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The Montclarion Student Newspapers

4-16-1971

The Montclarion, April 16, 1971

The Montclarion

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Recommended Citation The Montclarion, "The Montclarion, April 16, 1971" (1971). The Montclarion. 1422. https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion/1422

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Montclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. IVIonticlarion Vol. 45. No. 24 Montclair, N.J. 07043 F rl, April 16, 1971 TCB ’Students Only’ Meeting TOE Et rat Board Stresses 'Just a Draft’ at Hearing By Suzje Hrasnaa attended mostly by faculty and Coffmann went on to say that education," said Mrs. Neuberger, Staff Writer MRS. NEUBERGER also administrators. the Graduate University of New "nobody has any quarrel with any reminded the students that public TRENTON — Phase II is just a ABOUT 60 students were in Jersey takes the flexibility of of the six colleges. But if they are draft, not a final plan according to institutions were dependent upon attendance, including 21 from education. The document "is just to become truly top-notch liberal appropriations of public funds. Mrs. Katherine K. Neuberger, Montclair State College. a jumble. It says nothing to the liberal arts institutions, they have hearing chairman and Board of Miss Majorie Coe, MSC student, students at all." to have the programs and the spoke of GUNJ as being "a Higher Education member. "We The statement by Mrs. MRS. NEUBERGER at this faculties to be able to work in the hierarchy of people who are far want to know what you people Neuberger that Phase II is a draft point asked Coffmann if he was in field of liberal arts on the removed from the education. (The think about it," she said at a was prompted by a question the education department, which graduate basis as well as the students) are going to be traveling fourth master plan hearing here posed by MSC graduate student he was. She then explained that undergraduate basis." to different schools to take their Wednesday. Robert Coffmann. He said, "The the state colleges were teacher "So what are you going to do," courses...They'll have " no The hearing, held in the document is ambiguous and some education colleges until the Mrs. Neuberger went on, "let each allegiance to any one shcool as auditorium of the state museum, of its implementation has not Education Act of 1966 when they college run a race and get bigger their graduate university. They'll was for students to express their been worked out. How can we were designated multi-purpose and bigger and bigger? You have a structure that is no opinions on Phase 11 of the Master possibly deal with a document institutions. diminish your quality and also structure." Plan. Previous meetings were like this?" 'Now in the---- field W.of optlspend III too IUU IIILmuch money." Miss Coe also spoke against the 7500-stiident limit placed on state Oshin Charges Watson-Asaal colleges in the Master Plan. MR. STEFFEN W. Plehn, assistant chancellor, answered that "proposals for the new colleges With Election Rules Violations are to have them located in those Richard, Oshin, SCiA areas of the state * where the presidential candidate, has ■ population will be growing over charged the Bob Watson-Bill Asdal the next 15 years." It would seem election campaign with misuse of that by limiting enrollment, the student funds for their own Master Plan would seek to open campaign. more colleges instead, he said. "Buttons which were Terry Lee, MSC student and distributed on campus earlier this SGA presidential candidate, also week by Watson and Asdal were addressed himself to the merely sprayed-over College Life 7500-enrollment limit. He said, Union Board buttons. Unless they "What the board is doing is can produce a receipt for the shifting the weight back to the buttons at the rate of 25 cents per population...You say we have button — the rate at which they only a certain amount of money were sold to all the rest of the so let's pull everything together students — an illegality has taken and make one superstructure. place," Oshin said. Then let the people get to them — YESTERDAY MORNING, wherever they happen to be." Watson presented a $12 check to Mrs. Neuberger then apologized SGA Treasurer Dawn Sova for the that Dr. Bruce Robertson, who purchase of the buttons. The wrote the draft, was not present. Watson-Asdal buttons were first "M y guess," she said, "is that his distributed Tuesday, Oshin said. thesis was that when you have "And the 200 buttons were more than 7500, you lose purchased at only six cents apiece, quality." instead of the 25 cents that the When asked how this hearing remainder of the student body will be used, Mrs. Neuberger said bought them at," Oshin that proceedings would be commented Thursday morning. reported to the board. When Oshin said that he had intended asked why no one was recording to formally charge presidential the proceedings, as had been the h o p e fu l , Watson and practice at other hearings, Plehn vice-presidential candidate Asdal apologized for not doing so. at the regular SGA meeting Mrs. Neuberger stated that Tuesday afternoon. The meeting proceedings would be "boiled was cancelled, however, by Stan down to the points made." When Grajewski, SGA vice-president, asked how this was going to be allegedly because there were too done, the students were told that few bills up for consideration. they could have a copy of the Grajewski also serves as Watson's William F. Buckley Jr. told MSC students Wednesday night that it is the duty of report mailed to them. Mrs. campaign mamager. American youths to be proud o f their nation's history. Neuberger also said that students Watson is a history department "Ofttimes, students today levitate on the fact that they are Americans. The problems could write their proposals and representative. Asdal, an industrial in this is that these students are lacking a true knowledge o f their history. The blood of send them to the board. She said arts major, represents the School Jefferson and Madison and Thoreau and Emerson runs in their collective veins," he said. that a delegation should be sent to of Professional Arts and Sciences. He suggested that students seek a "more meaningful purpose" for their educatioth the board meeting when Phase II SGA President Thomas Benitz The conservative student usually agrees with the revolutionary in that there must be a is discussed. One student appointed them earlier this year as purpose to education, but there is indeed something called a historical consciousness that suggested that the Master Plan's SGA vice-presidents of academic should be understood." Buckley's speech jn Panzer gym was attended by 750 students goal should not be 1985, but- affairs and external affairs.' and sponsored by the College Life Union Board. 1984. . Z'

2. MÖNtCLA R ION/Fri., April 16. 1971 Soph Claims Ambulances Take Too Lowfl Wants First Aid Corps for Students

By Pat O'Dea trained in first aid, Weimer wants commented, but said that the THE FIRST aid team will be Staff Writer to organize a first-aid team on group now has the support of the organized like the student patrol, college medical staff and security Weimer said, "but our hours will An ambulance from Montclair campus. "Students, faculty, and chief Joseph Daly. depend on the number of or Clifton can take as long as 20 the security police should know " If we could get something volunteers we get." He pointed minutes to get to the Montclair where they can get immediate going this semester it would be out that volunteers must have an State campus, according to help," he said. WEIMER EXPLAINED that he swell, but we're really aiming for advanced card in first aid, tho sophomore business next fall," emphasized Weimer, ambulance experience is not administration major Robert and a group of friends interested explaining lhat the necessary needed. Weimer. " If a person required in the project all have volunteer ambulance squad experience and equipment would be the team's Weimer's qualifications for this oxygen, that would be far too have answered first aid calls on first concern. "A t this point," he project include certification to long," he added. campus. added, "I'm not sure whether we teach the New Jersey State first For this reason plus the fact "A t first, people were leery as will apply for a SGA charter, but aid course and the American Red that MSC security police are not to o ur credentials," he we do need funding." Cross first aid course.

A Drive Starts Next Week I APOGets Involved - In Blood By Cecelia Fecho 16. A Peace Corps Day will also rearrange the magazines. APO Staff Writer be held at MSC. Booklets will be member Steve Feinstien is Alpha Phi Omega's tradition of given out and questions will be directing the project. social involvement has resulted in answered. ONE OF the pledges, Kevin a schedule of activities including a Right now, the fraternity's Streelman, said that he chose APO blood drive, cancer drive and newest pledge project involves a because of its well-constructed Peace Corps drive. little muscle strain. The Sprague organization and its social The annual blood drive, a library has decided to move its involvement. McCloskey thinks carryover from the nationwide periodicals into the reserve room that there will "probably be project, will begin registering and ten pledges from APO will another pledge period after Easter donors April 19 at the Fishbowl. carry the load downstairs and vacation." The deadline for registering is April 30 and donors are expected to fulfill their obligations by May Performs qt Studio Theater 3. Vice-president Bob Schaible is in charge of the project. APO PRESIDENT John Bus Co.’ Steers to MSC McCloskey states that last year's The Bus Company is coming to the Deaf. The cast consists ot campaign was the most successful Montclair State. No, that's not a students from various colleges since its first attempt ’ in 1964. new system of transportation who study at the memorial center The fraternity is now considering from the quarry. It is the student in Waterford, Conn, for eight have the blood drive each touring group of the National weeks. Among them is MSC junior semester. Theater Institute, who will Doris Lee, Newark, who received All APO chapters in the state of present a performance and a a scholarship to study at the New Jersey will combine to workshop on Thurs., April 22, in center for college credit. News Desk "The Disintegration of James coordinate a drive for the studio theater. • Free TB Tests Set American Cancer Society next The performance, 'The Cherry" was written by Wanshell while a student at Wesleyan. It Disney Fest Pla nned for Tomorrow week. Disintegration of James Cherry" • "Send a mouse to college" is by Jeff Wanshel, will take place at was given its first performance as The Health Service is offering Students interested in applying the slogan of the new campaign 8 p.m. and admission is free. The a stage reading at O'Neill center's free TUBERCULIN TESTS to all for a NATIONAL DEFENSE which will involve the buying of workshop will be given at 10 a.m. National Playwrights' Conference students on April 26-27 and May STUDENT LOAN for the mice for use in scientific THE NATIONAL Theater in 1969. 3-4 at the health service office In 1971-1972 school year should experiments. The average price for Institute is supported by the Members of the troupe are Russ Hall. A reading of his poetry, also contact Neuner or Richards a mouse is 27 cents. Therefore, Eugene O'Neill Memorial' being housed by students and by ROBERT VAS DIAS, will be in room 217, College Hall for an that amount from each Foundation, which also sponsors a faculty of the School of Fine and held on Sunday afternoon, April, application. Renewals of the contributor would make the Playwright Unit and Theater of Performing Arts. 18, at the Public Library of Cedar National Defense Student Loans project a successful one. —M. J. Moran Jr. Grove. Vas Dias, a are not automatic. An application AS A sectional service project, nationally-known poet, editor and must be filed each year if a loan is the drive will be coordinated by teacher at the New School, will desired. Middlesex County. Montclair IN/lontclarion hold the reading in observance of State College's APO chapter will Serving the College Community Since 1928 A Walt Disney Children's FILM National Library Week. The be led by Fred Myer. — New Jersey’s Leading Collegiate Weekly FESTIVAL will be presented in reading will commence at 3 p.m. In a joint effort with the other assignment editor Memorial auditorium, tomorrow Maurice J. Moran A dm ission is free and APO chapters, the fraternity is Carla Capizzi and on May 8 from 10 a.m. to Diana Forden refreshments will be served. also participating in a publicity noon. The series is sponsored by Susan Kelly Juniors who will complete campaign for the Peace Corps. Jo-EHen Scudese the Office of International and M ary J. Sm ith copy editors requirements for entrance into Representatives from the Peace O ff-C am pus Learning and Carol Giordano their senior year during the Corps will be at MSC April 15 and Donna Goldberg layout editors donations will be accepted for the Paula Mac Intyre magazine editor 1971-1972 school year are eligible Experiment in International Cynthia Lepra arts editor to apply for the BELL Carol Sakow itz sports editor Living Program. The Saturday Michael T ray lor photography editor TELEPHONE SCHOLARSHIP. LEGAL ABORTIONS showing will feature "Peter and Anne Baldwin business manager Each year two scholarships are John McCloskey circulation manager the W olf" and "Shaggy Dog". Susan Hrasna editorial assistant awarded — one to a male student Immediate Admission, Alpha Phi Omega circulation Confidentially Arranged. Clinics editorial consultant and one to a female. The criteria Applications for a POOL Michael F. X. Grieco Staffed by Licensed for selection is based upon the TOURNAM ENT are available in Gynecologists. The M ONTCLARION is published weekly thruout the college year, over-all cum average, grades in the TUB office. The eight-ball September thru May, except during vacation and examination periods, by the their, major field, participation in Student Government Association, Inc., Montclair State College, Valley road elimination tournament will begin MAGNOLIA at Normal avenue, Montclair, N.J. 07043. Telephone (201) 783-9091, college and community activities at noon on April 24 in TUB. The Subscription rates by mail: $2.50 per academic semester, $3.50 per school and personal and social qualities. REFERRAL SERVICES year. Advertising rates upon request. Known office of publication, Montclair, Applications may be Obtained maximum number of participants N.J. 07043. The M ONTCLARION is a member of the New Jersey Collegiate Press from Ulrich Neuner or Randall is 64 people who will be chosen 212 362-4898 or 212 877-8901 Association, Collegiate Press Service, Newspaper Enterprise Association, Richards, student personnel, room United States Student Press Service and United Press International. on a first-come, first-serve basis, The editorial opinions expressed represent those of the editor-in-chief. 217. Deadiine date for filing is first come, first-serve basis. May 5, 1971. MONTCLARION/Fri., April 16, 1971. 3. Profs Give Mixed Response To StudentVoice in Tenure By Carla Capizzi would be better able to judge him distribute, collect and tabulate the Staff Writer than a committee making a one results of the questionnaire. Students in the School of day observation. Each committee would submit Humanities may get a voice in the The School of Humanities reports to both the student and procedures for rehiring, student affairs committee hopes faculty affairs committees, as well promoting and granting tenure to to distribute questionnaires to as the personnel advisory instructors. students, enabling them to committee of each department. Student involvement in faculty evaluate their teachers, who ON THE basis of these reports, evaluation has gotten mixed would also be asked to complete the student affairs committee responses from concerned faculty questionnaires concerning the would send an overall report to members, however. subject matter, materials and the faculty affairs committee and ASSISTANT PROFESSOR of methods used in their courses. the dean of the school. The English Raymond Paul THE STUDENT and faculty committee would then consider commented that student affairs committees met on March the students' evaluation in making participation would be based on 24 and 29, at which time student its recommendations to the opinion, while faculty views representative John Diamant college administration, but would would be based on fact He added outlined his committee's proposal also weigh faculty observation of that faculty members could judge for evaluating instructors. Under instructors in the decision. their colleagues by criteria the plan, student advisory 'Where have all the women gone7" Undoubtedly to Bohn Hall, different from those of the committees would be elected Diamant stated that the School because their rooms in Russ Hall will be used for faculty offices students, with emphasis on class from each department in a of Humanities proposed and classroom space in the fall. preparation, knowledge of meeting of faculty members and evaluation will be separated from Offices and Classrooms respective fields, and participation majors in the department. The the SGA's proposed teacher in college community activities. number of committee members, evaluation. He added that the Philosophy instructor Thomas as well as their qualifications, student advisory committees will Bridges defended the value of would be decided by each evaluate only those faculty Russ Hall Goes students' opinions, commenting department separately. According members up for promotion, that a student who had studied to Diamant, the function of these tenure or rehiring, whereas the under a teacher for a semester committees would be to write. SGA will evaluate all instructors. Faculty in Fall Drivers Get SGA To Hear Beefs By Ellyn Mora RUSS HALL, which was By Sue Reeves "It came to my attention that Staff Writer constructed in 1912 and which Staff Writer MSC had no specific Russ Hall will not be used for houses the college Health Center, Montclair State's commuters representation, fo r its- women's housing in the fall. The would 'require the most funds to now have a representative group commuters,which comprise B8% building will be used for faculty be maintained as a residence hall, to provide them with information of the total student population. offices and classrooms. stated MSC President Thomas H. relevant to their own needs. The people living in the dorms, The women that would have Richardson in a memorandum The new Commuter Committee approximately 600 students, have been housed in Russ Hall will be issued to the college will serve as a sounding board for a provision for a student input accomodated in the new 603-bed administrators. In view of these commuter opinion, maintain Looking at this imbalance, I saw Harold C. Bohn Residence Hall, facts, it has been decided to bulletin boards in central the need for a commuter group," stated Jerry Uuinn, facilities convert this dorm into office and locations, and establish a Mason Asdal explained. Asdal is a director. The college classroom space for the upcoming between commuters, the candidate for the SGA administrators, headed by semester. administration and the Student vice-presidency in the April 29 Vice-President for Business and Quinn has stated that Russ Hall Government Association. election. Finance Vincent Calabrese, may be used primarily for the BILL ASDAL, SG A Commuter reaction to Asdal's reviewing the cost of operating offices of the faculty from the vice-president of external affairs, ideas was favorable, so with the the five existing residence halls, School of Social and Behavioral commission has been established. explained why he helped to create approval of Totn Benitz, SGA decided that Russ and Chapin Sciences. However, this has not MARGUERITE B A N K S , the committee. president, a co m m u ter halls are economic liabilities. yet been finally decided. commuter committee chairman, remarked that the publication of a CBS Newsman Provo - Sponsored newsletter was the group's first project. Nam ed as N ew 'This newsletter will include everything commuters should M S C Trustee Cons, Jars Back know about parking, where to go when they receive a ticket and TRENTON — CBS newsman what they can or cannot do. We Dallas Townsend Jr. has been hope to devote one section to appointed to the Montclair State To Makers Today those students who need rides to College Board of Trustees by the specific areas," Miss Banks stated. Board of Higher Education. Another goal of the committee By Carol Giordano He added that the aluminum cans Townsend, who lives on is to establish a Mason with MSC Staff Writer and bottles will be sent to the Afterglow way, Montclair, fills the security officers in order to create Coca-Cola company, the other seat vacated by Peter F. Drucker, an effective communication with Aluminum and tin cans, glass cans to either the Continental Can presently in California. them. bottles and jars, newspapers and or National Can companies, and Townsend's term runs to June BOTH MISS BAnks and Asdal magazines will continue to be "newspapers will go somewhere.' 1973. believe that by letting the collected today in the mall PROVO WILL not be making a A graduate of Princeton commuters know that they are between Partridge and Mallory profit from this recycling project, University and Columbia being specifically represented and halls by the Provo Action according to Varjian. "We will be University's School of Journalism, not forgotten, commuter-campus organization. All items collected getting a couple of bucks from Townsend joined the Columbia relationships will be improved. yesterday and today between 10 Coke," he added, but he Broadcasting System news staff in Dallas Townsend As Asdal said, "Our intent is to a.m. and 3 p.m. will be sent to emphasized that this money 1941. He served as news editor New MSC Trustee. make commuters aware of various companies for recycling, would not go into members' and special correspondent for the activities on campus, but not to space splashdown. He is presently according to Leon Varjian, Provo pockets. It will be used to finance network. His assignments included hold them here. If they had some a newscaster and anchorman for leader. Provo's future activities, said the Japanese peace conference at way to stay on campus longer, the network. Varjian said that Provo's Varjian. the end of World War II, every such as a ride rather than catching Townsend's appointment members read about the Varjian suggested that if political convention since 1948, a bus, maybe they would stay and awaits Gov. William T.Cahill'jS Coca-Cola company's recycling possible, labels be removed from crucial United Nations sessions, take advantage of the activities approval. program and "had the idea that it cans, bottles and jars for purposes atomic tests and- nearly every offered." —D. M. Levine. would be nice to take part in it." of convenience. MONTCLARON

New Jersey's Leading Collegiate W eekly

Don Pendley editor-in-chief Rich DeSanta managing editor David M. Levine editorial page editor

Voi. 45, No. 24 Montclair, N. J. 07043. Fri., April 16, 1971 Strike Killing Newark The Newark teachers strike ends its 11th week today and merits the distinction of becoming the longest educational strike in the history of our country. The issues involved in the situation have become dimmed by the shouting matches and internal knock-dwon battles that are aiding in the lingering death of the city. The strike now has been placed in the hands of a few *¿r. CAU&, m í f m y o u g u i o v o F f i r r t w c o u g h t * egocentric maniacs who are cheating themselves, the city and the students — who are hurting the most. The strike originally dealt with the economic rights and professional duties of teachers. That’s passe now since Campus Whirl the teachers have chosen to reject a Board of Education contract compromise. The teachers now want full control of the educational system which should rightly Deals Behind the Scenes be governed by the board. Striking teachers are aiming for the destruction of the The , current Student source, have been trying to feel iiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmi school system by consistently seeking to avoid Government Association out public opinion about his compromise and engage in irrational arguments. This is presidential campaign is turning administration. Should the public holding back the students — mostly socio-economically out to be a game of opinion have been favorable to deprived — from continuing their much-needed behind-the-scenes political Benitz, he would have tossed hiiT education. Further, transcripts are being held up; and it maneuvering with the smell of hat into the ring. Guess you know just might be that present seniors will not make it to hush-hush deals being made in who the winner was on that score. college this September. every corner. PARKING, AGAIN Despite the pleas of Mayor Kenneth Gibson and Richard Insley, self-styled As if the students didn’t have campus radical and erstwhile municipal moderates, the strike continues at an impasse enough trouble with the parking contender for the SGA crown, situation, the hard-hats, who are with near anarchy in control. This is indeed a horrid withdrew as presidential candidate busily constructing the picture being painted by so-called professionals who are last week because of hinted deal math-science building by Partridge resorting to childish methods of gaining attention. with BOSS kingpin Terry Lee. Hall, ,are snarling traffic and The city of Newark in the past has fallen victim to Lee, an original supporter of causing all types of jam-ups. One politicians seeking graft while building their empires on Richard Oshin, decided to toss his student reported that he was corruption. What the Gibson administration inherited hat into the ring because of driving on the road in front of was an empty shell of a city lacking funds and sufficient Insley’s supposed push and the Webster when a tall, fat confidence. The hoodlums simply are aiding in the feeling that Oshin was too weak cement-mixing truck decided to untimely death of a city. to be an administrator. drive in reverse from the Meanwhile, vocal business beginning to the end of the road. The College Life Union Board is department representative Ralph This in turn forced the student apparently helping out the The Pressing Problems? Silas surprisingly crossed his name Watson-Asdal team as evidenced by and at least four' other cars in the buttons the pair has been passing Sen. Harrison A. Williams reports that the Indochina war and off SGA petitions for president back of him to go back from around campus. The buttons are economic conditions are the two issues uppermost in the minds and is campaigning for the whence they came, all the way in painted in day-glo, but when the of New Jersey’s citizens. His conclusions are based on the return Oshin-Wilkie ticket. The ticket reverse. This added to bumper paint is scratched off, the CLUB of some 5000 survey forms to his office recently. Other pressing must have offered Silas something clashes and ill feelings. As a result, insignia shows thru. Students are in return for that service. questioning how the team got hold o f problems, the survey says, are environment, welfare, dying cities the hard-hats started to give the the buttons: thru theft, purchase or and aging citizens. Previously, Silas was planning a students obscene finger gestures. as a gift. Some believe that CLUB, in Actually, only one-third of those*responding listed ending the big “give-’em-hell”-type campaign This is only one of the typical one way or other is helping to pay war as the most urgent problem with 70% listing it as urgent, but with all the trimmings. We’re problems the construction is for the team’s campaign. CLUB officials were not available for not the chief crisis. We question the conclusions one can draw anxiously awaiting to see what’s causing. Apparently, college comment and Watson, when in store for Silas. from these statistics. One-third is a small percentage of a smaller officials are not planning to questioned about how he got hold o f percentage that returned the form, who were an even smaller Robert Watson, whose political regulate the situation in any way. the buttons, said: “Talk to my percentage of the New Jersey population. The fact that 1600 campaign started before the * * * campaign manager. ” members of Williams constituency does not necessarily mean that petitions for office were even BITS & PIECES. . .College is imiiniimuiiiiHiniitiimiiiiiiimimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiimi New Jersey is committed to ending the war. It is a nice thought available, is making use of the planning to up the cost of parking folks nail signs'on'trees; says that and other evidences may cause us to temporarily believe it. Benitz administration’s manpower decals to $50 in two years; hurts the growth of trees, makes It all boils down to a big question: So what? Thousands of in keeping his campaign afloat. increase also coming next year. . ’em sick, and all. New Jersey citizens could write to their senators, the entire Watson’s campaign manager is .ROBERT WATSON, SGA WEEK’S STATISTIX: One kid population of the United States could march on Washington later none other than Stanley presidential candidate, breaking has accumulated 21 parking this- month and there could be 11 Cooper-Church amendments, GTajewski, curren rules by putting up elections signs tickets in one year. Someone else but the war would continue. vice-presidential whip, who is early. . .ULRICH J. NEUNER we know has 14. . .Three people Surveys will not stop the war. If Harrison Williams is correct, briefing the 30-year-old says he has no plans to retire in on campus carrying 30 credits this only immediate, meaningful legislative action will change our cop-turned-student on the ins and near future. . .Maintanence chief semester and having no emotional course outs of running for office. JOSEPH M’GINTY is mad cause problems... While Grajewski does all the End of Mickey Mouse? talking, current President Thomas Benitz is keeping silent — perhaps Our America The decision to beef up Montclair State’s sickly as Watson’s silent partner. Sources security force with student assistants is a step in the close to Watson said that should right direction if the men at the top mean what they The Joke’s on You he get elected, Watson would like “Ponder — with what result is up to you — over the fact that say. to have Benitz as his we got into the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Civil All of this means, we assume, the guards will increase vice-president for external affairs. War, the Spanish-American War and World War I in April. If you the frequency of their nightly building patrols, thus Benitz, by the way, pulled off a thinkwe’re getting out of our present undeclared war in foiling any attempts by would-be thugs. This also keen political maneuver — perhaps Indochina in April, you’re an April fool.” means, we hope, the security force may even be more his first one — when he kept silent —Garrett D. Byrnes, Providence (R.I.) Journal about his election plans until the visible by day. iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiliilillllliiiliiiillllliiiiiiiiliillllliliiillllllimiiiliiliiiiiillliiili last minute. He may, said the MONTO. A R ION/F ri., April 16, 1971. 5 ^ 6 1 1 6 F S 'J* Htle At Large « " It v Lhè Lessons o f M y L a i

To the Editor: - Americans are growing weary cannot believe that what occured superiors who tried to coverup the I don’t think that any one man or any one group or any one ideology can of the war and My Lai was just a at My Lai was an atrocity. The incident must be dealt with small part of it. The Vietnam war accordingly. be all things to all people because MSC massacre of women, children and IT WON'T WASH THAT EASILY is not one man, or one group or one has shaken the nation’s babies is a horrendous reality. PRESIDENTIAL POWERS ideology. It is a composite of different foundations and has contributed They may have been Viet Cong President Richard M. Nixon has men, groups, and ideologies, with to the toppling of one previous sympathizers or even the enemy. unfortunately interjected himself different wants and needs. I think that’s the pitfall most past chief executive. Its casualties can In either case they were prisoners into the picture. As SGA administrations have fallen into, be counted in of war under Calley’s protection. commander-in-chief he had every instead of being a coalition of the the rice pad­ He should have treated them in right to review the case. However, variety it has been the most-popular or dies and on accordance with the Geneva by announcing his intentions strongest group deciding what’s best before hand he has jeopardized for everyone. the campuses convention. Instead, acting on In most elections the margins of of Kent and orders allegedly received from his any hope of the case being victories are never excessive, meaning Jackson State. superior, Capt. Ernest Medina, he appealed objectively. After all, that each candidate has a strong Its origin can “wasted” them. what enterprising career officer following. This can and must be would oppose the wall of the be found in an He should not be made into the utilized. president? Remember it doesn’t make sense for archaic Amer­ scapegoat for all the actions of If future My Lais are to be a handful of people to neutralize 5500 ican foreign those connected with the avoided America must end its role students — the only way to counter policy. massacre. The military cannot be this control is to be as strong and as in the war. The Laos incursion The Calley verdict is another allowed to offer him as a united — meaning hippie, conservative, and the small increment in troop addition to the ever-widening sacrificial lamb to absolve its liberal, black, orange, purple whatever withdrawals are indicative of the makes up MSC. tragedy of the war. His action was mistakes. Let’s take the blinders off and look the biproduct of a barbaric limited success of Vietnamization. at the kaleidoscope of MSC. We must conflict which the United States Instead, Calley should receive If the South Vietnamese can’t have unity — without it we’ll remain as no longer can condone. punishment for his crime as well defend themselves now, they dead as we are right now. CALLEY A HERO as those who obeyed him. His never will. Terry Lee, president, Calley has been turned into a Black Organization for Success in Society. hero by masses of Americans who iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinininiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinim iiiiiiiiiiiHiiiMiiiM iHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiniintiiNiiiii ‘Sesame Street’ Goes Collegiate Mini Review Television Show’s Methods Help Deficient Students “No Bars to Manhood, ” by Daniel Berrigan, S.J., Bantam books, By Patricia O’Dea 208 pages, 95 cents, paperback. and Knowledge). That program According to Ballard both City S ta ff Writer This book is a remarkable statement by an activist Catholic has been in operation for five University and WNET, the priest, presently serving a jail sentence for carrying out antiwar years. It was designed to draw in educational television station in demonstrations. It is a complex piece—part confessional, part NEW YORK - Jaded college black and Puerto Rican students, N e w York decided autobiographical, part polemic—but its message hits home. In freshmen could learn a thing or offering remedial programs and simultaneously, that this type of essence, it is a total indictment of all that was or presently is two watching “Sesame Street.” financial stipends. Ballard program was needed. wrong With America. Dr. Allen B. Ballard Jr., dean estimated 40% of the SEEK Representatives or both groups A few examples from Berrigan’s prose makes this point. of academic development at City students graduate, compared with spent one week at Sterling Forest “Americans who can bear equably with the sight of burning University, thinks that the 60 to 70% of the typical City conference center, Tuxedo Park, children are enraged and baffled by the sight of burning draft innovative teaching techniques University students. “Of that N.Y., discussing the plan. 40%, several are now in graduate files.” And: “Of course, let us have the peace, we cry, but at the demonstrated on that program Educators from other institutions same time let us have normalcy, let us lose nothing, let our lives will help academically deficient or medical school,” he said. were also invited, “to bring an stand intact, let us know neither prison nor ill repute nor high school and college students. Ballard believes that television outside perspective,” said Ballard. disruption of ties.” “Sesame Street”—is a program will have an additional impact. They were Benjamin De Mott, “It’s a familiar medium,” he Not one moral or economic wrong is left untouched. With for children of all ages, presenting English professor- at Amherst explained, “and it is excellent for equal facility Berrigan takes on the military-industrial complex,, a variety of multimedia learning (Mass.) College; William Johntz, dramatization and the utilization the universities, the legal profession, the police, the racists, the material. The setting is a city m athem atics professor at of visual teaching aids.” vested interests responsible for poverty, and the apathetic public street. The list of characters Berkeley; and H. Alan Robinson, Like “Sesame Street” the which just sits back and lets it all happen. includes kids, a funny assortment reading specialist from Hofstra. I am loathe to place any writer in a “school” or intellectual of muppets and even interesting proposed program will be set in Those educators worked with niche, but the author himself tells us that some of the greatest adults. Its success can be the audience’s environment. discussion and study groups. They influences on his spiritual growth came from Jeremiah, Christ, St. measured by the number of “Students will be involved in will present their final Paul, Jacques Maritain, Thoreau and Gandhi, with added three-year-olds who count, know every aspect of the production,” recommendations to the inspiration from Camus, Eldridge Cleaver and Che Guevara. colors, identify exotic animals like Ballard emphasized, “they will specialists from City University Berrigan’s approach to politics thru civil disobedience is hippos and camels and reel off the develop the idea, help produce the and WNET, concerned with the contemporary, but considered in the context of history, it is of alphabet. program, act in it and evaluate its program. course quite old. There are several remedial usefulness. By accentuating the Ballard estimated that $15-20 The author was obviously not born a radical priest. Childhood programs at City University, and student’s involvement, the million will be needed for the influences played a part (“My father used to say that in the 30s new projects,' such as the “Sesame program will try to increase pilot project. The funds will come he had lost everything but his shirt”). So, too, did the experiences Street” adaptation, have been viewer’s motivation too. from “the usual sources,” said gained while teaching high school in New Jersey (“Everything I triggered by the controversial City University has spearheaded Ballard, “the government, and had velieved or hoped about myself, by way of being a open admissions policy. That this program, but Ballard pointed various foundations.” Richard contributory creature in the real world, began to come true”). policy guarantees a freshman out that the effort “is not just for Meyer is director of the school Also significant were his contacts with the French worker-priests place in City University for every us.” He would like to utilize the television service of WNET. His whom he met while studying at a university there in the 1950s. senior graduating from a New experience of remedial teaching office estimated that it would At that time the French were going through the final ^agonies of York City high school. groups across the country. Ballard take 18 months from the time of their own Indochinese war, and the entire episode left a lasting One-third of the freshmen cited the Job Corps learning financing before the pilot was impression on the young priest. admitted to City University are programs and the Massachusetts broadcast. Perhaps the most informative chapter comes towards the close described as “academically Institute of Technology’s remedial “The sky’s the limit in terms of of the book when Berrigan retells the story o f the 1959 Cornell deficient” by Ballard. “The course for black and Puerto Rican creativity,” Ballard stressed. He is disturbances. The chapter is so rich in insights that an extended problems are basic,” he explained, students. willing to experiment with any discussion is necessary to do it justice. In my judgment, the “reading, writing and math.” Ballard wants to see a product approach that might reach developed for national use and a author’s crusading and messianic zeal tended to obscure a real “A good teacher attacks a viewers, but is determined to central organization formed to understanding of just what was going on. One might say that problem in 20 different ways.” maintain academic integrity. while the weekend incident raised everybody’s consciousness, one Ballard stressed. “Each of the focus the input of other programs. “This program is designed to be is hard put to agree that the SDS were as altruistic or the faculty remedial programs at City He envisions that centralized nothing more than the essence of as malevolent as Berrigan describes them to be. Nevertheless, this University attempts to handle organization having “a huge good teaching,” he said, is an important book and deserves a reading. math, reading and writing research arm attached.” capsulizing the aim of the project.' Julian F. Jaffe The Educational Broadcasting Who knows, that statement may (Dr. Jaffe is an assistant history professor here and a frequent book problems from a different angle.” reviewer for the Providence, R.I., Sunday Journal and Publishers* Weekly.) An interesting example is SEEK Corporation entered the picture prove to be more powerful than iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii (Search for Education, Evaluation with the phrase “national use.” “Open Sesame!” 6. MONTCLARiON/Fri., April 16, 1971 Vi f f inners and losers on view tonight

By Cynthia Lepre The Total Theater Ensemble is stu d y ,” explained Barbara perform one of our earlier productions “Sugar Plum” at Staff reviewer the official name of an Wasserman, the senior speech In this world there are two independent study group in the major who recently played a several high schools in the area.”' leading role in Players’ “Journey kinds of lovers, winners and school of Fine and Performing “We are working on practically LET US HELP YOU losers. A play by Brian Friel, Arts which consists of nine of the Fifth Horse,” “We each no budget at all,” Mrs. Carol Call us now (collect) and simply titled “Lovers” deals with students under the direction of have done research on different Hawk, a senior speech major and one ot our dedicated staff one set of each type. This play, in Wayne Bond, speech instructor. aspects and theories of ensemble will answer your questions stage manager of the upcoming about placement in Clinics two acts presents two separate theater and brought back our and accredited Hospitals stories. Mike Murphy, sophomore findings to the group. Players production commented, in New York City. speech major explained their “So we had to chose plays which “This is really only the first LOW COST Both based in Ireland, the first purpose this way: “The idea of STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL could be done with a minimal act, titled “Winners,” deals with a total theater is more than just a phase of an ensemble company AVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEK couple of high school age about to repertory company. We are a amount of set and properties. We which we hope to see blossom CALL ANYTIME (co llect) be joined in holy wedlock. The group of people who make alToiir charge a small admission fee, but (212) 371-6670 second half of the program, own decisions and do our own here at MSC,” Murphy explained. or “Losers,” is the reencountment of work.” “Already we have been invited to that is only to cover royalites.” (212) 759-6810 the courting ot a middle-aged WOMEN'S couple whose sparking is Kich Nelson, a tall blond senior 'Summertree9 PAVILION constantly interrupted by the speech major who is currently INC. matron’s sickly and oh-so-holy directing “Lovers” explained that, l 515 MADISON AVENUE, N.Y. L. ______10022______^ mother. ‘ Each member of the group must have at least one acting and one Not another youth flick “Lovers”, which enjoyed a technical assignment during the quite at home in the role, which successful run on Broadway a few course,’ he continued, “Naturally By M.J. Smith features her almost mandatory PREGNANT? seasons ago, will be performed with only nine people in the Staff reviewer nude scene. tonight at 8 pan. in College High group we are all getting more than Need Help? The screenplay credits for Someone said never act with a Auditorium by the Total Theater the required amount of For avvlvtance in ohtairir.g “Summertree” should go child because they invariably steal a legal abortion I frmect i a t e I v Ensemble. experience.” something.like this: “Based on a in New York Cl tv at r;ininol the scene. They must have known ~ c o v t film title by Ron Cowen. Any Kirk Calloway because this PHlLA.> 2 1 S j 878-5800 THE PLAY’S NOT EVERYTHING resemblence between this movie CALL: >t I AH I ( 305 ) 7 5 A - 5 A 7 1 But the actual play production nine-year-old steals the whole AT LANT A(A0AI 52 A - A78 I and the play are purely CHICAGOt 312)- 92 2 -0 7 77 is not the only part of the movie. The self-assured youngster NEW YORtCi:'. 582-A7A0 COME TO THE coincidental.” handles his role with all the false . 8AM-I 0 P M - ? DAYS A WEEK program. “We also have an However,. “Summertree” does acedemic side of theater to hardness of a ghetto child. JUNIOR FORMAL stand on its own very well. The Lyricist-singer-actor Anthony ABORTION REFERRAL plot is a worn one, the young man Newley’s direction is tight and who doesn’t want to answer his SERVICE (ARS), INC. at the crisp. The transition from one Classified draft notice. Interest lies in the WAYNE MANOR scene to another is made easily, film’s approach—actions instead Bids: $15.00 much to Newley’s credit. of words. pregnancies up to 12 on sale TODAY! "AMBITIOUS MEN of various trades In general, Richard Glouner’s to NORTH SLOPE, ALASKA and the Michael Douglas is very good as weeks term inated from in Life Hall YUKON, around $2800 a month. For camera work is uninteresting complete information write to JOB Jerry MacAdams, the confused $175.00 RESEARCH, P.O. Box 161, Stn-A, except for one lovely sequence Toronto, Ont. Enclose $3 to cover young man. After all, anyone who Medication, Lab Tests, cost” . which is shot thru leaves, echoing attacks a girl with a Water Pik the film’s title. Their Veins divide Doctors fees included. can’t be all bad. Douglas bears a the screen as behind* Jerry and Hospital & Hospital strong resemblance to his father, Vanetta make love for the first affiliated clinics. actor Kirk Douglas, whose Byrna time. (212) TR 7-8803 Productions handled the film for 24 hours-7 days “Summertree”-is another in the Columbia PHYSICIANS REFERRAL long line of recent youth-oriented We know we can help you, even if JERRY’S GIRLFRIEND it’s Just to talk to someone. films. But it is better than most. Brenda Vaccaro, the girl from "If you do nothing else, read one book on your own history, “Midnight Cowboy,” is adequate LABOR'S UNTOLD STORY." as Jerry’s girlfriend. She seems - BERNADETTE DEVLIN ANTIQUE In a speech. New York City, March 7,1971 BRASS BEDS \ I V; 2 5 6 2 4 2 2 o r 7 9 7 -2 8 6 7

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WILLIAMSBURG, VA. impressive 7:39.2, setting a school first leg in the record-breaking Montclair State's anchorman Greg record. On the preceding day, the 2-mile at 1:54.9. Mizzone passed Weiss finished with a gaudy Indians took a fifth in the off to Bill Lowing who ran a « 1:49.8 to speed the Indians to distance medley with a 10:12.5. 1:56.8. Steve Schappert ended the first place Saturday in the 2-mile JUNIOR V IC Mizzone ran the third leg at 1:58.9 before handing relay at the Ninth Annual the baton to the waiting Weiss. Colonial Relays. After breaking the tape at the SM MSC finished the event with an finish lipe, Weiss ran to his jubilant teammates and shouted, "We showed those southern boys S Howdoyou who could run." MSC's distance medley runners included Mizzone, Lowing and rate as an Weiss. Mike Sinott ran in place of Schappert. independent INDIAN RUNNERS won a moral victory in the Monmouth RElays during the Easter vacation. thinker? MSC's distance medley team " A " WINNER: Rosco Gold concentrates on approach during MSC's finished second to Villanova with intramural bowling championship^ Gold's team, Alpha Sigma Mu Answer Yes or No. a 10:07. Coach George Horn's "A ", beat Vanilla Fudge for the Crown. Tau & Sigma Delta downed the "B " veterans in the consolation game. 1» All your friends have decided to boys were edged out by the wear short shorts. You really don't Wildcats by a little more than 3 like the look. Do you follow the Greg Weiss seconds but were well ahead of gang? H elped S et Record third-place Princeton. Alpha Bowls To Yes □ No □ iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiijHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiii 2. You’ve just met a marvelous, FINAL INTRAMURAL 'BOWLING STANDINGS interesting guy who’s shorter than First IM Crown you. Would you be embarrassed American League National League to go out with him? W L WL John Griwert's 606 series AWRAMKO SET the league's Yes □ No □ Vanilla Fudge 25 3 Alpha Sigma Mu "A " 23 5 sparked Alpha Sigma Mu "A " past high series mark with his 672 Alpha Sigma Mu "B" 20 8 Tau Sigma Delta 22 6 Vanilla Fudge, 1625-1381, for effort. He rolled a pair of You’ve been invited to dinner 3. Tau Lambda Beta 18 10 Gamma Delta Chi 15 13 their first intramural bowling 200-games in the set, a 246 in the again by a group of nice but Packers 15 13 championship. Paul Awramko first game and a 269 in the third. uninteresting people. Do you feel 11 17 Phi Lambda Pi stunned the veterans' "B" squad obliged to accept? Linden Mansion 11 17 Alpha Phi Omega 12 16 Tom Farley aided in the win with Snidely's Snappers with a 672 series as Tau Sigma a 224. Yes □ No □ 9 19 Lambda Chi Delta 10 18 Phi Sigma Epsilon 0 28 Zeta Epsilon Tau 5 27 Delta won the consolation game, 1664-1519, Tri total pins. MSC's IM league ended the 4. Ail the charts say you're 10 iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pounds overweight. You feel fine Griwert started things off with Tuesday before Easter vacation. and your clothes look well. Do a 226 game in the first set, then Joe Westervelt had the day's high you diet anyway? W ABORTION AID rolled a 206 in the third set. Bill series of 559 for Alpha "B." Rudy F The Council on Abortion * Yes □ No □ EAST ORANGE Underwood helped things along in Olszyk was the impetus for f Research & Education (Non- Gamma Delta Chi with a 554 5. You appreciate all kinds of the finals with a 213. music. Except opera. Do you think Profit) provides free infor­ series against Lambda Chi Delta. you should listen anyway because mation and referral assistance Bob Zetlin paced APO with a it’s "the thing to do"? regarding legal abortion. LEGAL AUORTIONS 535 series. Tau's Farley finished Yes □ No □ Limited financial aid is also with a 524 series, including a 211 available. Inquiries are Immediate Admission, game, while George D'Esposito If you’ve answered "No” to three completely confidential, i Confidentially Arranged. Clinics rolled a 528 series for Phi Lambda Staffed by Licensed or more questions, you really Call: A Pi. Gynecologists. rate as an independent thinker. Another example of your in­ Lk - (212) 682-6856 | J MAGNOLIA dependent thinking: You use Tampax tampons. ABORTION REFERRAL SERVICES LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Why T am p ax tampons? Be­ 25th ANNUAL Only Gynecologists and cause, when you compare them 212 362-4U98 or 2T2 877-8901 HOBO HOP general hospitals used. all, only Tampax tampons give from you these advantages: Each Immediate Placement APRIL 14 to APRIL 18 Tampax tampon comes in a Confidential Band parties Fri. & Sat. Night •••••• CUP AND • • ••••• 164 College Ave., silken-smooth container-applica­ Phone I« Rutgers/New Brunswick tor. 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For assistance in o b ta in in g a legal abortion immediately 517 Bloomfield Ave. THE in New York C i t.y at mini ma I cos t PHILA.(215) 878-5800 Montclair, N.J. 783-5024 BGWLERO CALL: MIAMI (305) 754-5471 50 ATLANTA(404) 524-478 I CH I CAGO( 312) 922-0777 Bowling Lanes NEW YORK(212) 582-4740 11:00 to 6:00 daily 8AM-10PM - 7 DAYS A WEEK Wed. & Fri. to 9:00 p.m. the COLLEGE bowl ABORTION REFERRAL 10% discount to Junction of Route? SERVICE (ARS), INC. 3 and 46 MSC students with ID card. Clifton, New Jersey M ontclarion Vol. 45, No. 24 Montclair, N.J. 07043 Fri., April 16, 1971 Spadaro’s HRs Hand Indians First Setback

By Jim Dente runner on third stranded with no Garlick pulled into third when the Sports Writer one out deprived them of the second baseman failed to come up Montclair State fell victim to chance to remain unbeaten. with the relay cleanly. the power hitting of william With the score deadlocked at With the potential tying run 90 Paterson College last Monday, 5-5 after 5 innings, Paterson State, feet away. Carmen DeSimone suffering its first setback of the now 7-1 overall and 2-1 in the grounded out to short and Tucker 1971 baseball campaign after five league, broke thru for 3 runs in proceded to fan Phil Baccarella consecutive victories, 8-7, in a the sixth stanza. Vince Sausa and Charlie Williams to escape a New Jersey State College greeted relief Rich tight situation. The Indians could Conference slugfest. DelGuercio with a single and came not reach Tucker for another all the way around on a booming over the final three frames as the triple off the bat of Joe Briggs, righthander picked up his first the brother of Philadelphia Phillie Rich win. star John Briggs. San Flllipo: BOB Wl LSON put the pioneers Dennis Mamatz brought Briggs MSC's ahead in the first inning with a f i f home w ith-a sacrifice fly to left Top Shortstop, w®., just inside the right W field before catcher Ron Van field foul line. MSC came right Saders boomed a shot down the back on run scoring singles by left .field line that just cleared the DeSimone and Baccarella and a STRIKING POSE: Southpaw Ken Inglis delivers a pitch in the game fence for what proved to be the bases-loaded error. Bacarella's against Newark State. Inglis whiffed 13 batters as MSC won the Each team pounded out 11 winning run. fielder's choice made it 4-1 in the season opener, 4-1. safeties in the run-filled marathon, COACH C LARY Anderson's second. but paterson delivered 6 extra nine retaliated for 2 in the bottom Spadaro lined his first circuit base hits including 4 home runs. of the inning, but blew a golden shot to center with two aboard in John Spadaro was the mainstay of Asdal, Venti Star opportunity to tie it. San Fillipo • the third to knot it at 4-4 and his the Pioneer attack, accounting for cut the deficit to 8-6 when his other homer put Paterson on top half his club's runs with a pair of home run traveled to the far 5-4 in the fifth. Baccarella cracked circuit blasts. The first was a 3-run reaches of center field, clearing a long triple to center in the last job while the second was a solo the barrier with plenty to spare. half of the frame to tally In Upsala Romp clout. Bob Cosentino, facing reliever DeSimone, but was later cut down MSC WASN'T exactly a slouch Tom Tucker, then smacked his at the plate trying to score on a By Robert Watson Seton Hall snapped the golfers' at the plate, poking 4 extra hits third single of the afternoon and ground ball to third by Larry Sports Writer 9-game winning streak. Coach including a round-tripper from moved to second on a wild pitch. Berra. Jerry DeRosa's six-man shortstop and leadoff man Rich Dale Garlick followed with a Paterson (8) contingent recovered by San Fillipo. But some poor towering fly to deep center that MSC (7) A team low score of 78 by A B R H A B R H Montclair State golfer Joe Venti outstroking a weak Steven's Tech base-running combined with the caromed off the webbing of Bob Van Saders, B. 10 0 San Fillipo 2 3 1 Sparta 4 11 C o sen tin o 5 1 3 Spadaro 4 2 2 G a rlic k 3 1 1 and the continued record of Bill team in the first of two vacation fact that the Indians twice left a Fallon's glove for an RBI double. Wilson 4 12 DeS im one 4 2 2 Fallon 4 0 0 Baccarella 5 0 2 matches. Sausa 4 1 2 W illia m s 4 0 1 Asdal as undefeated and unscored Briggs 4 1 1 Berra 5 0 0 M am atz. ' 3 0 0 Sam son 4 0 1 upon highlighted the Indians' THE 2% POINT yield to Upsala Van Saders, R. 4 1 2 C ooney 2 0 0 Caswell 0 0 0 M o o ne y 10 0 Lauterhan 2 1 1 D e lG ue rcio 10 0 romp over Upsala Monday at the came in the first-position contest Tucker 2 0 0 K le in 10 0 Ability’s There As Totals 36 8 11 T o ta ls 3 7 7 11 Upper Montclair Country Club. matching MSC's Rich Gerber 123456789 R H E The locals tallied a 151/4-2V2 spread against a strong Juan Sabatis. Paterson 103013000 8 112 MSC * 31 0012 000 7 111 for the match. Gerber was even with pro-bound The near shutout was MSC's Sabatis after nine, but the visitor's BallplayersWin 5 Paterson (7-1) MSC (5-1) second victory after a loss to back nine rally for a 74 If there was any doubt as to the when he bested Long Island overpowered Gerber's 79. ability of Montclair State University, 7-3. Cooney scattered Playing third slot on the MSC College's baseball team after 11 hits, walked 4 and fanned 5. card, senior Venti birdied the final winning just once on its recent Third baseman Steve Samson had two holes to score his 78, taking exhibition tour of Florida, it was 2 singles while Dale Garlick all 3 points from his opponent. quickly erased during the past two smashed a 2-run homer in the first Also collecting 3 points toward weeks when the Indians rolled and DeSimone unloaded a 3-run the Indians' victory, sophomore over five straight opponents. double in the top of the ninth to Asdal maintained his formidable Southpaw Ken Inglis opened ice it. record of wins. Asdal edged his the season in fantastic style when competition with an even 80. The hitting really came in to its he retired the first 16 batters he Followup shutouts by Lou own in the Indians' next two faced on his way to striking out .Tucillo, John Weber and Jim games, pounding out a total of 30 13 and leading MSC to a 4-1 Devine cinched the contest for the base hits. The first was an 11-2 triumph over Newark State in a locals. rout of Jersey City State which New Jersey State College COMING INTO the current saw Garlick collect 3 of MSC's Conference clash. season with an 8-game advantage, safeties — all doubles. THE SECOND contest, a 4-2 MSC hopes for a successful year AS IF that wasn't bad enough, win against Newark-Rutgers, saw did not appear dampened by the Indians really put it to another route-going performance Seton Hall's win. Following Newark College of Engineering, by a member of the Indian mound Monday's match, ReRosa 17-0. First baseman Charlie staff. This time it was Paul Parker commented, "The team is really Williams had the kind of day who struck out 13 and walked starting to jell." ballplayers are constantly just 4. Carmen DeSimone was the CHIP SHOTS: Contrasted with dreaming of when he belted a story on offense, going 3 for 4 his low 78 Monday, Joe Venti grand slam home run and drove in ■ with 3 RBIs. carded a 6 on a .par 3 last week — 8 runs. WHERE'D IT GO?: Golf Captain Rich Gerber follows the flight of Kevin Cooney turned in the after hitting the green in onejand Dente. his shot during the Upsala match. Gerber ran into trouble against third consecutive 9-inning sting then putting into the lake. Upsala's Juan Sabatis but the Indians went on to win 15y2-21/2.