Campus Ithaca N Y ' poses. Advertising: call 274-3207 - 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. · ' · · conflict of interest, no member of the Editorial views reflect the ~pinion of the Editorial Board. These The hiring and firing committee of views neither reflect the of!lclal position of Ithaca College nor college community, faculty or student, necessarily Indicate the consensus of the student body. every department will be composed of All letters and articles submitted to the Ithacan become the tenured and untenured faculty in a may hold a position on the all campus, property of the Ithacan. The Ithacan reserves the right to correct or refuse to publish any material submitted for publication. ' ratio equal to their numbers in the reviewing board and any departmental. Subscription: $7.50 per academic year. board simultaneouslv. All of these Published weekly during the school year. department. Let us assume that this l . Second Class Postage Paid, Ithaca, N.Y. 14850 continued on page 6 PoStmaster please send form 3579 to Business Manager, The hypothetical department has nine ten- Ithacan, Ithaca College, Ithaca, N.Y. 14850. The Ithacan, January 30, 1970 Page 5 ITHACAN PRESENTS - A PROPOSAL FOR ACADEMIC REORGANIZATION As someone vi tally ADMINISTRATION OF ZC. interested in the future of Ithaca College, I am con- tinually p o n d e r i n g the question of academic re­ organization. Wh i"l e my PRE~1DENT - <1-115 ASST.> viewpoints on this question nuxuate and are not gener­ I ally known, I will take this PROVOST - (l-llS ASST.) opportunity to outline for this community my current thinking. I do not wish to antagonize numerous peo- ple with these proposals. However, in keeping in line with the Ithacan 's ambition . V. PRES. /)!RECTOR of" DtRECT"R of" AMl55/0N.S .DEAN.F PIReCTOR 't£PAES. V. PRES. to get people on this cam- .S7l/DEJI/TS II' SPEC14L .lJEV.Ekt>P­ ACAD.EMIC r!NANCE INST!Tllr!ONAL PV&/CAT/lJNS . . D1R£CTOR 1lE$£ARc.H pus thmkmg, I would hope PROti-11.fHS MENr AFFAIRS &­ that these proposals are PROPERTIES certainly ready to be pub- I lished at this time. ADM. ASST. Certain premises form the basis for the academic reorganization I would pro­ pose. In no logical order. these are: 1) Financial circum­ stances dictate that Ithaca R~RM u8RlflltAN (NI A/E DIVIS/ON Z> I REC rO/l5 College cannot afford many programs thi~.t do not pay DePARrHGNr.4L ~JCJ'l£Vl/fl/E5 REPDRT TO their own way. Some pro- .D/'V/:5/'LMI P/-'IECTPl'IS grams that lose m one y must be abandoned or mod- ified. 2) The e s s en c e of a The administraton of the College might look like this small college should be its employs 2 Deans, 2 Asso- 4) The VPAA would de- ministered" in some divi-' er now important it is to ready acce~s on everyone's ciate Deans, 1 Assi_stant cide what programs the ~ions and "under-admin- have strong science_ pro_­ part to all its as~ets: Dean, and at least 2 Direc- College can afford after 1stered" in others. ~rams and_how plaus~ble _it . 3) As anorgamza_h?n. (be tors. This proposal asks discussing these matters 2) We are fragmentized 1s to _continue a_ maJor m it a departm_ent, div1s10n, for 9 Directors and one with the Provost and the and lack "total organiza- physics. Again related ?r sch?ol) gains aut~no~y, Vice President. Total VPAA's faculty-student ~ion" administrators with fields make sense, espe­ it begms _to draw mto 1!- administrative expenses, constituency. time and authority for ciall! in interdisciplinary se~ - cu~mg off co~mum- as a budgetary item, would 5) The Division Direc- rational decision-making. studies. . ?ation with the outside. It remain about the same. tors would be housed in the 3) We are tr ad it i O n- e) We should consider ~nbreeds, a~d most damag- There are several im- same building as the VPAA bound in some areas seek- whether to finance library ~ngly, worries more about mediate advantages to this to ensure communication ing to stay with dated or acquisitions in the tradi­ i ts elf _tha~ about the larger proposal: between divisions. too expensive programs too tional areas or in emerg- orgamzation. 1) It unifies all major 6) The VPAA would de- long. ing interest areas. 4) . That academic lead- academic decision-making cide the degree of auton- a) We should "PiJtsh" f) We should orient all ~rsthh1p on a c?llegetacamt ~ubs in one person (VPAA) not omy residing in each divi- ffie l:1.A. or n.;:,. usic our more "professional .1s e. mo_st ~mpor n JO responsible for non-aca- sion in regard to curric- ~ajor de~ee and cu! back p~ogr~ms" in a libera~ arts of the mstitution (other than demic matters. ular requirements, grad- m Professional Music and direction. Thus business remain~ng solvent). 1:1us, 2) It destroys the pres- ing, etc. It is plausible to Music Education. . becomes more co?cerned a premmm must be paid to ent divisions of the college assume that some divisions b) We should provide with the art and science of l' ensure quality leadership, by subdividing all existing would be more flexible and Drama, Art, and Music administration, TV-Radio Open-minded leaders are divisions. Yet new divi- experimental in these mat- opportunities for non-ma- with writing and the ethical e_ssential. They must have sional au t O n O m y on key ters than· others. This jors on a much greater ques_tion_s related to com­ time to lead and t~ thi?k· questions (especiallyfi- does not destroy "one- sc:ale_. This will_ help ad- mumcation, etc. All pro­ They ~us! be ~rea_tive, m- nancial) is kept at a mini- ness', as long as lines of m_issi_ons 8?d giv_e us . a gra~s should leave plenty novative, imaginative, sub- mum by centralizing all communication are O P en distinct, innovative pro- o! time for students to con­ tle, personable, and "total major academic decision- between divisions. "One- gram (CCPA). sider contemporary prob­ organi_zation -or i en te d." making in one position ness" is a spirit (andriot c! We sh_ould phase ?ut l~ms b~th. withi~ and out­ Above _all they m1;1s_t see the (VPAA). Hopefully, Divi- sameness)! In this way men s physic.al educa_tion side their i_mmE:diate focus. total picture, anticipate fu- sion Directors would main- divisions of the College can and push alhe~ services 4) In st it u ting such ture needs, trends, and tain a strong interest in react to faculty and stu- such ascommumtyrecrea- changes would notappealto problems, and not have~ teaching and, indeed, they dent needs without the tion, camping administra- many people on campus, ~ _in a po~it_ion. An aca- would be considered as fac- entire College agreeing, as t~on, athletic administra- because so~e of them will dem1c adnumstrator usu- ulty members. long as these needs do not tlon _and m~nagement. (es- los_e prestige and pow~r ally should not expect to 3) Division Direct O r s preempt another division, s p e c 1 a 11 y m professional while many of them will rema~ in a position more would be selected by the resources (especially fi- sports), etc. This would feel a loss of autono~yand than five to ten years. VPAA from a list of candi- nancial). That is, experi- allow us. to spen~ more some power. Forth1s rea- 5) The task for Ithaca dates suppliedbyanelected mentation is a divisional scholarship money m non- son alone, perhaps such a College is to create in- faculty-stud~ n t search decision until the VPAA athletic areas and ensure reorganization makes cre_ased coop,eration, 1;1:1m- committee from a list of rules that it has damaged that fut u ~ e alu~ni have sense. S~ch a change would cation, and oneness and candidates supplied by the the College or one of its greater fl nan c i a 1 re- have to be handed down not to continue the trend VT'~. Appointments other divisions. sources. These programs from ~:m top, with the ex- toward the subdivisions would be for five years, would not compete as often pectation that some pres- "professional" and '.'l~b- thus assuring continual THIS THINKING ON MY with state programs and en! administrators_ mi?ht eral" andfurthersubdivis- evaluation of performance PART REFLECTS SOME they are in emerging oc- quit rather than assuming ions within the~P. t.wo. . bv all elements of the Col- BIASES: . cupational areas. . new Po s it ion s (perhaps Presently the College lege ~ommuntty, 1) We are overly "ad.. - d) We should reconsid- teaching ones).

• The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 6 for good. No one may be forced to HIRING AND FIRING undergo this system of courts more Letters To The· 'Editor than once for any given charge. This noted, are corroborated by system is, at best, a gem in the rough. Atrocities in Nam American report s, only It needs more consideration and re­ continued trom page 4 demonstrates his knee­ I fining. It needs you. There will be a · Editor: jobs are filled bi annual elections and jerk anti-communist bias. are for a period of one academic year sign up sheet on the FUSA board in the I At r o c i tie s in Vietnam snack bar all weekend. Please, if you are the rule, not the excep­ His logic would lead to the only. (Re-election to any given post is conclusion that if commu­ are interested sign up to help. If there t ion. Mr. D. H. Arm­ j of course possible.) The job of this· nists declared that the Kor­ I board is to serve as a court of appeals is something unclear about this system strong's letter to The Ith­ as I have described it feel free to call acan, January 23, 1970, can ean War was a ''police for any one who believes that theyhave action,'' we would have to been dealt with unfairly at the depart­ me (Sandy 277-0726) and I'll try to only serve to cloud the fact clarify it for you. that the U .s. is deeply im­ discount their description mental level. The final court for out of har!i. appeals in all cases is a meeting of all This year we have seen two profes­ plicated in the destruction I.:, sors on the line without our having a of the people and the land As reports continue tc members of the given department. pile up about the starva­ This means all faculty (tenured and thing to say about it. Students are be­ of Vietnam.· ing refused admittance to schools be­ Mr. Armstrong's sharp tion, death, and hideously untenured) and all majors in the de­ deformed babies caused by partment. A two-thirds veto by that cause of an archaic dress code which disagreement with my point not only violates academic freedom but of view is understandable, our chemical warfare body of a decision of the all campus against the crops of Viet­ board is the final say so in all cases. is against the law of the United States however, in the light of the of America by virtue of the civil rights fact that we Americans nam, my picture of Son~ Allow me to run through the procedure My fades in importance of a typical firing procedure in order act. The time for change is now. The have always been able to need for constructive change is now. define the terms of our Only double-think can avoic to clarifv what I have said above the conclusion that geno­ Tenure<1 Profes::;or A decid~s to The need for students to take their history. During the Amer­ proper place in the academic com­ ican Indian wars, for in­ cide is becoming a realit~ initiate firing proceedings against un­ in Vietnam. tenured Professor Y. First Professor munity is now. AND the need of your stance, the whites won Ronald W. Taber X must present his case and Professor support and help in formulating this ''victories'' and the Indians Department of History Y his defense to the departmental board. change is NOW! The choice is ours, pe·rpetrated "massacres." Let us assume that the departmental yours and mine, whether Ithaca College Today. however, many Downs Saga committee votes to retain Professor Y. remains the nepotistic feudal institu­ American historians are Editor: Professor X however feels that he has tion it has been up until now or it be­ re-'thinking our past and not been dealt with fairly and so ap­ comes the kind of school at which an our present. The record is At a time when the actual peals the case to the all campus review education can be gotten. It is your not very pretty. And the perpetuation of the Human race record now includes some board and they vote to fire Professor Y. college and your education that is being is threatened by overpopulation1 Professor Y pas one chance to appeal played with by this elite, so you decide of the underdo·g•s point of pollution, and war, it seems ra­ his cause by calling a meeting of the it. view for a change. That is ther inappropriate to be criti­ entire department. Here for the third by Sandy Wesman why I chose to quote from cizing the food that is served in time Professor X presents his case Supported by: N.L.F. documents as well Union Cafeteria. Nevertheless, Jean Stillitano, Editor-in.Chief and Professor Y his defense. If this as from the testimony of Saga food is a harsh reality such Greg Lindsley, News Editor American G.I. 's who were that I am able to overcome my body (composed of all faculty and all Pearl Muruvka, Features Editor at Song My. Mr. Arm­ guilty feelings of complacency majors in the department) votes a two­ Bill O'Brien J thirds veto of the all campus review Steve Robinson Advertising Editors strong, who complains and write this brief complaint. board's decision then Professor Y is Chuck Miller about my use of' 'Viet Cong It is unfortunate that this inert retained and the charges are dropped Rov Leff, Sports Editor documents" which, I have continued on page 9

Oracle · presents SCAMPERS '70 'l Of Man-For Man 'J A Different Kind Of Musical Written by Direded by Kei,!h Ripka Alan Toman i. P.A. Building February 4 thru February 7 $2.00 (P.A. Bldg. Box Office ) 8:15 p.m.

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... The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 7

conthMHd from p ... 1 ------class last semester. Taber and Don that the dismissal came-at the end •· 'fhe AAUl' should give Taber Niewyk were invited to debat~ the of the tutorial when all the work definite notification on his case TA.BER topic "Teacher As Revolutionary." for the course had been com-· by March l. A three man panel During that debate Taber was sup- pleted. Apparently members of including Professor Charles Sny­ posedly challenged by a student faculty and Sherman view the in· der (who represents the AAUP specifically called to establish a who declared that the American cident as a political confrontatiot,. Ex~cutive Committee). Professor precedent for Ithaca Colleg. Stu- Revolution was a conservative re- Other members of the same tutor· William Bergmark, and Professor dents Sandy Wessman and Nadine volution inter ·d to preserve the ial however, spoke in defense of Cohen explained that there was status QUO rather initiate social Taber during the two hour meet- Marcia Ascher will investigate the no personal battle intended at the change. Reportedly, Taber replied ing Monday. The students upheld case. meeting. Said Nadine Cohen, "I that,· "If Professor McKeith told that they had also been dismissed A tenativ~ meeting of informa­ think we are here not to discuss you that, that's baloney." When from the tutorial at the same time tion was scheduled for Feb. 9, pro­ two isolated incidents, but to pressed to repeat his remark, the because they were also told that viding the history department and prove that students do have the professor said, "If Professor Mc- the work for the course had been Taber agreed. right in deciding who their teach- Keith said that, that's a narrow. completed satisfactorily. ers are going to be; students just interpretation." Wessman explain-', In an interview Tuesday, Taber can't sit back and allow their pro- ed to the group present in Biol th- told The Ithacan that he had ask- fessors to be dismissed for no rea- at no personal insult was inte"4ed. ed for the formal AAUP investi· The Ithacan wishes to apol­ son." The major point of the meet- against McKeitfi~ but that is was gation because the History depart- ogize for the SDS article printed ing was that "students do havi; a the interpretation that had been ment had labeled his actions "ser- in last week's issue. The contents role in the hiring and firing of questioned. ious breaches of professional con- and headline were incorrect. faculty ," The second incident involving duct." He added that a December Peter Orville's story will appear However, two specific inci.-. the Ron Taber Case concerned the 16, letter from ·Robert Ryan, cha- next week in The Ithacan. ___dents ,.;...were brought to light in the ...... dismissal of Howard Sherman from irman of the...... department, had que- .meeting. First,______in an e5iucation m Ind saying that publicly." ~ ______Senior tutorial. Taber upholds stioned his reappointment. ______

An Open Letter to the Ithaca College Community

Ours is a society of change ... change brought about by l. have made an outstanding contribution to progress. That which was "in" or "happening" only collegiate broadcasting the semester preced­ yesterday may suddenly be "out" by today's standards. ing consideration for admission, AND ••• Accepted "traditions" may rapidly lose import in view of current beliefs. Such a situation faced Alpha Epsilon 2. meet all other requirements for active mem­ Rho: we questioned the value of our pledge program. bership, AND .•• Granted, all phases of the pledge program fell well with­ 3. show an active interest in Alpha Omega chap­ in Inter-Fraternity Council rules, but it was felt that the ter in particular and Alpha Epsilon Rho in goals of our pledge program were not compatible with generaL the goals of our departmental and collegiate life. Any student fulfilling these requirements and exhibiting After much discussion and careful consideration, the an active interest in the fraternity will automatically Brothers and Sisters of Alpha Omega chapter of Alpha be considered for admissions. In order to facilitate a stu­ Epsilon Rho decided, by unanimous vote, to abolish our dent's show of active interest, we will continue to spon­ PLEDGE PROGRAM. Furthermore, the vote also sor several announced rush parties. Adnnssion to the removed any and all mentions of "pledge," "pledge­ fraternity follows .a !pecific period of consideration for master," "pledge-program," et.c. from our constitution. adrnisSions lasting· from four (4) t.o six (6) weeks. Of course, no organization can :long exist without some During this period, ~ndidates for admission will work means for the continuation of the membership. There­ with the Brothers and Sisters on (a) professional pro3- fore, we have replaced our PLEDGE PROGRAM with a ect(s) designed to acquaint the members and candidates with each other and to further the ideals and goals of the contemporary ADMISSIONS PROGRAM. We now have fraternity. a program based not on ritual for ritual's sake, but rather on attitude and an expressed interest in our Thus, we are now presenting our changes to our college fraternity and its people, problems, ideals and goals. community. We hope that these changes will make for With our new ADMISSIONS PROGRAM, we have new a more relaxed and congenial atmosphere and the stu­ criteria for admissions consideration: dent body of Ithaca College as a whole. If you have any ACTIVE MEMBERSHIP IS OPEN TO: questions regarding our new admissions policy, please feel free to contact any Brother or Sister of Alpha A. All full time students of the Television-Radio Omega Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Rho. We'll be more Department at Ithaca College who: than happy to explain our changes in detail 1. originate their matriculation in the abovt mentioned department and complete at least Yours trulyt two (2) semesters. OR .... i. 2. transferred from another institution or de· partment within Ithaca College and complete at least one (1) semester, AND ... 3. have maintained at least a 2.5 in their Tele· President vision-Radio courses and a 2.0 cumulative average, AND ... 4. meet all academic and social rules and regu. lations prescribed as a minimum by the Ithaca College Inter-Fraternity Council. '• .~ B. All full time students enrolled at Ithaca College ALPHA EPSILON RHO who, if not Television·Radio students ... ALPHA OMEGA CHAPTER The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 8 Wl,o Rules I t1 Frat Experiments Craie: Wolf by Brewster Ely WE MUST REALIZE that, ultimately Ithaca Col­ Perhaps one of the most "in· teresting occurrences at Ithaca lege is controlled by American society and ~th~r College this year has been the entities over which we have no control. But withm experimental off-campus living these limits there is a considerable amount of of Pi Lambda Chi Fraternity: power which is exercised by the people who ar~ Prompted by the housing short· involved with the college. This is a brief look at age ,facing the college for the how this college runs. fall of I 969, the brothers of Pi * * ,.. Lam indep,,1dently leased what 't For purposes. of control and efficient operation had previously been a Cornell (and out of tradition) our college is organized as a fraternity house. · hierarchy. This means that the people at the top Admittedly, there was con­ make the major decisions and delegate power to cern on the part of the college subordinates to carry them out. administration, due particularly R The students as a group do not fit into th_is sys­ to a number of specific problems. tem; they are the objects of it. There is some Could ·40 students sucessfully sharing of .authority by students at low levels and undertake the enormous t:i,;k of there is a significant amount. of student influence. budgeting over ~.!U,UUU"! What The Student Government is not really a government; was the feasability of having an ---- it is an advisory body which makes recommenc;ia­ Ithaca College organization living tions to the faculty or the administration, but it has as a group off campus? And last· no power to make binding decisions. (Although it ly, what would the result of off­ GET EXPERIENCED appoints students to some committees, these com­ campus living be on the accumu· mittees have only influence and not power.) lative indexes of the members of For academic decisions such as curriculum, this organization? Friday Jan. 30 at the requirements, and grading the rulings of the faculty Now, one semester later, a are supposed to be authoritative. But the Faculty fair conclusion may be reached Handbook states that the ·faculty " ...is responsible in regard to this undertaking. to the President and, therefore, may be overruled Projected figures based upon the DOGHOUSE by him.'' This means the faculty has limited past semester show Pi Lam's authority. They are usually left alone since they fiscal budget in the black, thus ·" with the Foxe.y Ladies don't bother to pass something they know the guaranteeing solvency and future '• President would overrule anyway. On the other security. The 40 men living in hand, the President has no absolute ability to rail­ this experiment have also main­ All Girl Furburger Band road things through the faculty, at least not in tained an admirable record, thus practice. . eliminating the concern for their Dime drafts All NIGHT The administrati0n is the President and his staff · separati9n Jrom the Ithaca Col~ of subordinates. :'he President does not often make lege Campus. In addition, a study 50(. Sours snap arbitrary decisions; rather, he must usually of accumulative indexes shows a con mlt with his subordinates and rely .upon them for definite positive trend academi­ Special Attraction featuring the information, expertise, and labor in each of their cally. As a consequence, Pi Lam­ special areas of authority. Each officer must obey bda Chi fraternity will continue FllET of SOUl his superior, which means that everyone mnst to reside off-campus next year. <. ultimately obey the President. When any official Another aspect of this project, Fun .begins at 8:00 Music 9-1 faces a decision that involves a possible change of perhaps of equal note, has been policy, he· either passes the buck upstairs or ~t the reaction of . the fraternity least makes consultations to make sure he's stay­ members·:--!t would have been Sat. Jan. 31 st The Del R.oyals ing 'in line. .When you talk about the administration, idealistic Tor these students to continued on paae 13 expect an easy time in the hous-. ing transition. In addition to the burden of controlling the budget, the men are jointly responsible for the maintenance of a 36 ,room house. a task of sizable · propora~ion.

&ylnan 3llill.a

1757 SJatervllle Road

DINNER 5:00 to 9100

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Steak.a, Sea Foods, and Roast Prime Ribs

Spedallsta In PARTIES AND BANQUETS

b "

The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 9 Letters liar with the "WEEKLY PEOPLE" founded back in 1891 by the continued from page 6 STUDENT MORRIE'S SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY. THE DROPOUT This unique, outstanding Soc­ THE BEAL COLLEGE ialist journal carries many educa­ piece of paper cannot convey ~y 111 S, Auronx St. tional articles. The January 17 is­ CONGRESS BAR total feelings of outrage and dis­ sue has an editorial: "The col­ gust concerning the meals (I use • the term loosely) that are served lege labor market" that should * be read by all students. The u s u a I fantastic in the Union. It is not the food BUD ON DRAFI' A free copy can be obtained by continued from page 1 that displeases me, or I would buys in Men's Pants, writing to the "WEEKLY PEO· waste neither your time or mine, that members of the faculty plus red, yellow, green, PLE"-116 Nassau St-Brooklyn, in the Arts & · Sciences depart· 25c it is the way the food is served N.Y. 11201. that is so objectionable. There is ments would probably suppor1 purple a n d multicol­ In th; 1968 Presidential elec­ absolutely no excuse for serving ~he resolution by about 98.6% .. tion, Henning Blomen, the candi­ ored Women's Pants. * an icy "hot" roast beef sandwich Student Congress formed a-' Corner of Eddy St. date of the SOCIALIST LABOR or cold mashed potatoes, or luke­ committee of student rights con­ PARTY, received more votes than From 3.95-7.95 and Dryden Rd. warm gravy. Even more infuriat· sisting of three students from any of the minority party candi­ ing is the fact that 3 out of 4. Arts & Sciences. Physical Edu­ dates. ·nights that dinner rnlls are served cation, Physical Therapy, and Nathan Pressman they are stale. Music. They will form a basic and There are so many examples 1-----"--"-=-==--=--"'"t definitive Bill of Students Rights. of ineptness and incompetance Students on the committee in­ concerning the functioning of Search For clude: John McGhan, Lance the Union that it is hard to Bradley, Corrine Franklin, Dan­ decide which is most annoying. iel Carroll. Peter Swales, Michele After much thou~t. however, New Music Geraerdts, Betty Cornacchio, the tray line must outweigh all Norm Sasson, and David Bunce. other competitors. When one has Sounds Student Body President Patty put up wit~ the abuses of a O'Conne11 said, "At prerent, there~ typical Saga meal it is virt~ally is no document defining student impossible to tolerate the tray The news today is about a rights. Because of th_e lack of line. I would be ashamed to be Good Samaritan with top radio­ such document, the existing jud­ the manager of such a place. rec.ord connections who's offering icial system is not equipped to you a shot at the Big Time on a ' ,_, handle cases of a discriminatory gold platter. There will be,starting .•. Ron Stern nature, (as defined in the Stud­ February 1, a search conducted by ent Council motion of Monday Socialist Speaks more than 200 radio stations a­ evening.) Due to this situation, I Editor: round the country, for the kind of new music sounds that will make will take full resoonsibilitv for tomorrow's Billboard charts. Ex­ aiding any student who feels that I recently gave a ride to a col­ perts on their staff, and others to he_ ha~n discriminated against." lege student who had never heard whom they have access, will listen of the oldest Socialist publication to the taped entries chosen as m this country, the "WEEKLY local winners by the 200 stations 10~ Discount PEOPLE," official organ of the participating in the "New Sound with SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY. Network". Billboard has been Student I.D. 's Undoubtedly, there are many commissioned to handle the pro- more students who are not fami­ continued on page 14 t It It If t t t t t t t t It t I It It t t It t t t t t It t t t t t t t t t t t t t t PEARSON~$ The Most Ambitious TEACH IN GHANA OR NIGERIA? SPORTS Collection of Yes: - If J'O\I •• ,. :• ••• Jewels and Gifts 1. Haft a Eachelor's Degree; preferably a Masters Degree. Village Green 2, Ha\re 'at least 30 semester hours cerdit in one of these: a. ~sics, b. chemistry, c. biology, d. mathematics, e: in­ dustrial arts, f. French, g, geography, h. home economics, or i. business J!ciucation. 3. Desu-e to teach at the secondary school level. 4. Are in gop

RECORDING PRODUCTION ~ULT,·TRflH 4-TRACK SELSYNC STEREO RECORDING· 1330 E. Stute St. 272-8200

CORNELL UNIVERSITY CINEMA PnNdl /

- ~' Still a Great Selection of Parkas and Warm-up Pants Hours: 9-9 Monday-Friday, 9~ Saturday YELLOW SUBMARINE Wfth the Beatles TONIGHT, SATURDAY and SUNDAY FALLVIEW SKI SHOP 1:00. 9:15 Allee Statler Auditorium 1&6 $1 - Open to the Public RUN 1Y StcllR& , S:ORSIC !. : ALLS STRIET The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page I 0 i pho,o

~ .,.,_n,,__ 'SIJGAl'l',~TB 1>tltlG Bulllllas I BIii . ~ONLY ON MONDAYS * Shrimp Cockta.il Salad* · (Have another, if you can) I : ...... _ * Roa.st Sirloin of Beef * ~:~i]. • ( All you can eat) GALLERY ONE TWENTY-ONE * Cha.mp~gne * PRESENTS ,ITS FIRST -~~-i ( All you con drink with dinner) ~~ -"'(.JD Steak & !ipirits BOUTIQUE CLEARANCE ONLY ON TUESDAYS~ * Shrimp Cocktail Salad* ½ TO ½ OFF ON FALL WINTER ( Have another, if you can ) CLOTHING: DAYTIME - COCKTAILS - * N.Y. Sirloin Stea.k * SUJTS DRESSES SPORTSWEAR ( Generous 1 lb. boneless cut) RAINCOATS - JEWELRY - ACCESSORIES .. * Sparkling Burgundy * AND OTHER SELECTED .ITEMS ( All you can drink with dinner) .&.:SD TH.AT'9 l!ll'OT A LT, Elegut Diaiag Padon and htmtic Saloon. Begiaoiug Monday, February 2 hatilllte Tm-of ·lu·CeatlllJ ltusplaen. AComplete Selection of Slrolager Spirits ii lni11We. Serving I Wltil !OJ~C)j I0,30P.M. GALLERY ONE TWENTY-ONE * 121 EAST BUFFALO STREET AR 3-9005 Elmira Rd., Ithaca. :'IJ.Y. To Reserve a Quiet Little Table in the Comer call 272-6484 MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:30-5:30 FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 llte Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 11 I

/ / / r d 0

Photos by Harvey Zvansky n "Music to me is the only link I have with the most important aspect of my life which is the spiritual aspect."

·r.JA the by Lynn _Green will be served in the Egbert Union lounge. From 12:00-4:00 llliaca College will present its Flash Gordon Movies, including annual Winter Weekend, tonight "Shattering Doom," "Battling B t and tomorrow night. The Byrds, the Beast," and 1nany others, one of America's most popular will be shown in the Union Rec L h and creative rock groups, will ap­ Room. Weekend ticket holders pear tonight, at 8 :00 in the Ben wW will be admitted free. All others u Light Gymnasium. It will be a will be charged S.25 admission e blanket concert---the dress casual. for the fun filled four hours of E Performing along with the exciting flicks. Byrds will be Harry Gordon, a I E The Blues Project II will ap­ s freshman from DeWitt, New pear tomorrow at the North York. Gordon is a music major Forty from 12 noon-4:00. Food p B studying Composition and Class­ and liquor will be served. Also ical guitar, which he has played NE for the students' convenience, y for ten years. He performed in a _ there will be shuttle busses leav­ R rock band for six years. Not only ing from the Union Parking Lot doe~ Gordoo play classical, folk TK between 12-4. 0 rock, baroque and flamingco Tomorrow night, Delta Sigma R guitar, but he plays sitar as well. Pi Fraternity will hold its Delta This summer, he will study sitar Sig Rose Ball in the Terrace Din­ J D at the Au Akbar Khan School of EE ing Hall. The dress for the Ball Indian music. He feels that music iis semi-formal. At 9:00 there E is not just entertainment, but an will be an open bar and at 9:30, s important spiritual experience the band will begin playing. At C and will study anthomusicology RN 12 :00, the Crowning of the Rose next year. At the concert tonight queen will be held. The band Gordon will perform almost all will then continue play until T original compositions. D 12:30,am. Following the concert, com­ Tickets will be sold at the plimentary coffee and doughnuts door . . . . _I QUEENLY CANDIDATES

,;·./'.·-·~ --:;. 'j . /' \ ___ ...... '

Beth Keeley Donna Siciliano

Karen Langenmayr Donna Morgan Carol Wesenberg !!!.' Ithacan1 January 301 19701 Page 12 Canadians Are Has Ithaca Blundered; 'Pro-US Draft Dodgers by John Galt There is a great deal ot quest·. Another present system which Draft eligible men look- majority of Canadian stu- Cipryk estimated that ioning about the freedom and must be changed is the cut system, ing toward Canada as one of dents are verbally opposed there are 65,000 evaders rights of students throughout the Why should an IC student attend a those alternatiVP-S will find to the Vietnam war. Stu- in Canada, with the largest country. Most people here at class if he feels that it is unneces­ that the wind doesn't blow dent opinion is probably concentrations in Vancou- TthacaTolfege hear of these things sary for education? After three quite so cold on American more sympathetic toward ver and Toronto, which is but do not realize that this prob· cuts in GIPPE you will fail. This draft dodgers seeking aid r e s i st e r s now than in considered by many to be )em l·nvolves them to a great ex · 1·s senseless. At this point of the · d e to o" ne we as mature students and comfort there. 1967." the end of a :modern under- ten·t The Ioss Off ree d om is u .,..i ' "tud f A tud t counci" l ·deci· _ d . d the great sense of apathy that pre- lor attendani;c. fhe proiessor 1~ In f act , th e_ a tt1 e O . S . en . groun r_ai 1r_oa ·· . vailed a couple of decades ago. If there and being paid regardless ii most Can ad 1 ans, young s10n ·to aid evaders m early Orgamzabons designed we continue in this tradition we students show up or not. There­ adults in particular, tends 1967 was. overturned in a to help evaders -are, for the will never receive the education fore, there should be no demands to be pro-draft evaders, campus referendum at most part, well-operated, for which we are paying and de- on students except that "they do according to Stewart Saxe, .Waterloo, said Patterson. financially sound offices serve. assigned work. president of Canadian Uni- The same thing had happen- gene1·ally found by draft Too long has the destiny of the All students should have the versity Press. ed at the University of Sas- evaders themselves with student been in the hands of the right to decide what courses they In a recent interview, katchewan a few months the help of Canadian sym- institutions' administrators. This ,should take. A required course Saxe said two years ago, before. pathizers. has handicapped the students to fails many times because students when the Canadian govern- Bob Verdun, editor of Many student councils at the point where their thinking are not interested in it. A non· process has become dulled. These degree program would enable stu· ment was considering The Chevron, student Canadian universities put people have hindered education sents to pursue couses that are in- cracking down on young newspaper at Water 1 o o, draft evaders in touch with for years. Because of this students teresting and meaningful to them. American immigrants, said that if the same motion these ·organizations as a must be placed on the adminis- Living conditions on campus· pressure from native Ca- were put· before Canadian way of showing their sym- trative staff, to have a voice in-the must be revised. This is to say the nadians convinced the gov- students today, support for pathies. affairs of .the institution and to abolishment of curfews with or ernment to reconsider its draft evaders would prob- The U.S.'s northern give views and ideas on certain without parental permission, the position. ably be approved. rn. ibhbor might not seem so aspects of the college; hiring and present intervisitation system and "The Canadian youth was Verdun added lliat, as far alien when compared to ·firing of professors, budget. etc. the dormitory set-up. lntervisit­ aghast at the government. as he knew, Toronto and Fort Bragg and olive drab. . _inere snou1e1 be a complete r·e: ation must be extended to a com· Two to four years ago it Mc G i 11 Universities had ______v1s10~ of t~e p~esent system_ of! pletely open door policy. There "ff . gradmg which 1s so repressive. should be more co-ed living if the would hav~ b een d1 e~ent, formally voted 1~ favor of ------, Grading should be abolished be- people so desire. Also the manda- but now the general attitude support to American draft cause it proves nothing except tory meal plan for students living what a student can cram before an seems to be favorable to- dodgers. BARNETT'S on campus 1s a Cluect restriction ward the young kids who Albert Cipryk, former ...J>., .-. , exam. Grading as it now stands on our freedom of choice. And don't want to fight in Viet- editor of the Silhouette at ::::Y'" ""-.. makes for a competitive classroom the hassles involved with moving nam," Saxe continued. MacMasters University in structure which results in students off campus are not necessary. Tom Patterson, Presi- Ontario, said it is not diffi- ,-~ cheating and lying to get better 'People should be given this choice." dent of the Federation of cult for a draft evader to ._... ~ marks. A student should be allow- Education at Ithaca College pre· Students at the University get into a Canadian Uni- ed to take a course and reap its STATE & CORN STS. fi h d h d pares you to take the role of the of Waterloo in Ontario, versity, though there is pro its wit out the ark s a ow stereotype m~n. If you want to concurred with Saxe sav- some opposition from Ithaca, N.Y. 272 .. 9881 of a grade hanging over his head. · be a machine-fine .. It is your 1- In place of this system we should choice. However, if you want to '/ ing, "It is safe to say the authorities. ------demand not a pass/fail system I be an intelligent, functioning in­ which is also repressive, but a sys­ dividual in society and be able to tem of credit or no credit. Thi~ _ser;ve yourself, you had better get. would mean a revision of the sys­ off your goddamn ass and do te~s of graduate schools also. something. C.Ome See Our· Included in tl!is sho.uld. be a non- LE-ATHER major degre~.

SHOP MAYERS SMOKE SHOP including Raw Leather Specializing in 75c sq. ft. Skirts All Smokers' Supplies Under 20.00 Vests Paper Bound Books .f Magazines ·Pipes All Under 5.00 ( water, wooden, etc~) Newspapen Silver Jewelry Magazine Subscriptions See Our 10 Dogs Hear Jeremy Recite Their Names ,-----.. Open 7 Days a Week 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. Hours subject to Bleeping habits, .'·1 head, and altitude of sal,espeople.

'\ The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 13 Who Rules IC ? ~-'": continued from P•I• 8 you're talking mainly about the President. He and his "cabinet" (the VP's and the Provost) pretty IYOUTH RALLY AGAINST GE much run the show, subject to pressures from out­ side forces, the students, the faculty, and the trus- tees. . (CPS)--Recent· protests of plainclothesmen and tive. Students demanded The role of the Board of Trustees is to have on at least six campuses campus security guards that the university handle "supreme control" of all college affairs. But hav­ have been directed against and were ordered to dis- all medical and legal prob­ ing only three meetings a year and having little corporations, particularly perse. · lems resulting from the first-hand knowledge of the college, they must rely the General Electric Com- When they did not, about incident, but the University upon the President and his staff to run things. They pany. Some 150,::>00 work- 50 helmeted San Jose po­ refused to do more than do, however, decide the broad limits within which ers are currently striking lice joined the other law provide bail money on a the college will function. The President has great G.E. for increaf:e~ wages enforcement personnel in loan basis .. It also refused influence in the Board because he is a pro and is in and fr:.1ge benefi :s.' pushing the demonstrators to comply with a demand the know about college affairs; but he must adjust At San Jose f;tate Col- out of the area. Fourteen that all G.E. officials be his decisions about the college to what the Trustees lege, about 25 stud~ n t were arrested and charged banned from campus. will accent. This is why they are powerful. members of the Radical with misdemeanors under Then approximately 50 I love a polerr._c. So, turning to the lighter side, Action Movement !RAM) a a recently-passed pro­ members of SDS occupied here's Ithaca College as a feudal system. Here, the wing of SDS, clashed with vision in state laws pro- th€ administration build­ serfs (students) toil ti> get a living (education) and 70 police w:10 atte1:1pted to hibiting student disruption. ing to protest the school's pay taxes (tuition)totheCrown (college). Eachlmight block the smdents access At Boston University, the complicity with G.E. They (professo:..') has dominion over a number of serf­ to a room in the College G. E. issue caused two out­ held the building for 16 students and receives a fief (delegation of authority) Union building where in- breaks in as :many weeks. hours despite a court in­ from his noble (dean). In return for the right to sit dustrial recruiters were Twenty-four were arrested junction against such ac­ at the academic round...:ta:ble the faculty-knights owe stationed. when a group of protestors tion. Six were cited for vassalage (responsibility) to their noble-deans. At Sixty companies were tried to disrupt a seminar contempt of the court or­ the top of the pyramid is the King (President) who, represented by recruiters attended bv a G E execu­ der. contlnueel on page 15 though a benevolent ruler. is in a position to do the on campus, including Lock-· -- · · - ,najor decision-making and to have the final say, h e e d, General Dynamics usually. The King-President is assisted by his and General Electric, the BOW TOG.ETA court (administration) which includes ministers for nation's top three defense DOCTOR OF DlVINITY DEGREE treasury, taxation, foreign (public) relations. and contractors. Doctor of Divinity degrees are issued by Universal Life ~ other affairs. The court-administration also in­ The students marched on Church, along with a 10-lesson course in the procedure of cludes many lower workers such as the tax collectors the recruiters chant­ setting up and operating a non-profit organization. For a free will offering of $20 we will send you, immediately, all 10 ' (business office), the palace guard (campus police), ing "Smash imperialism" lessons in one package along with the D.D. certificate. and perhaps a court jester. The King-President and ''Recruiters off cam­ receives his official authority from the Clergy pus." They were stopped UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH (Board of Trust.ees) who crown him and have the at the door of the recruit­ BOX 8575 power to set the gen~ral tone of moral and social ers' room by a smallforcEa. HOU.YWOOD, FLORIDA 33021 life within the society. The Clergy-Trustees do not ordinarily interfere with the King-President's run­ ning of the. kingdom but there.is a mutual understand­ WICB "NOW 30" SURVEY ing and agr~ement on what is permissible. This f eudat niodel is appropriate if it is understood • that academic traditions modify the severity implied Week Beginning January 30, 1970 ,-·~ by the image of medieval feudal society, and if it i.s l 1 remembered that the relationship between the Board Thia Last 1 of Trustees and the President is a formal one and Week Week Title Amat that there is really no area in which they cannot in­ 1 3 I'll Never Fall In Love Again Dionne Warwick (Scepter) tercede if they decide to. 2 5 Take Me In Your Arms Jefferson (Janus) That's the ·way it st~n~s now. 3 2 Thank You/Everybody Is A Star Sly/Family Stone (Epic) 4 25 The Court Of The Crimson King King Crimson (Atlantic) 5 7 Walk A Mile lri My Shoes Joe South (Capitol) 9'-'a~.. 6 8 Blowing Away Fifth Dimension (Soul City) 7 4 I Want You Back Jackson Five (Motown) .AltmaJJ,&Green 8 l No Time The Guess Who (RCA) · CQ»,,J.~Jewilers 9 11 She Belongs To Me Rick Nelson (Decca) 10 10 Monster Steppenwolf (Dunhill) ~"'IIJ9'ilerf Iba. 1448.~~·~-IBJO. 11 13 Evil Ways Santana (Columbia) IIHACA'S EXCLUSM KEEPSAKE DIALEI 12 17 Hey There Lonely Girl Eddie Holman (ABC) Expert Watch/- ~.welry.bpalrlng 13 27 Open My Eyes/Hello Its Me Nazz (SGC) Remounting of Diamonds 14 18 One Tin Soldier Original Caste (TA) 15 24 Rainy Night In Georgia Brook Benton (Cotillion) 16 12 Raindrops Keep Falling On My B. J. Thomas (Scepter) Head 17 19 Jesus Is Just Alright Byrds (Columbia) '18 22 Psychedelic Shack Temptations (Gordy) 19 6 Venus The Shocking Blue (Colossus) 20 . 26 How Can I Forget Marvin Gaye (Tamla) 21 21 Let's Work Together Wilbert Harrison (Sue) 212 Walking In The Rain Jay/Americans (UA) Corner of Green & Cayu~a '23 9 Whole Lotta Love Led Zeppelin (Atlantic) 24 Who'll Stop The Rain/Travelling Creedence Clearwater (Fantasy) Band 25 16 Arizona Mark Lindsay (Columbia) 26 Give Me Just A Little More Time Chairmen of the Board FOR YOUR WINTER WEEKEND (lnvictus) 27 30 I've Gotta Make You Love Me Steam (Mercury) Dining Pleasure 28 Try (Just A Little Bit Harder) Janis Joplin (Columbia} 29 Never Had A Dream Come True Stevie Wonder (Tamla) 30 Baby Make It Soon Flying Machine (Congress)

Compiled By And For The "Big Six" Listening Audience! Stop In For Beef In AH Its Glory Ron Kobosko Music Director WICB 6 The Ithacan. January 30, 1970, Page 14 Fear of Solitude

,, I by Michael Ainsley . . The hunter come home from the hill; on the hill were 15 other hunters no less skillful than he had died. He came down the steps of the silver winged transport and found himself in New York's .~ Kennedy International Airport. He hadn't seen so many lights since the day he left the country, one snowy January morning in 1967. It had been a long 12 months and now it was 1968. A year of the hunter's life had passed, leaving him no: one year older, but five years older in the face. His eyes were deep set beneath his fore­ head as though the hunter were inside another man's body looking WOULD YOU LIKE TO BECOME out from the sockets with amazement that New York was still there. A little afraid yet steady of nerve, he moved among the A MINISTER? other hunters that had disembarked the silver transport. The sound <"'RDINATION is without question and for life. LEGAL of laughter, yelling, and even crying missed ih the ,air as the hunter in all 50 states and most foreign, countries. Perform entered the gate then left it behind. The hunter took a deep breath, legal marirages, ordinations, and funerals. Receive dis­ chol9ng back his own emotions, and faded into another scene. counts on some fares. Over 265,000 ministers have already been ordained. Minister's credentials and li­ Back on the hill, more hunters arriveu; they call them replacements. cense sent; an ordainment certificate for framing and Some would die there, some would come back and some of them an ID card for your billfold. We need your help to would never be the same. cover mailing, handling, and administration costs. Your Search The hunter checked his bag and with it slung over his generous contribution is appreciated. ENCLOSE A shoulder moved along the corrider obscure to himself in the Satur­ F'REE WILL OFFERING. day evening bussle of travellers. No one had greeted his arrival just Wr!lte to: continued from page 9 as no one had mourned his departure; this allowed the hunter,a UNIVERSAL LIFE CHURCH man ~f his own, something he had enjoyed in the past. Now, if BOX 8071 only for tonight, he wished it _hadn't always been so. FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA 3331'4 ject by the Tea Council of the USA, who's footing the bill. Decorated like a Christmas tree with beautiful red, blue and The partic1patj.n1t stations have white ribbons, the hunter stood fixed before a mirror in the corri­ in hand entry blanks, _E!O~~ures,. dor. ln a moment of weakness he looked deep into the reflected rules, regulations an"d information image. I coLD BEER about tea's big 1970 Search for .. Hemmingway said there's no market for medals in the pawn Pete's the New Sound. When all the ¼ BARRELS HOW shops anymore, he should know," the hunter said as he faded into .AVAILABLE shouting's over, there will be seven another scene. Back on the hill, more hunters arrived; they call ICE CUBES PICNIC SUPPLIES finalists, including the one com­ them replacements. Some would die there, some would come back OPEN 7 D4YS 9 AM. 10 PM poser that. Billboard's experts and some would never be the same. think has the best success po­ In the Sky Way Lounge, the hunter sipped scotch and watched -·· tential. !fiese seven will perform at a grand finale on the stage in with amazement at people laughing, at couples still in love, at the the ballroom of the National Press ·world ~ing on around him even while the hl!n~ we11t on. ,After Club in Washington, D.C. (all con­ another couple of drinks, the hunter payed his bill. There's noth­ ,., Call ·testants• expenses paid by tea, of ing new with this year; no worldly change. The war is constant, ~ _ 714 W. BUFFALO course,) and will be judged by a more so than a man's life. It's the images that fool us, we look so 273 7 470 panel of top-qualified ju4ges from good in evening promises and yule tide fire light. the world of music. They will all The hunter changed his clothes in the men's room and discarded get recording contracts arranged his ribbons in one of the trash bins. His clothes changed and his, by Billboard; and a chance for net­ face covered with three days of new uneven growth of beard, he work televfsion appearances, equip· aim.>st looked free and easy; but he was still a soldier, si.iil a hunt• ment, travel, and cash prizes. er of those long since dead. '"Night to some a bnef interlude, to others the fear of solitude. 1WAREBOUSE-f Brave Hellious, wake up your steeds, bring the warmth of the coun­ THIS WEEKEND tryside needs." (Moody Blues) FRIDAY Penna. Offers Financial Aid Head Straight Legislation has been enacted "mg Ithaca College may apply for which authorizes PHEAA to in­ a state scholarship for the 1970- crease maximum student loans 1971 academic year. April 30 is from $ 1,000 to $1,500. The the deadline for the filing of re­ BRASS BUTTONS ROYAL PALMS $7,500 maximum guarantee re­ newal applications by students 209 Dryden Rd. mains. now holding state scholarship a­ 272 • 9636 Pennsylvania residents attend- wards and for upperclassmen ap­ plying for the first time. Applications for scholarships may be obtained from the Penn­ Away from home? sylvaaja Higher Education Assis­ .SATDBDAY tance Agency: Towne House Get on the Right Track at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania,_17102. Veterans o(..jh~ U.S. Armed The Station Service and students from famil­ THE SHADOWS ies whose principal wage earner has retired, died or become total­ and ly disabled may submit applica­ tions 'at' any time wJthout regard­ to deadlines. LONG TIME COMIN'

cc a I See Page 3

273-1333 Rtes. 13 & 366 <.For that home away from bome feeling) 272-2609 West Buffalo ------. __ The_!!haca~....'..~~n~ 30, 1970,Page IS ~I intellectual stimulation, · continued from page 13 hassles students in their times. In relation to un- 11r-~7.G I - UP academic role, infringes necessarily restrictiveun- Hu upon their right to pursue dergraduate PE program: outside activities, forces 1) Physical Education ~T GLP~ D I;'f them unnecessarily to be sh o u 1d immediately be- 1 At theUniversityoflowa. 11 .r,L submitted to an ideology come voluntary; 2) If and the administration has an- 0 and to certain learning when taken. PE should not nounced it will discipline b techniques that they have be counted on one's cumu- students who attempted to y Jack Gipplard no use for, criminally 1a t·ive rec o r·d; 3) There remove a U.S. Department . no use· f O r, criminally should be an all college of Laborrecruiterfromthe Since President John F. gree. It is conceivable, embezzles funds from stucommittee 25made up of 50% school's placement office K en_n eC,~' s program for however,. that there are their financial savings, and nddentS, 25 % PE faculty, last month. The students physical fitness, the United qu~te a few freshmen and acts as an all around sub- ~1 % of those o were protesting what they ~tates has come a long way sophomores who- couldn't tle remiruler of the greater n t ere st ed. This board called the Labor Depart- i? A~erican-Soviet rela- find a hell of a lot of con- reality that they are low shouldth ~eet. to deliberate ment's support of the G.E. bonships. solation in knowing that men on the totem pole and on e situation, make the management against strik- . GIPPE at Ithaca College their time is being wasted that college busines~ undergraduate PE program ers. qivil charges will be is a remarkable specie. two or three times a week comes first. The educa- stumore relevant to today's 1· broug~t against non-stu- !~ can and has in the past for the benefit of some tional aspect is definitely ~ents (i.e. e~ology), and ·- dents mvolved in the inci- ~ung people up" for a nameless grad student. philosophical, and prac- to fmd a tentative solution dent. diplo~a. The case history Consider that in other tic a 1 r O 1es in life are by the end of the semester. The students will be tried of ~ns fascinating division colleges and universities merely incident:i.l. . Everyone re a 1 i z es the by the Committee on Stu- ?f mtell~ctually stimulat- the PE program is optional, There are 01 course un- importancest of having a dent Conduct under a sec- mg curriculum has on the and its attendance records mistakable benefits of such rong body which should tion of the discipline code surface some valid reasons are quite good. The decade a program to the students le~dd to a healthy and open p~ohibi!ing "intentionally for existence and under- of t}le sixties ha~ become but these can be maintained ~m .• Some_how our Phys­ disruptmg the order 1y neath so~e values and rea- legendary in its production on a voluntary level. Ad- ical Education school has processes of the University s?ns ~hich ~re quite pos- of students who wish to mittedly, there is a state passed up the lat_ter which or obstructing or denying sibly in v a 11 d and detri- know answers to serious law whioh pertains to Phys- ~hould .be remedied in the access to services or facil- mental to students' rights. questions, who are chal- ical Education, but even at thimmediate future so that ities by those entitled to One of these may be be- lenging the norm s and that most schools require e program will add to and I use thereof.'' . cause of the background of values of our present so- only two semesters of PE not h~ndicap the greater i '. The ~tude?ts at Roose- the colle'ge itself. For ciety, and who seek to and don't band out failing ed~cahonal process in '' velt University in Chicago years Ith a c ~ has been change tneir lives through grades when persons are which ~e. Ithaca College were arrested for aggra- known for its Physical a humanistic perspective. absent more than three student is involved. vated battery and damage Therapy, P_erformingArts, ~ence, we have the decline Ir~~~~~~=~~~~~~.. ------• to property afterarecruit- and Physical Education. m goldfish eaters The WE GUARANTEE THE LOWEST PRICE er from the General Motors PE is one of the few de- undergraduate non-~ajors IN NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY Co_rp. ~as doused with red partmen~s from which one Physical Education pro- PENNSYLVANIA MASS ' pamt m the university's can rece1v.e a graduate de- gram offers little or no , ACHUSETTS, placement office. - AND CONNECTICUT Rutgers University can- BIGGEST WEEK YET f celled scheduled visits bv recruiters from G.E. afte~ MANOS DINER • the school's chapter ofSDS ON ELMIRA ROAD (See ad page 3) threatened to demonstrate. FOR THE BEST IN FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES ! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 7 a.m. - 3 a.m. Fri - Sat.

Donohue - Halverson SALE Inc. PLUMBING AND HEATING of the MEET YOUR MATE ... • 11 1 Estimates Cheerfully Given HAPPY S HOUR FRIDAY 3:00 to 6:00 • PITCHER OF "THE KING OF ~EERS" 602 W. Seneca St. CENTURY • 273 - 3393 BUDWEISER - $1.00 ' At This Price - Bring a Date 1 In Our ~Cith Year semi-annual clearance MJ:Pt}I SO ELSE.t-\.CE Expert Workmanship Where· Many jobs while you wait. QUALITY is Supreme TAVERN

24 hour service in most cases 108 N. Aurora St. SATURDAYS 3P.M.'tlll 7PM 405 Coll~ge Ave. BLOODY MARY'S 'so· Call ARJ-3313 The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 16 ~RT'S TRANSMISSION KOSS APPOINTED Health and PE SERVICE 1.-clellsn .. ~ ,,...,..,11.,.. TO Conduct

• •cPLACID~ • P.:0-AlaCD • llllUII.T • •fHAl.10 Study of Students • tan· oaQt•· 1" • &o,u,no PUBLIC AFFAms "?!'13-3642 Ithaca College's Sch­ important in specialized 206 I TQMl'KINS U ool of Health and Physical Edu­ areas of physical educa­ by Jim Donaldson cation, which has ranked as one tion, such as working with of the nation's finest (or many the physically or cultur­ To Keep Your Spirits Up The Ithaca College office IAffairs. His new duties, years, has undertaken a thorough ally handJ.0apped. PHONE 272 - 2111 of Public Affairs recently as explained to The Ithacan, evaluation study of the profes­ Straub would like to in­ added a new member to its will primarily be "to assist sional preparation of its major itiate proficiency exams in H& HUquor & Wines staff. Lawrence L." Koss, in expanding communica­ students. many skilled areas which formerly an advertising tions concerning Ithaca The study was initiated by Dr. would eliminate unneces­ 218 E. State St. rep~esentative with the College both within and out­ Arnold W. Wiffielm, who was ap­ sary repetition. pointed Associate Dean of the Ithaca, N.Y. Caterpillar Tractor Com- side of the campus environ­ School in September. It is in­ The study will be con­ pany of Peoria, Illinois, has ment" with special em­ tended to provide factual infor­ ducted by Straub; Walter Your Closest Uquor been appointed an Asso- phasis in the area of crea­ mation to the Curriculum Com­ Newsom, director of insti­ Store to Campus ciate Director <;>f Public tive services. mittee which was recently set up tutional r es ear ch; and One immediate concern by Dr. Eugene T. Deluca, Direc­ Richard Miller, graduate of Koss will be to assist in tor of the College's undergra­ student and graduate as­ EMMICK MOTOR CO. the coordination of a pro­ duate program in physical edu­ sistant in physical educa­ posed film designed to pro­ cation. -That Committee is study~. tion. MONTOUR FALLS mote Ithaca College to the mg poss1bie changes in curricu­ lum due to a relaxation in State Questionnaires consist­ public. He will also, among requirements in the area of phy­ ing of 78 questions on all Factory authorized dealer for twelve other duties, act as an ob­ sical education, and because of phases of the program have makes of new cars, including such s er v er at the upcoming new teaching methodologies, su­ been sent to a random sam­ names as Porsche, Jaguar, Volvo, Long Range Planning Com­ ch as micro-teaching, self-direct­ ple of 50 per cent of the BWV, Fiat, Peugeot, MG, Austin mittee meetings, as well as ored study, and educational gym­ Class of 1966, after three Healey., Renault, Sunbeam, Checker, working on various college nastics. years of teaching, and the Plym_outh, and others. publications and a l um n i According to William F. Str­ Class of 1969, after one material. aub, associate professor and co­ $90,000 Parts Inventory year, and to all members of Koss comes to Ithaca ordinator of graduate programs the Class of 1970. Those College with a greatdealof in physical education, this eval­ Always more than 100 models in stock. uation study is part of a contin­ who are now teaching will prior experience in public be evaluated by their chief We service what we sell and as many affairs work. He began his uing program of reevaluation and others as possible. improvement designed ·~to make school administrators, to career as a reporter for Ithaca College a unique institu­ present a picture of the the Hartford Courant in tion." quality of the teacher from SALES OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 C on n e ct i cut and later I.C. 's program. joined the Peoria Journal- Straub suggested some Service By Appointment Only In addition, all faculty . Star as assistant city edi- possible changes, focusing members of the School of PHONE 568-3071 tor. Along with his adver- mainly on building greater Health and Physical Educa­ tising duties at Caterpillar, flexibility int O the pro­ tion and selected faculty he also edited a monthly gra~. He would ~ike to from other divisions of the company magazine, served prov1d~ _more elective op­ College will be asked to as a press relations repre- !'ortun_1ties for st u _dents, complete an evaluation sentative and worked as mcludmg such things as questionnaire designed by assistant editor of the em- independent projects and stu the American Assn. for ployee newspaper. dY abroad. Health, Physical Education Koss holds a BA degree . s_traub also feels pro­ and Recreation. This in­ from the University oflowa v1s1on should be made fo.r strument ha s previously and is a member of Sigma those students ~ho may been used by other colleges Delta Xi, profession- want a seco?d e1ght-~eek for self-evaluation. al journalism society and blo_ck of student teac~mg. The School w i 11 also the Toastmasters Club. This would be especially invite a team of evaluative experts, with national rep­ utations in the field of physical education, from the National Council of ·][f 'lou\le been loolci11g Accredations in Teacher 8'1 Education of Middle States tor in~ i mat'e "°°"' to visit the campus and iN which • wine •rul J·i11e evaluate the program. a11 ifflpressiona~le ~•, 901.c Two weeks will be al­ lowed for completion of the oc.9ht to consider · questionnaires and exten­ sive follow-up procedures will ensue if an 80 per cent response is not received, The Porterhouse Room Straub said. o( .fohc· \Jonde .. ta .. d Motel The target date for com­ "S't &&.MU~A ltOAP • AR 2.-s~s2. pletion of the study is June 1970.

LOBSTER~ Your Plumber or Heating Dealer CHA~·BROILED STEAK HULL HEATING & PLUMBING INC. BEEF A LA FONDUE For Courhtaus and Dependable Service ... a,u/Jkr ~-6~1,rs • 3 ,.,,-,,,,t., fh,- Kitchen Aid AND MoTaL. • 1TM~ c • I 20TRIPLANDTERRAC 25. EWONDERL I\ ._.. 2. ••2.,S2., · ..... "···ltWATIONa6M 804 W. Seneca St. _T....,._1111.--11111111.U 272 • 3550 Ithaca, N.Y. The Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 17 ------M-=-=-=u-=s=E::U:::M:-:--_-_PROFESSOR ------:c::on~,:-:.nu•d from pa11• 1o DEFENDED "I have never in the rest ·of my college career been so highly motivated or interested to learn, study and attend class. Mr. Taber presents, in his own personal fashion, to the students a zest for knowledge and learning. He has brought the rest of the world and its problems into a classroom situation." A student evaluation After just one semester at Ithaca College, Ron Taber·. a professor of American History, has estab­ lished himself as one of the· best instructors at the

college. Now he has come under attack from the - . ~... senior members of the history department and the on ••IIIDlt at tll• downtown mu ..um of art Dean of Arts and Sciences. The charge. as usual, is ''unprofessionalism' ', a newvariaticn on an old theme today · where others have He~en Ottaway, definitely OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK for those familiar with the Bea Goldman case. Dr. failed. The other pictures worth looking at. Also 11 a.m. • 1 a.m. Taber has been censored and his chance of reappoint­ Jeft s om et hi n g to be make sure to see every ment threatened. desired. His photographs photograph by Howard We believe that the situation out of which the charge were good, as they left a Lieberman. DELICIOUS of unprofessionalism is so trivial as t9 need not re­ few things to the imagina- This present exhibit FOOD AT buttal. "Professionalism" in the academic world is tion. "Artists/ Photographers" THE RIGHT a· convenient guise behind which weak men clothe Bruce McComb's etch- ends February 6. Thenext PRICES their hatred of the strong. What is more to the point ings could not compare to showing will be of faculty is that Dr. Taber's academic freedom, in our judge­ those of Bolton. Most of artists' works through the ment, has been violated and Ithaca College students them were done in pen and month of February and in Evening Supper , stand to lose one of their most exciting teachers. ink, and weren't very dis- March a one-man show Menu · Professor Taber's at times unconventional ap­ tinctive or else were ex-takes over, the artist 8 p.m. • 1 a.m. proach to American History provides a stimulating tremely abstract. His Lawrence Calcagno~ classroom atmosphere. He is also radical and 2 photos were a superb por- ~ 0 doesn't mind letting people know it. This, of course, trayal of America. is his real sin. He is a man with different ideas and 2 Definitely out of place in he knows how to communicate them honestly and 60 D this exhibit was Joan Gla1MS boldly. People who combine those characteristics R Lyons. Her pictures were and Contact y usually get fired at Ithaca College. confined to the use of only Lenses Fitted D Isn't it abouttimethatthiskindofthing be stopped? silkscreening; they did not Emergency Optical Services E Isn't it about time that Ithaca College makes a co1n­ fit into the general moodo CO-OP SHOPPING N mitment to providing students with an education con­ the exhibit, although she CENTER ITHACA sisting of all points of view? Can this college make R 272-0994 D. claim to a free marketplace of ideas when a young did have one or two good HOURS: and qualified teacher is threatened for expressing prints. 9-5:30 Daily - 9-1 Sat. Come In and See Us I his opinion? We propose that the ~ctions of the it is on the whole a well-L.!::======~...... ------!!!!!!~~ people involved in persecuting Dr. Taber have made collected and well-exhibit- a mockery of the ideals of a liberal education. ed showing. . If you' re up on Unless the situation is changed, Ron Taber will be the seoond floor take a R. A. MOOG Inc. only the latest but not the last of a long line of ex­ small side trip to the se­ ceptional teachers who have been clubbed into si­ lection of. watercolors by presents lence or removed by those in power. We urge the students of IC to move toward breaking the monopoly J - --- . f An Electronic Music Concert of these powerful factions of the faculty who are in- ,h C&.IIJIM-2: 1 . tolerant of radical ideas and afraid of good teachmg. , with introductory talk by Robert Moog ! We believe that to do this, students must assert their 1i NOW OPEN i interest in faculty hiring and promotion. And mostly, . ~ , we want to see people like Ron Taber and Bea Gold­ ( ELMIRA ROAD f Live Electronic Music man in the Ithaca College classrooms next fall. ~ • Sundaes f performed on Moog Synthesizers by Join us Monday, January 26, at 8 P.M. in BlOl for a discussion leading to the resolution of this problem. ~ • Bana~a Barge f ~ • Flying Saucer f The Committee to Defend Ron Taber . t • Shakes & Floats . AMULET Nadine Cohen >-:.... ------.-:,.... - - ---~ a synthesizer quartet directed by WOULD YOU LIKE. TO START A YOUR OWN CHURCH? COMPLETE Chris Swansen We will furnish you with a Church Charter and you can MUSICAL SERVICE start your own church. Headquarters of UNIVERS~ LIFE CHURCH will keep records of your church and> file with the federal government and furnish you a tax exempt status-all • 2 Shows -Sun . F eh. 1 2pm & 4:30 pm you have to do is report your activities to headquarters four HICKEY'S times a year. Enclose a free will offering. Chas. 0. Dickerson H. S. Auditorium UNIVERSAL LIFE. CHURCH Music Store BOX 6575 201 South Tioga St. Trumansburg, N .Y. ~te. 96 HOLLYWOOD. FLOIUDA 33021 Ithaca 272 - 8262 Donation to band uniform fund ...... -; ~ i,,;• .-•••••,,.-;- • • ,,~-.-,,•• , .. ,,.-,,. , ••••••,, SI.SO FRA TERN/TY JEWELRY ' by L. G. BALFOUR CO. ' Tickets available at:

ITHACA COLLEGE CLASS RINGS Willard-Strait Hall WASHING AND McNeils Music Ray Robinson with Rothschllds 1st Floor GREASING Kostrub's in Trumansburg Badges, Favors, Mugs - Sportswear • &at door Phone 272-5959 f Cor. Buffalo and Aurora •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•••••••••c•,..,••••••••••••••••••• ______, ...I ------\, be Ithacan, January 30, 1970, Page 18 ,. W.II.II. Hosts Wrestlers The 400 Penn State l thaca Lollege will be the Continued from page 19 host for Penn State and Brock­ Restaurant port tomorrow. It is the first Hochfelder gained a well women's gymnastics meet this wrestled 8-6 · decision at year. The girls have been busy · 150, and at 158 Tony Scar­ The only* place pract:cing since long before inge was victorious with an to eat while in Christmas and are looking for­ 11-6 verdict. · Hochfelder ward to doing well. All are and Scaunge, both seniors, Collegetown invited and encouraged to at­ have been two of the more tend at IO a.m., Saturday in . persistent wrestlers for IC the PVm over the last three years, College *Ave. and . The Competitive Swim Team with Hochfelder a 1 ways will also be at home tomorrow. Craig Kolloff on the panllel bars. fashioning a fine record Dryden Rd. Penn State, Oneonta, and Wil­ liam Smith will be the compet­ and Scaringe doing a very OPEN to 12~ ing schools. We were number reliable job. Going into the one in the state last year. ·167 lb. match, IC still Come watch us start another Gymnasts Upset trailed by two points, but successful season. __ Doug Porter. subbing for injured captain Bill Meis­ Trenton ner, was awarded a forfeit by Howard Krebaum making it 16-13 Ithaca. At to forfeit the high bar event, 1 77, Tom Polimeni hum­ CAR WASH Ithaca College gymnasts won placed third in all around. Team bled his opponent with a their first meet of the season captain Federrnan placed second 10-4 victory, but Wayne by defeating Trenton State in in the rings, assistant captain Keebler lost -a tough 5-4 a close contest last Friday night. Bob McEvoy took third in vaul­ decision at 191, makingthe The meet was highlighted by ting, and Bull took third in 1he score 19-i6 Ithaca, going WAXED & DRIED outstanding individual perfor­ nngs. into the heavyweight bout. Mon.-Tues.-Weds.-Thurs ...... ••...•..... 99' mances by the team's number Coach Gordon Eggleston said In this match, freshman Fri.-Sat .-Sun ...... ;...... 1 1.25 one all around, Craig Koll.off, that he was pleased with the Wayne Ferguson iced the who took second place in all team's performance on both victory with an impressive around, and by Lee Multari who says. Even though Ithaca lost first period pin, making the took first place in floor exer­ to Montclair, the team scored final score 24-16. cise, rings and high bar. Captain five points more than against The match by match re­ 1/2 Price Russ Federrnan took first place Trenton. Coach Egglesto~ felt sults: in the rings aJ.ld ·second place that the Montclair victory was 118-Jim Orloske lost by on the parallel bars, Tom Bull partly due to the use of video fall. WITH GAS took third place in the rings, OPEN tape instant replay which en­ 126-Bob Hoyte lost by fall. FILL UP and Ru~ty Flook' took third ables the gymnast to spot his 8 A.M. - 8 P.M; place in the high bar. · 134-Ed Anderson lost by 8 Cul. Min. own errors and weak points · decision, 23-.2. This was a very close meet I in practice sessions and thus 142-Jerry McTamney won Additional Preston Spray Wax SOc with a difference in score of correct these points for the re­ only a few tenths going into by fall, 1:40. . "RAIN CHECK" Given on Fill Up gular meets. The coach of the 150-Tom Hochfelder won the last event, the high bar. IC team has requested the use Kolloff perfonned his routine by decision, 8-6. of one of these machines for 158-Tony Scaringe won by GULF CAR WASH with very good form and scored next season and he is sure it high enough to put Ithaca in decision 11-6. 740 s. Meadow St. ( Rt. 13 South l will be a great asset to the 167-Doug Porter won by Acro>s From Ithaca Shopping Plaza the lead by one point and team. thus giving the team the 86.1 forfeit. to 85 .1 victory over Trenton. 177-Tom Polimeni won by ~ ...... , On Saturday, IC went against ITHACA FLOOR decision, 10-4. a much tougher Montclair team. COVERING 191-Wayne Keebler lost by decision, 5-4. • Giant Subs Ithaca lost by a score of 131.40 • Lee's Carpets to· 91.85. Even though IC lost • Floor Covering Hvy-Wayne Ferguson won • Reasonable Prices the meet, they placed in certain • Palnb ey fall, 1:30. . events. Multari again took first • Hot or Cold Factory Trained Installation. 1 place in the floor exercise and LEE S GARAGE · FREE PARKING he also scored second in all FOR: Repairs on all makes • Best in Town 272-5696 around. Kolloff, despite an in­ and models, including for­ 407 Taughannock Blvd. jured hand which caused him · eign cars N.Y.S. Inspection WIIW Front End Alignment KING Electrical Tune-Up r ROBERT ~- BOO;-RO~ 1 Brake & Motor Overhaul SUBMARINE 402 S. CAYUGA ST. I AGENCY, INC. I 273 - 1821° _ Rear Entrance HOUSE Ca,efully w,:::d ln,u

VARSITY. CAGERS SLUM-P CONTINUES by Phil Chardis Although playing better · big lead, and scored prac- ported with 12 points. Mike ;~-~ than they have all season in tically at will throughout Reed, Hartwick' s 6' 6" at least two of the games, the game. On the other center who almost beat Ith­ the Bombers from Ithaca hand, Ithaca had one of its aca by himself in the first dropped three contests last poorer shooting nights of game played between the week, bringing their sea- the season, and ended up two this year, was held by son's record down to 1 win with only a .354 shooting Williams to only 3 points, against 8 losses, and giving percentage as compared to as the Ithaca center drew them three losses in a row the winners' .643.' The only numerous offensive fouls since their only win of the shining light for the Bo~b- by Reed. year at Alfred. Held to ers was, of course, under The Ithaca Frosh team their lowest point total of the boards where Mike had no chance in the pre­ the year at Hartwick, the Williams, usually the only lim as Hartwick came ou Bombers dropped their I.C. rebounder, fought two with a 97-75 win. Except second of the season to the and sometimes three men for the great shooting o much-taller Warriors, 92- bigger than himself for a Ken Nigh, who f.inished 66. With Coach Hurst then fabulous total of 29 re- with 22 points, and per­ going with his "shooting bounds, breaking the old }laps the ball-handling -of team," the Blue lost a record of 25 (which he had. 5' 6", Dav e Dellos, the hard-fought battle to the tied the game before. frosh looked worse than Mountaineers of Mansfield Mike was also I.C. 's best their varsity counterparts.;. at Ben Light Gym~ 90-88. shooter, hitting 4-4 from Some team play would be The Bulls of the Univer- the floor. and 7 of 8 free of neat h.elo to the squad. sity of Buffalo then came visitors' Reggie Lang and to I th a c a an d took the 17 by Bob Weinstein helped Bombers, 89-78, although to keep the game just out Ithaca played well. The of reach. The Bombers most games that Ithaca stole the ball with about College has ever lost in six seconds left, and Brian one season was 13 in the Chafin attempted to drive 1953-54 season, but with ln for the basket from the 11 games left on the sched­ corner. Mansfield's 6' 4" ule, the current Bombers ·charlie Williams went up to have a good chance to ob­ stop the shot and, in a call tain that dubious distinc­ that could have either been tion. a foul or a clean block, the Hartwick 92, Ithaca 66 ref called the latter and time ran out. Close, but With an amazing dis­ no cigar! play of hot shooting from the floor, the Warriors of Buffalo 89, Ithaca 78 Hartwick jumped out to a Five feet nine inches is not very tall, even in small college basketball, but the University of Buffalo's Ron ' Gilliam made everyone in Light Gymnasium f o r get Ibis height (or lack of it) and watch his ability, as . pboto by Todd Brady ]he completely d~minated . the game for a Buffalo win. Seeing his first action ; throws for 15 points. Brian Mansfield 90, Ithaca 88 iams turnea m another 20- in over two weeks because Chafin, playing as consis- plus rebound performance, of a player boycott, Gill- tent as he has since he A starting team of Ca- and· also scored 15 points. tam made everyone won- started with Ithaca in Jan- hill, Di b 1 er, Williams, Pa u 1 Veronesi led th der how good he is when in uary, followed up with 12, Veronesi, and Chafin ac- scorers with 23 points, pract~ce. Besides pour­ and Rick Cahill chipped in ~ o u n t e d for 80 of the followed by Williams and ing in 33 points and giving 11. The winners got a team's 88 points in a show Chafi~ with 15, Dave Dib- 10 assists, Gilliam sparkl­ great performance from of balanced scoring, but it ler with 14, and Rick Ca- ed with his ball-handling · Willie Rackley (brother of was n~t enough as the hill's 13. A great press and defensive skills. Help­ the pro Royals' Luther) Mountaineers squeaked by in the closing minutes led ing out on offense for Buf- , who hit on 10 of 12 floor the Bombers in the final by co-captains Mark Row-. falo was Eric Rasmussen shots, and 8 of9fromthe seconds, Again battling ley and Keith Shieldslwith 14, and Tony Ebner ch_ a r it y stripe, for 28 two o~ three men tal_ler brought the Ithacans sol with 12. _Ithaca played well continued on nomts. Ed Craumer sup- /han himself, Mike Will- close, but 19 points by theJ p-,. 19