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The thI acan, 1967-68 The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70

11-10-1967 The thI acan, 1967-11-10 Ithaca College

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This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The thI acan: 1960/61 to 1969/70 at Digital Commons @ IC. It has been accepted for inclusion in The thI acan, 1967-68 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ IC. ' . Ho.w·.:' Grows The Grass? The Ithacan !Eltplores the Question of Non-Addictive Drugs_

by Kevin Connors I This special edition is dedi- these, including marijuana, how­ cated ·to the Drug Problem on ever, this is a problem inherent campuses. Keeping this in mind to tobacco, coffee and alcohol as it might be wise to understand well. just what the problem(s) is (are). Focusing on marijuana; though Since nobody is concerned over intensive research has not been • hard drugs on campuses (heroin, conducted on anything more than cocaine, etc.) we may eliminate its immediate effects, there have addiction as a problem. The drugs been no claims of any bad physi­ which are most used on campuses cal effects of that substance and . fall into the category of soft or no deaths have been attributed "· non-addiction stimulants, de- to it. By contrast physical dis­ pressents or hallucenogens, with orders caused by alcohol claim amphetamines, barbituates, mari- 20,000 lives each year in the juana and LSD as the most fre- United State alone. quently used. Regarding these; Aside from exam time when problems inherent to their use amphetamines are used as stimu­ may be listed as overdoses (in lants, marijuana is undoubtably the case of amphetamines and the most common camp~s drug. barbituates) and permanent psy- Washington health officials esti­ chosis and chromosome break- mate that 20 million Americans down- (in the case of LSD.) Psy- have tried pot and up to 4.5 mil­ chological dependency is also lion smoke it regularly. The ma- hoto Courtesy of Dare Magazine listed as a problem. For each of Please tum to page 9 Photo Courtesy of Dare Magazine HEl

A Weekly Newspaper, Published by and for the Students of Ithaca College.

Vol. 40-No. l 0 Ithaca, New York Friday, November l 0, 1967 Vietnam. Turn On T({]) Vote Held

by Jean Stillitano from average society and to enter In Ithaca into a new society of love, free­ Psychedelic is the word. You dom, and awareness. by Mary Burdick Ford To "turn on to" the winding tunes-- The origins of the psychedelic Ithaca residents were given the from the Beatles to African movement are harder to identify. opportunity on Election Day, No­ drums-of psychedelic beat. You According to !C's assistant soci­ vember 7, to vote in a referen­ Lecture go · mad with the blinking blues ology professor, Mr. Stewart Whit­ dum vote regarding American against purples, pinks against ney, the trend began "in the policy in Viet Nam. The proposal reds of psychedelic lights. Sur- early part of the 1960's, through they voted on required only a Tuesday rounding you is psychedelic art, an increase of sophistication, "yes''. or "no" vote. The question a mad maze of posters and paint- awareness, and sensitivity of read: "Registered voters: Should An internationally known as- ings. Your friendly, bare-footed, some people in the United States there be an immediate cease-fire tronomer, Clinton B. Ford, will bearded, long-haired hippie neigh- society." As a result of these in Vietnam and a prompt, orderly deliver a public lecture at Ithaca bor tells you: "Don't say love, do feelings, the "psychedelic phe­ withdrawal of American troops?" College Tuesday evening, Nov. it;" "Praise the pill. Bless our nomenon," as Professor Whitney 14, starting at 8:15 in the Science pad;" "Thou shalt not kill, this termed it, took shape and frac­ The refernedum vote was or­ Building. The lecture will be part means you." Squat in a corner, tionalized across the United ganized by a small group of in­ of the C. P. Snow Science Series. cross your legs, meditate a little, States. terested students. They were not He will talk on "Astronomy's concentrate. "What is manifested in the part of any organinzation. Head­ Contribution to the Humanities." Okay, you have heard the psychedelic phenomenon," he ed by Robert Kaplan, a graduate Mr. Ford, a member of the <;:ol- word. You know the sights and said, "is an awareness, a search Dr. A. H. Karam student at Cornell University, lege's Board of Trustees, is secre- sounds of the scene. But where for a functional alternative in their only goal was to give peo­ tary of the American Association . did it come from, what is it do- today's society. The psychedelic ple a chance to express their of Variable Star Observers, and ing, and most important where is scene is an alternative through opinion. Kaplan said the results holds membership in a number it going? which individuals express them­ ,Karam To Serve would be published. And he hopes of other societies in this country, It is easy enough to identify selves for some integrating func­ that people will see the signifi­ Canada, and Great Britain con- the members of the psychedelic tion." cance-importance of such a vote cerned with astronomy and sci- scene. They are the questioning, What is the integrating func­ and organize more- next year. entific research. He is a Fellow rebelling, usually dirty members tion that made initial hippies Comments which were made on of the American Astronomical of an open club, aware of the group together, question, even In Vietnam some ballots will also be com­ th by Don Green Society. major problems of the twentie rebel? Basically, hippies are con- piled by the group and made Previously he has been assis- century. They are called hippies cerned with creating an ideal On November 30, a team of South Vietnam, five-hundred of public. tant director of the Ordwes and can be found almost any- community they can be a part of twelve doctors will leave San the seven-hundred doctors are in­ Nineteen voting stations were Laboratories at Wesleyan Uni- where in the United States today, and a community they can make Francisco for service in · South volved with the military. This al­ set up within the city of Ithaca versity, vice president and dire.:- from the average college and uni- function. Through free love, and in each of the official wards. ~ietnamese provin~al hospitals. lows only two-hundred doctors tor of research of the Nik.or Pro- versity campus, to the crowded group sharing and living the Poll watchers came predominant­ ducts Company of Springfield, quarters of East Side, New York community would prosper. It is ···one of these men will be Ithaca's for the 16,000,000 civilians in ly from Cornell and Ithaca Col­ Mass., and faculty member at City; Chicago; Buffalo; and this aspect of the psychedelic Head Physician, Dr. A. H. Karam. South Vietnam." lege. Ithaca College was entirely Harvard and Brown Universities, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco. pheneomenon t h a t Professor Dr. Karam decided, since he is Another factor in his decision responsible for the sixth ward at Smith College and Renssalaer Socially, anyone ready to love, Whitney, as a sociologist, is in­ reaching the retirement age of was "the condition in which these South Hill School. Polytechnic Institute. He is a march, rebel, "turn on" mainly terested in, since he feels that Ithaca College, to devote the re: civilians have innocently found To keep the results legitimate, resident of Wilton, Conn. through I.SD ("Better living the hippies may represent an only registered voters were al­ nd mainder of his life to interna­ themselves. This is very much through chemistry''), a live "ideological change in America.» lowed to vote. This caused a small OF SPECIAL INTEREST communally wherever there is "Now," he continues, "the hip­ tional medicine, a field i~ which what brought to commit my­ amount of friction according to room, is in. But intellectually, the pies of the psychedelic scene are­ he is well experienced. In self to South Vietnam." some of the poll watchers. Some IN THE ITHACAN hippie assesses his community, mainly dissatisfied with society the past five years alone, he has Dr. Karam is part of a pro­ people who were registered vot­ THIS WEEK hi quest, and himself with the vi- and they are often joined by served with medical teams in gram sponsored by the American ers 'in the town of Ithaca, but not tality of one who knows what is other groups with the same, anti­ <> nd Medical Association. This organi­ within the city limits where the happening today a who wants U.S. society feeling. They don't Equador, (S. America), Guinea IFC King & Queen .. Pg. 8 to associate himself in some way material for the school's 75th Balancing WINTERIZING anniversary, in addition to having At the end of the First lndo-Chinesc War, the VPA was a regular army of 200,000 men strong. PLAYTIGERAMA several pressing personal commit­ Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. At the present time, according to official sources, the VPA Stop in for Double Tickets ments. N.Y. Inspection Station The lthacan's new Faculty Ad­ has 450,000 men. According to a study of the VPA by the ALL WORK GUARANTEED Mr. Parker Hanna South Vietnamese Army General Staff, the regular VPA army S & H Green Stamps visor is Parker D. (Pat) Hanna, <> is backed by over 200,000 of the people's Militia and Self De. Jr., Associate, in Development for tor and general manager of the fcnse Units. Seneca at Meadow Cor. Buffalo & Meadow Ithaca College. He was appointed Cazenovia Republican. After the bombing of North Vietnam by the U.S. Air Force, Phone 272 • 9559 Ithaca, N.Y. AR 3-9719 last week by Dean of Students He has been publisher of two in February 1965, an organization called "Thanh Nicn Ba San John Brown to replace Mr. Potter. newspapers and editor of three l\1r. Hanna volunteered to assist others; night editor of the As­ Sang" (The Three Ready Youth Organization: ready to enlist in the Ithacan staff in addition to bury Park (N.J.) Press; on the the armed forces, ready to fight, ready to go anywhere) mo­ his other duties temporarily, rewrite and copy desks of the Los bilized 1,500,000 young men to support the army. The mmister STIEW UNDERWOOD pending assignment of a perman­ Angeles Examiner, and ·reporter of defense and deputy prime minister, General Vo Nguyen Giap, ent advisor by the beginning of and feature writer for such news­ is assisted by 7 Deputy Ministers of Defense and a Defense invites you next term, according to Dean papers as the Dallas Morning General Staff of 8 departments, one of which is the Office for to dine in the Crew Room Brown. News., the San Antonio Express Liaison with the ICC ( International Control Commission)",. A veteran newsman, Mr. Hanna and the Houston Post. headed by Colonel Ha Van Lau. The Armed Forces Staff under Extensive Menu has held positions on weekly, l\lr. Hanna was managing edi­ the Ministry of Defense is headed by General Van Tien Dung small daily and metropolitan assisted by 5 Vice-Chiefs. erivate Rooms for Banquets tor of The Battalion, student daily newspapers in all editorial newspaper at the A. & l\'f. Uni­ The Political Department of the Armed Forces Staff, the Reasonably Priced positions as well as advertising, versity of Texas, and advertising most important of all departments, is heade_d by General Song circulation and management ac­ manager of The Daily Texan at Hao, an old comrade in arms of General Vo Nzuyen Giap. The Cocktails tivities. Most recently he was edi- the University of Texas. In recent VPA, being an "instrument of the Party", is basically a political years he has been a management army, and the role of the political commissars attached to all consultant for Upstate New York units is the decisive one. · CLOVER CLUB business firms in advertising, In an article in the VPA magazine, General Vo Nguyen public relations, fund-raising and Giap wrote on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of the VPA 356 Elmira Rd. sales organization. , in -1959: "The Vietnamese People's Army is indeed a national one. In fighting against imperialism and traitors in its service, SUNl{YSIDE DANCING 'IMy only interest is in help­ it has- fou_ght for national independence and the unity of the Every Evening ing The Ithacan staffers in put­ ~ESST.A.URA..NT ting out a good, readable news­ country. Our Army is a democratic army because it fights for the people's democratic interests and the defense of people's Rre. 13 S. at Corner Elmira Rd. and S. M~adow St., Ithaca <> paper," Mr. Hanna said. ''News t:xotic Oriental Dancers story techniques, headline writ­ democratic power. Impregnated with the principles of dem­ Open 11 :30 A.M. to 9 P.M. daily, except Mondays 3 Shows - 1 O, 11 & 12 ing, layout and other technical ocracy in its internal political life, it submits to a rigorous discipline, but one freely consented to." '\ <> problems are, in my opinion, the Phone AR 3-1200 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Sundays - Rock & Roll legitimate interests of an ad­ "Our army is a people's army, because it defends the fun­ damental interests of the people, firstly those oi the Ronnie Dio & The Prophest visor, along with budget and other management matters." Continued on page 9 THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 3 Dorm 12 Recitals WICB Coverage House Council To Be Given , Moves Ahead This Week li§ To1t21li TV Student performances will be Tuesday, November 7, will be With Election Coverage '67 In the past two weeks two featured in four free public con­ remembered by many as the day completed, WICE-TV is now back i social events have taken place on certs at Walter Ford Hall next campus sponsored by the Dorm that WICB-TV became WICB to its weekly Thursday night pro· I week. The performers and stu­ gram schedule. Every Thursday 12 House Council. The first was a dent composers are enrolled in Total Te-levision. Tuesday's Elec, reception for students and par­ ~vening at 7:00 p.m. WICB-TV I tho School of Music at Ithaca tion Coverage '67 on WICB-TV presents a full range of programs ents held after the Parent's Week­ College. end football game. The second marked the culmination of nearly that represent the concept of On Wednesday, Nov. 15, at 1 a year's work to rebuild WICD· was a discussion on drugs held Total Television. Programs such p.m., there will ·be a recital by TV into a totally professional tele­ held last Thursday night for· the as Newslinc: Ithaca, Sportsman's pianists Kathleen Burke, Donald vision operation. Nearly 150 peo­ residents of Dorm 12. Corner, Quad, The Scene, En­ Stein, Deborah Erftenbech and ple worked for five weeks on semble, and Infinite Horizons Coffee and donuts were served Kathleen Skalko; also William Election Coverage '67 and the meet the needs and tastes of to approximately 200 people on Broadwell, viola; Gregory Rud­ product was the most accurate nearly every segment of the com­ the fourteenth floor of the men's gers, trumpet; Robert Hayden, and comprehensive election cov­ munity. hi-rise following the Ithaca-C.W. clarinet; and Paula Johrde, so­ erage in the Ithaca area. WICB· Now that Total Television is _, Post football game. The purpose prano. They will perform music TV's studios on Buffalo Street WICB-TV, much more is planned of the reception was to give stu­ by Mozart, Debussy, Webern, were the headquarters for a re­ for the future. Plans are already dents and their parents a place to Brahms, Maris and Purcell. port staff of 50 people who sup­ under way for WICE-TV's "Sec­ warm up and relax after the At 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. plied the material for eight hours ond Season" next semester as are game. 15, members of Sigma Alpha Iota, of continuous coverage from 7:00 plans for several special shows The drug discussion last Thurs­ honorary music society, will pre­ p.m. until after 2:00 a.m. when both this semester and next. In­ day night was attended by about sent a program of American the results were final. The entire cluded in these plans are tele­ The WICB News Team which, this past week provided full election 50 residents of Dorm 12. Dr. music featuing contemporary operation was typical of the kind vision dreams, new entertainment coverage. Hammond and Father Graf, mem­ composers Malcolm Lewis, Karel of community service program­ shows, and everal indepth in­ bers of the Ithaca Drug Commis­ Husa, George Andrix, Warren ming that is represented by the terviews with nationally known sion, first gave some pertinent Benson and Vincent Persichetti. philosophy of Total Teilevision. personalities. facts on drugs and then turned Music by student composers the meeting over to questions. will be heard at Walter Ford Hall Fede:irali Officia].§ 'Jf <0> Members of the Ithaca Police Friday, Nov. 17, at 8:15 p.m. In­ r"t Dept. were also present to an­ cluded in the program are works swer any · questions concerning with such intriguing titles as their position on drugs. Bob Hab­ "Concert Piece for Clappers, Learn M([))~

U.IP.B. ,~of,-OBll,J Cfr-HE ITHACAJ-' ~ c~~~1R Sex upon C.P.S. v,~ ~ '\...J ~ Friday, November 10 A TO All Day-Director Distribution- , Publtisked weektv by and fo,. the students of Ithaca College. MEMBER 1me Rec. Rm. Editor-in-Chief ...... Alex B. Block 8:15-Faculty Chamber Music­ Part I Co-Managing Editors Ford Hall ...... ····· {~~;rk~~ NEW YORK (NAPS)-In Ames, Iowa, a bright little ...... Winifred Gillespie 9 p.m.-1 a.m. - IFC Weekend Business Manager .... eight-year-old, watching a television documentary on the popu­ News-Mary Burdick . ... ····sp~~ts=P~~··nii:ViS" .. Advertising-Sue MacCubbin Carnival-Rec. Rm. Terry Clark Jack Gedney Rick Biggs lation explosion, turns to her mother and asks: "Mommy, what Cheryl Gelb Joy Malchodi Cheri Bleck Saturday, November 11 do they mean when they say 'the pill'?" Georgianna Glace Ben Reese Dick Cohen 9:30--Advanced Seminar on E. . In Los Angeles, a studious fourteen-year-old boy, taunted by Ellen Gold Gene Slater Pam Forster Asia-US Laura Katz Rich Stryminski Jayne Koch his rougher schoolmates, wonders what "manly" mcans-an 0 8:15-C. P. Snow Lecture--Clin- say doctors, educators, and religious spokesm·en, is no easy task. Pot A LotY ton Ford-S302 Nor is it the task solely of the rebellious young. It is also the Every society creates its own set of tab_oos­ flourished. A major black market formed as 9:30--Terrace Dorm Head Resi­ responsibility of the mature. And too often adults react nega· the price of marijuana doubled and tripled taboos social in nature, of custom, or simply dents--Ul tively to sex and sex problems. They point with an accusing from ghetto prices. The one establishment in of what is fit to consume. There arc taboos on finger to the statistics of illegitimacy and venereal disease, and the country that welcomed most the rebirth Wednesday, November 15 to reports of teenage promiscuity, rather than m:eet their own~1 certain words, although m time they may of marijuana was that of organized crime. All Day-Pre Registration-Rec. responsibilities in the development of positive, healthy sexual come to common usuagc and be accepted by Still not satisfied to accept the edict of the Rm. attitudes in their children. grammarians as part of the formal !anguage. government, the intelligencia began to expose 6:00--EUB Executive-DeMotte Much of the refusal of young people to accept on faith and their ideas to an ignorant public, and found In the nineteen thirties in the Umted States 7:30--Forensic Debate-Ul without question the moral code of their elders is a result of this that for every hour they put in, and for every· ~ the government felt- a need to motivate the 7:30-Chess Club-Dorm 12 14th lack of honesty about sex. "It's an inevitable reaction," says . i dollar they spent the liquor and cigarette in­ Rev. William F. Genne, Family Life Consultant of the National I populace in order to rid society of the burden dustry spent a thousand to keep marijuana floor 8:00--Student Court-US Council of Churches, "to the negative attitudes that so many of the depression. Part of this effort was t_o illegal, for if pot were legalized it would put adults have had, and the silence with which we've treated the wipe out, or try to eliminate, the use of mari- a serious crimp in the sale of liquor and cigar­ 8:00--Football Films--B102 subject of sex." ettes. According to marijuana users, once you 8:00--Forum-Rec. ! juana. Rm. Fortunately, those negative attitudes are somewhat in re­ - ; have tried pot you lose your urge for liquor As part of the campaign the government 8:15-Sigma Alpha Iota Recital treat. Public discussion of sexual problems has resulted in in­ and your taste for cigarettes. -Ford Hall associated marijuana with the seedy elements The pot users cried out that their product creased attention to the need for sex education in the schools. In Flint, Michigan, in Anaheim, California and in \Vashington,.· of society, and spread posters promising dam­ had been mislabeled in the 1956 Act, as it had. Thursday, November 16 Evidence of this is the fact that marijuana D.C., just to list three prominent examples, the schools take up .,; nation for anyone who smoked "pot". All Day-Pre Registration-Rec. the subject of human sex and reproduction in formally organized The generation that grew up to these posters may soon be taken off the hard drug list and Rm. .__ properly labeled as a mild hallucinogen. courses of study. At Fordham University, a Jesuit institution, a has today become the ruling power-the es­ 6:30--Bridge Club - Dorm 12 course in sex education has been announced which will include The alcohol people and the tobacco people 14th floor tablishment-that group which makes and claimed the legalization of pot would create discussions of contraception and contraceptive methods. 6:30-Christian Science Group /· upholds-'the laws and taboos of society. a nation of dazed mental cripples. Concern over the tragedy of the unwed mother has encour­ -U5 Thus pot has grown up with that gener­ The marijuana people retorted with the fact aged support for family planning clinics and for contraceptive 7:00--MGB-Ul education that helps young women to plan their families and ; ation as a seedy part of society, a taboo for that no death has ever been attributed directly to the physical effects of marijuana, while 7:00--Delta Mu Delta Initiation to have their babies when they want them, and when they can .) respectable people. Dime novels portraying the more than twenty thousand deaths per year -US best care for them. moralless slums and ghetto dwellers never ·.,; are directly linked to the use of alcohol, not Fears about our own domestic population explosion have : failed to portray them smoking marijuana. counting automobile accidents caused _by led population experts to hold up the small family as 'a new I. ' In 1956 Congress passed the Federal Nar­ drunken drivers. And who can count accurate­ ideal-and to press for the widespread separation of sex from The Ithacan procreation that will make this possible. "We ought to prepare l cotics Act which; as one would expect from the ly the multitude of deaths caused annually by the use of tobacco. · our young girls for college and career," says Richard Stiller, establishment, labeled marijuana as a hard The alcohol people claimed the use of pot wants . .. Associate Director of the Information Center on Population drug. Along with heroin, opmm, and other would lead to the use of LSD and hard drugs Problems, "and not solely for kitchen and nursery. Women arc· drugs pot was shuffled onto a list of addic­ such as heroin and opium. -Jaynie earlier more than wives and mothers, and their vast talents can enrich'· tive and highly dangerous drugs. The dedicated pot users retorted by point­ our social and economic life immpasurably." By t_he early sixties marijuana and civil ing out that if pot were legal they would not A new interest in the mystery of human sexuality has en· I be forced to go to the bootleggers who would -To know what page couraged parents, church groups, and social scientists to dig j rights were in vogue for the intelligencia. The just as soon sell LSD or heroin as pot. If sex is continued on deeper into what there is in a family's intimate life that helps· two came logically together. :Marijuana was pot were legal in pure form there would be a boy grow into true manhood, and a girl into true womanhood: readily available in the ghettos, and by 1962 no need to go to other possibly damaging hal­ ,-More money -and to discover what manhood and wo·manhood really are. so were civil rights workers who were drawn locinogens and hard drugs. Its sale and use An important role in the growing effort to put sex in its from the educated middle class. co_uld be co!1trolled to exclude its use by proper place is played by the Sex Information and Education mmors, and its use by drivers could be regu­ -Pix from UPI These people were drawn to marijuana for Council of the United States. Organized two years ago by Dr. lated to keep pot happics off the roads. Mary Steichen Calderone, SIECUS has become a clearing house several reasons. They found it left no un­ _Th1:1s the ltha~ffn stro!1gly supports the leg­ -More features of ideas offered by social scientists, physicians, educators arJi 1 pleasant after-taste, caused them no dizziness al1zat1on of manJuana m all its forms, with theologians. "Its purpose," says Rev. Genne, an offic~r ol pr:opcr care tak~n to _set an arbitrary age limit, or nausea, and produced no hangover. They -Nylon unmention- SIECUS "is to establish man's sexuality as a health entity. This found that what they liked best was the effect with means of )iccnsmg for sale to be set up. is a value that all religious groups and most secular groups, \Ve must be prepared to meet three strong ables from Mr. it had upon their minds. Instead of the alco- S. and certainly educators, can agree on. We must do all we can to lobbies against legalization, however: That of prom.ate personal, physical, emotional and social health." . holic stupor and coarse, dulled attitude alco­ the liquor industry, that of the tobacco pack­ -A great fall week­ Perhaps most important is the new attitude toward sexual hol produces they found a quiet, congenial at­ agers, and that of the Mafia, who will lose a major source of revenue. ' . end for everyone morality, particularly towar'd sex outside of marriage. Instead mosphere arose after a few moments of shar­ of limiting themselves to the traditional prohibition against pre­ Society has spent millions of dollars look­ ing a small amount of marijuana. marital_ ?r extral!larital sex, many ~houghtful theologians are ing f?r outlets for its unused energies and the Conversations were "deep", or at least -A place to hold now ra1smg quest10ns about the quality of the personal relation· massive amount of spare time automation has seemd to be. Attitudes were friendly and, al­ the banquet ship between the two individuals concerned. Is it loving? Is it created. People have taken to many forms of honest? Or is one partner merely "using" the other? though not actually aph~odisiac, _at le:ist con­ plea~ure, man;Y physically harmful, while by­ ducive to warm and lasting relationships. passing the fmest escape valve of all: mari­ -Legalized What­ Most eminent of these new critics of traditional morality What these people didn't like about mari­ Juana. Cha-Ma-Call It is Dr. Harvey Cox of Harvard University's Divinity School. In juana were the sources they had to contact to The true danger in marijuana, however lies his book "The Secular City," Dr. Cox suggests avoidance of a simple "thou-shalt-not" approach to the question of premarital get it. as a result of the equally despicable in the fact that it exposes each of us td the operational fact that it was illegal. Crying for legality, most explosive element of society within our -An i_ntercou~se: fhis, he writ~s, "gets us off de~d-end argume1_1ts they found the establishment deaf to their grasp: Unlike liquor and cigarettes, pot does Campus Life about virg1mty and chastity, forces us to thmk about fidehtY,_ pleas. "Taboo on you!" cried back the es­ not dull our senses but exposes us to our own Committee to persons . . ." tablishment, "we heard about that horrible minds, and to that which we fear most--our­ · Douglas Rhymes, Canon Librarian of Southwark Cathedral stuff in the thirties." Thus the illegal sources selvcs. Pleaso tum to pago 11 THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 5 FROM THE MAILROOM by Steve Schiffman Known Effeclt§ There are so ll?any l!lethods of succeeding, that perhaps All letters submitted to The Ithacan must be typed and it would be appreciated 1£ .a 1:IST OF FAILUR~ was pub­ Of 1LSD signed. lished. Therefore, the followu:ig 1s for those who enJoy ~he con- the underdog the failure and the downtrodden. The followi11.g is a statement regarding some of the linuwn All letters become the property of The Ithacan, and we re­ cep t Of ' . . . . E . h I. RELAX. The first step m fa1lmg 1s to relax. nJoy t e effects of the use of LSD by GEORGE SWENSON, Assistant serve the right to refuse to publish letters submitted to us. day for what it is, forget about ~omorrow or the next day. In­ Professor of Biology at Ithaca College. Letters mu.st not exceed 400 words. stead ~ ge~ting up in the mornmg, sleep the extra hour, and The chemical structure of anti-metabolites like the tran­ 0 quilizers and the hallucinogens resembles that of the normal rationalize it's for your health ... very important. . Improvement Hillel metabolites whose functions they usurp or modify. These two I 2 BE LATE. There is little reason for the failure t? be forms are critically active with regard to their influence on the 280 First Avenue Dear Editor: ti~e after all what can he contribute to the surroundings. concentration of one of our hormone-like substances, Serotonin. New York, N. Y. Hillel held its most successful Better ;till, don't'bother _coming at all, and let everyone wonder Serotonin acts in smooth muscle in the digestive and repro­ October 31, 1967 Iget together of this year as over what you're up ·to. . ductive tracts to assist the entrance of calcium ions into the Dear Editor: 200 students and parents attend- 3. DON'T FINISH ANYTHING. I~stca~ of tackling a cells, whereas, in the brain, it inhibits calcium entry into cells. Last year, as a freshman parent, ed the Bagel Brunch on Sunday, ·ob and seeing it to the end, merely start 1t, w1tho1;1t, an,r c~m­ A decrease in muscle Serotonin seems to be accompanied by I rushed to subscribe to The October 29. Saga-style lox, bagels, J.deration to the completion. Remember the old saymg: A Job SI - » - an increase in the concentration of Serotonin in the brain and lthaean in order to add my little coffee cake and orange juice half done is better than none. . . vice versa. Such an increase in the brain's Serotonin concen­ bit to the Scholarship Fund and were served and the breakfast 4 DON'T SAY TOO MUCH. There is an expression which tration produces manic symptoms, including hallucinations. also (and primarily) to keep in was free to all members and advis~s the fool not to talk and prove ~hat he is indeed a fool. Tranquilizers like Chloropromazine, commonly called touch with what was going on at their parents. Stay quiet; and you'll never make a mistake. . Thorazie, acting as depressants, reduce the brain's Serotonin the college of my son's choice. After the presentation of gifts > 5. SPREAD OUT. Don't let yourself become. tied down level. Treatment with such drugs increased learning aptitude I felt, well, almost patriotic and to Bruce Malin and Dennis with anything. After all, with your talents nothing should in experimental animals. On the other hand, hallucinogens, such terribly excited when the first is­ Dukorsky for their role in the as Mescalin and LSD, increase the Serotinin level ·in the brain be left alone. - . sue arrived (about six weeks late). organization of IC's High Holiday 6. BLAME OTHERS. Find scapegoats for your failure.and and decrease learning aptitude. I removed the staple with quiver­ services and to Susan Brody as Incomplete studies indicate a common tendency toward blame then-,, for your situation. Parents are excellent for this. ing fingers, seated myself in my Past President, Rabbi Goldfarb chromosome abnormalities and apparently associated abnormal 7. BE PROUD ... that you're a failure ... it took a _lot of reading chair and prepared for discussed the recent problem of rat, mouse and hamster embryos produced by females treated the big thrill of the first page. cuts on religious holidays. He doing. with dosages of LSD considered by experimenters to be below Well ... so maybe the editorials encouraged all students "to keep their eqmvalence of dosages taken by humans. Chromosome would be better, I said to myself writing letters to the administra­ studies with cultures of LSD-treated human white blood cells --or maybe the second issue tion" so that by next year the have yielded conflicting reports. Thus, ominous genetic con­ would improve. I'm sorry to say present situation will be cleared sequences seem to be associated with LSD usage hut the data that throughout "our" entire up. are incomplete, the interpretation of them uncertain. freshman year the only thing that Rabbi Goldfarb then intro­ Focus I do have one suggestion to make: If the effects of any consistently made any sense was duced the speaker, Professor drug, even when considered of low addiction, are of such un­ by Jess Nedelman the listing of the radio programs. Burdick, of Cornell University. predictable nature, of such a wide range of mild to frighteningly I could not rid myself of the in­ An instructor of English Litera­ When you were six you dreamt of being a fireman; when several impact, and further, of such serious suspiciousness of creasingly sinking feeling that ture, Professor Burdick descibed aberrant genetic influences, as seems to be the case with LSD, • ; 0 u were thirteen you would S!}eak_ a "butt" with the boys :ind my son had chosen the wrong his experiences in Israel during be bigshots; when you were eighteen yo!-1 dr:mk ~?urself silly. l think only a fool would risk his health and that of potential college. From my lowly and in­ the "six day war" last June. He Now you are nineteen and you have tned gras~ , LSD, and offspring by experimenting with such a drug in his own system secure position of freshman par­ brought to the platform a great "speed." Why? A new kick; -to prove .you were ,m; or to get -just for kicks! ent, however, I kept quiet, gritted deal of insight about the recent away? Yeh, to get away. The world stm~s. They_ re mur?ermg by teeth and increased my dosage disturbances in the Middle East in Viet Nam; Harlem ~s rioting; th_!! establishment 1s dumpmg on of tranquillizers. and discussed his own emotions you head; you're fallmg behmd 1_n your wor~; your ~fl sho,~ But this year, I hasten to ad­ as well. Following his address, you dowrl. Quickly now, take a smff, tak7 a pill, take_ a cube, vise you, something miraculous the professor answered a great "blow" some "pot." Oh wow, a euphona. Nobody 1s her1; to has happened. Your paper has many questions from the audi­ bother you. Nirvana. Perfection: Forget baby. That obnoxious truly become something I look ence. world is gone. And then ten mmutes later or maybe an hou; forward to. It seems that some of The breakfast, which began at or a day or six weeks from now you .r~turn and _guess what. your staff have even taken a 10:30 a.m., was concluded at 'Everything is still the same or worse. It was beautiful but what stand on a few issues (other than 12:30 and as the officers con­ about responsibilities. You say, who cares? You don't. Get lost. the best dressed girl on campus). ferred later they expressed their r· Join a subculture. Do all the "groovy" things. Congratulations! I don't know the satisfaction with the excellent I am probably a goddamn puritan. reason for the change-but there attendance and the enthusiasm is no doubt that you are doing of all those who partook in the something right. It's turned into festivities. a great little paper, as witness Susan D. Kutell your editorial The Generation Involvement ~ Topic Of Of The Happening. Keep up the good work. And, incidentally, I Asian Wrong receive my copies regularly and as soon after publication as you Dear Editor: Person_ne~ !?.?!!~~encc , can manage, I imagine. The US military intervention I have just one little complaint. in Viet Nam is wrong because: Lti MIDDLE ATlANTIC ASSOCIATION I truly do miss the radio listings, 1. It violates the 1st Command­ OF having grown to them as my sole ment: Thou shalt not kill; or, are we COLLEGES OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION source of news last year. Why don't you reinstate them? forgetting the Ten Command­ 17th ANNUAL MEETING - OCTOBER 19 - 20 Again, my congratulations on ments? DREXEL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY turning out a really adult paper. 2. It violates the Golden Rule: PHILAJ?ELPHIA, PA. Please keep up the good work­ Do unto others as ye would have I have almost three more years them do unto you; or, are we for­ About 50 colleges were repr~sent~d, ~an&ing from the large getting the Sermon on the Mount? state institutions to the small private tnst1tut1ons. The _represen­ to go. Sincerely, 3. It violates International Law: tatives were for the most part, deans of schools of business and Viet Nam, North and South, is chairmen of 'departments of business. . Beatrice Tobias one sovereign nation and we have The theme of this year's meeting was (;urrent Issues in no right to interfere in its in­ Student Personnel Administration. The maJor speaker was ternal affairs; or, are we for- David Newton Dean· of Students at The City College of New Dr. H. Hinkelman Weekend Praise gettig our own Civil War? ·: York. After h; spoke, the group broke up into vanous ,vork 4. It violates the UN charter: ~ shop sessions. tees. The students are invited to participate in an advisory Dear Editor, Member nations are to refrain ~ The_ topics th~ speaker addressed h_is attention to, as we~l. as capacity, and have no legislative function. :rhe. group believed Taking a tip from a letter from from the use of force in inter­ ~ those discussed m the smaller sessions, were the fam1l_iar that the student could make a greater contnbut10n at the_ grass another parent in the recent 1 national relations; or, are for­ :;f ones we are hearing about on most campuses toda_y regarding roots level, that is, in the. depart!11enta] curriculum committees, Ithacan, I write to express appre- \ gettin~ o_ur commitment to that ~ student involvement. They included student evaluat10n of facul~ rather than on a college-wide basis. ciation to faculty and students i organization? t ty, student representation at faculty meetings,. student rcl?rcsen­ The practice of having students operate the student ac- for their successful efforts in , 5. It violates article 1 of the US ,; tation on faculty senates, student representat10n on curnculum tivities budget is apparently quite a common one. In _some_ Parent's Weekend. I Constitution: ~1; committees, ._and st_udent _operation of th_e student act1v1t1es cases, the officers of student_ government are automaocally Special praise is deserved by Wars are_ declared by Congress, members of the budget co~m1ttee, as well as ~he trustc~s of those who planned and executed I representing ~11 the people; _or, ~ b_udget. My 1mpress10n of the extent to which students are par­ I fi ticipating in these areas follows. student accounts. In several mst~i:ices, !he committee appc_>mtcd the panel discussion in the gym'\ ~re we for~ettmg that our nat10n i In many colleges students are evaluating the faculty, '.1nd a faculty member who was familiar with budgets to chair the Saturday morning. I applaud 1s a republic? ·; in most such cases ~he evaluation is -an all-student function. committee and to act in an advisory capacity to the treasurers their "oal of more involvement. : 6. It violates our Declaration of · i The evaluation is ~n a voluntary basis by the instru_ctor, and of stu~cnt organizations. The gro_up b<:lieved that this area was In ;he adult world beyond col- j Ind_epende~ce: ~ :in no instance, would anyone admit ~h.at the <;valuations were a legitimate one fc_,r stud<:nt part1c1p_at10n. _ _ lege, it is disheartening to ob-! It 1s the nght _of pcopks e\'ery- The general impression I re~crvcd was th_at there 1s no serve so much apathy. When it: wlwre to estabh:h whatpver fo:m l!.I. being used by administ~ators for de~1s1on-makmg purposes_ ~c­ f gardmg tenure, promotions, salary increments, and th_e hke. question of stude1;1t _involv7ment m the arcas d1scussc

representatives with voting power. I gathered that th_1s entire Dear Sir: J or, arc we forgetting our mosl area of having student representation at faculty meetings ~ncl AND A CONDITIONED IBODY I am delighted to learn that: important commitment that to student participation in faculty senates was not very wide­ fraternity men "can grasp real- future generations of Americans? spread. The response of the group to this area was, oi:i the whole, MAKE fOR ROTTEN ity for they understand reality." 10. It \iolatcs the clictum of ,negative. However, a suggestion was ma1e that in areas of Perhaps this calls for a radical Jesus: mutual student-faculty co-ncern, a c?mbmed student-faculty re-orientation of our philosophy Cast out the mote in thine own senate or congress might well be considered. IFAB..l WEEKEND ! ! ! department. eye, then thou shalt sec clearly ,__ As in the case of student evaluation of faC:ulty, many c?l· David L. Birt Please turn to page 12 leges now have student representation on curriculum commit-

1 • I THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, ·PAGE 6 , Oracle Greek Columns Officers by Susan Longaker Pi Theta Phi · Delta Kappa Phi Delta Pi I have come to a conclusion: whether a poet uses drugs or by Diane Golub by Mlcheel Schell by Sharon T. Wolk Elected not is difficult to discern from his writing. In fact what begins to sound like the result of a trip may be written by the straight­ A week ago Pi Theta Phi held All Greeks might take an exam­ Well, the big weekend is final­ On Tuesday, October 31, Ora­ its traditional mid-pledge party, cle, the Senior Honor Society, est poet east of the east. There seems to be a corresponding hap­ ple from last week's joint party ly here. All of us are ready for pening in the music of the east-As Ravi Shanker puts it, he only this year something new was between Pi Lamda Chi and Delta a really swinging weekend. held a meeting to discuss the added. 1n· keeping with the Hallo­ Scampers scripts which have hates people in his audience to have to 1. be under drugs in Kappa. With the sudden expan­ Our booth for the carnival, order to enjoy the music, 2. be drunk, 3. be making out with ween spirit, we invited the sion of the student body, the thanks to Lois Katz and her com. been submitted and to review ap­ pledges to the house and had plications for its Scholarship their boyfriend or girlfriend. Not that all this is relevant, but changing academic emphasis, and mittee is ready to go. We hope I want to point out an introduction to the following poem by them bobbing for apples, and rac­ the moving of fraternities to to see you all there and enjoying Fund soon to be awarded. ing to see which team of two Oracle will soon be sending a person.It is Eastern in viewpoint and corresponds to much o buildings on South Hill, it is yourselves. the poetry produced by the flower generation. Oh I hesitate to could finish an apple that was more important than ever that Greek Sing practice has been out bids to eligible seniors. All suspended from a string. Plenty those who are presently members use such terms. Anyway, flower poetry that I consider poetry is Greeks unite and work closely held every day for the past hard to come by-or to come near-anyway-let's away ••• of cold cider and doughnuts were for the benefit of all. Saturday couple of weeks. We're all work­ are urged to attend the next on hand for everyone. It was an meeting on November 14th. night's party brought two rival ing really hard to make this the In embracing the One with your soul. ideal way for the members to let best Greek Sing. The officers elected at the last fraternities together for the first Can you never forsake the Tao? their pledges know we think time in the history of their co­ Phi Delta Pi will hold another meeting are: I controlling your vital force to achieve gentleness, they're pretty special people, and President-(;harlotte Brahm existence. This tremeneous social rush party on the 16th of Novem. Can you become like the newborn child? they should stick with pledging success (nine kegs of beer) was ber, starting at 7:15 for all physi­ Vive President--Alice Cella In cleaning and purifying your Mystic vision, even though at times it might get Secretary-Nancy Slater also a great step forward in de­ cal education majors. We'd like ' Can you strive after perfection? a little rough. It was an excellent veloping a pride in. Greek unity. to see most of you there. A good Treasurer-John Gedney In loving the people and governing the kingdom, opportunity for the members and Histoian-Mary Jo Juliano It is in the interest of Delta time is in store for all. Can you rule without interference? pledges alike to socialize in an in­ Kappa and Pi Lamda Chi that Phi Delts would like to extend Parliamentarian- In opening and shutting the Gate of Heaven, formal atmosphere. William Schwab the rivalry between the two congratulations to Judy Betts Can you play the part of the Female? Tuesday morning at the crack largest fraternities on campus and Andi Lown who have com­ Scampers Representative-- In comprehending all Knowledge, Susan Zaher of dawn (6:00 a.m. to be exact) continues with the enthusiasm ex­ pleted their B.S. degrees -in Physi. Can you renounce the mind? each pledge was awakened and hibited at last week's intramural cal Education. To give birth, to nourish, . taken for a little walk to Butter­ football game, and with the spirit We would also like to wish the To give birth without taking possession, milk Falls where they were of friendship and unity of pur­ best of luck to Bobbi Goldstein, To act without appropriation, greeted with breakfast. Have fun pose exhibited at the party. Judy Oshinsky, Linda Zwahlen, ,:· ' Concert at To be chief among men without managing them- this weekend and remember that By the time this article is pub­ and Mary Jo Juliano who are out This is the Mystic Virtue. . you're still a pledge and Hell lished, the Ithaca College Intra­ this block practice teaching. Ford Hall -Laotse Week isn't too far away. mural football championship will • • • have been decided. Whatever the Friday perhaps the above will make you ponder what 1s poetry and outcome, the D.K. footballers de­ what was said ... another ... serve our sincerest congratula­ AE Rho A chamber music concert will Pi Lambda Chi tions for a tremendous season of by Ron Kobosko be presented in Walter Ford Hall to listen to the earth at peace! by 811,1 Mentz hustle and spirit. Next on the by members of the Ithaca College sports agenda: a basketball All of the brothers of Alpha each piece of air is filled with crickets, Epsilon- Rho are psyched for this Music faculty at 8:15 p.m. Fri­ running creeks, slow now, -as summer runs aground, It all began one Saturday championship under the leader­ Fall Weekend and are looking day, Nov. 10. The concert is open down below my window afternoon at three o'clock, and ship of Kaptaln Kuzman. to the public without charge. hear grasses rustling- ended some time Sunday after­ At last!!! After twelve years of forward to the really great booth I that we have set up for the I.F.C. David Berman, John Covert and singing crickets meet the snake on equal ground. noon around five o'clock. During planning by Delta Kappa bro­ Carnival. Working with the I.F.C. Stephen Brown, will open the the smell of grasses laughs around the walls the interval Pi Lam and Delta thers, both past and present, the the brothers of Alpha Epsilon program with a Dialogue for which hold me my room. Kappa held "the meeting of the D.K. lodge will be officially open­ m Rho have produced the first of a flute, French horn and kettle I'm presuming nothing, masses." ''The Coming Genera­ ed for Fall Weekend. with parties series of reports of the LF.C.'a drums entitled "Night Watch," knowing I am never grasses, tion" provided the music, and both Friday and Saturday plan­ activities. The program will be wrtiten in 1944 by Ellis B. Kohs. knowing grass will not last . the Brothers and dates of both ned by Bob DlGangi and Pat Mc­ "Divertimento," composed in or really help me be at peace-­ Fraternities provided the ex­ cann. broadcast on WICB-TV Cable-1 1960 by Ramiro Cortes, will be perience which won't be soon Channel two. The fraternity is ' '' ease of tension now is only temporary, Bill Adams and his staff should played by David Berman, flute; as soon as imagine grass forgotten on this campus. Did it be congratulated for their fine still pleased at the turn out of I parents at our Parents Weekend Charles Bay, clarinet; and Ed­ the juice undrains- do any good? When Pi Lam wears job on the Student Directory in wa_rd Golbrecht, bassoon. Bay and and I return to pain from walling­ Delta Kappa jackets and vice ver­ spite of problems beyond their events. Attendance of parents at pianist Jane Bergen will be heard knowing I must face an emptines&, sa, you just know it couldn't control. both the Friday night open house in "Grand Duo Concertant, Opus and cannot; have been all wrong. Thanks to at WICB and the Saturday night 48" by Carl Maria von Weber. I slowly drop my mind Bob DiGangi and Don Beers for banquet in the Terrace Dining The closing work ls "Three and there is none there the organization. (To all those Hall was greater than ever be­ Variables" (1964) by Benjamin to hear the peaceful falling .•. worriers, the jade was found.) Delta Phi Zeta fore. On Tuesday night all of the Lees, which will be performed -B.P. Now it's Fall Weekend. It be­ brothers of Alpha Epsilon Rho by Peter Hedrick, oboe; Charles by Judy Sacco participated in the election night 0 0 0 gins with the LF.C. Carnival and Bay, clarinet; Edward Golbrecht, from there it moves to a Halloween not only brought coverage on WICB. Our pledgea bassooon; John Covert, french the moon lodge party until 3 o'clock. Satur­ the Great Pumpkin ·but sleepy also loaned a helping hand. horn; and Mary Ann Covert, has day starta with a "sour hour" be­ pledges, vasaline, T .P., candy, With pledging hal! . way-~ piano. woven fore the game. After the game greasy doornobs, a newly decor­ through, our pledge class still a cool, pale it's' dinner time and then off to ated house, a missing television has the spirit and ambition that pillow they started out with. They have • I LEE'S GARAGE the concert. After the concert set and a pig in the living room to calm it's back to the lodge for another donated by Delta Sig. Many of been carrying out professional -/i· FOR: Repairs on all makes the fever the f ! party until 4 o'clock. Let's leave the Sisters decided to indulge in projects and seem to enjoy ~ and models, inc:=luding for­ of my sleeplessness. Sunday for resting •.• and Mon­ a new form of trick or treating­ experience of working at the sta­ •: ', eign cars, specializing in My little clay houses have all fallen down, day for pledging. trick or cocktailing, while others tion and the idea of making the Volkswagen. and all my jeweled joys and truths station a better broadcast opera­ ~ I RASCO and the MOONS are on kept up the tradition of singing } N.Y.S. Inspection lie their way! pumpkin carols from the third tion. Front End Alignment shattered on the floor like broken dolls. floor balcony. The fraternity is looking for­ ,, the magic land of make-believe ward to the day when the pledges 'r.-•... Our second fashion show Electrical Tune-up has turned into will be full members and be able t Brake & Motor Overhaul a nightmare proved to be a great success. The models looked lovely in their to help plan for our future pro­ 402 S. CAYUGA ST. of Rho Mu Theta jects which include many tele· grotesques. mod dresses and pant suits and 'I AR 3-1821 Rear Entranco After a very successful, enjoy- gave a striking picture of the vision productions and special ' Please tum to page 11 able, and tiring Parents' Week- fashions to come. Anne Kooper­ campus services. You can tell an end, the brothers enjoyed a week smith gets a special thanks for Alpha Epsilon Rho brother now~ of rest and quiet. We also wish all the hard work she put into because our sweat shirts are in your yo~ BE NEAT IN THE to express our thanks to all the .the show. , and pins engraved with Alpha Will raincoat keep Epsilon Rho are on order. .: ' people who bought corsages from The Sisters extend an invita­ warm and dry this.winter? UNION SNACK BAR us. tion to Ron Bobbit to our card All of this past week we have party this week and our apologies been making extensive plans for to Pi Lam about the last one but Phi Mu Alpha !Hlave ail' WBNTERBZIED Fall Weekend. Friday, the bro­ the "Days of Wine and Roses" thers have planned a party at won out. by Don Zegel For REAL Italian Food the house in the afternoon. We Delta Kappa please come and The past week a number of Phi are all looking forward to the (CDll'lldl WATIERIPIROOIFEIO> Spaghetti - Pizza get Fred Alexander's shoes. Mu brothers returned from their Carnival that night in the Rec They're the right color for a few eight week practice teaching'. Lasagna ·_ Ravioli Room. We extend a challenge to of our dresses for Fall Weekend assignments. We're all glad to' at all students to try our booth as but they just don't seem to "fit'' have them back with us a.p.d wish <> we feel it is something which you anyone over here. the best of luck to those brothers will not soon forget. All the bro­ Nance Cole and her committee who have gone to teach for the thers plan to attend the concert next eight weeks. Victoria Restaurant Saturday night and have a great are doing a fine job on our booth for the Carnival The Sisters As for the present activities of 109 N. Cayuga St. time. We hope everyone will at­ tend the Weekend and make it would like another first place the fraternity as a whole, Fall /Fast, !Ulicient Service lov All a success. this year. Weekend is at the top of the list. The party _last Saturday spon­ Friday 'night in our lounge there Your Cleaning Needs sored by Delta Kappa and Pl will be a Fall Weekend party for Lam was enjoyed by many of the the brothers and their dates. fRATERNITY JEWELRY· Sisters. We all hope to see more We're looking forward to seeing :,: FRIEE IPDCC

'! '~'' , THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 7 Sigma Alpha Nu by Art KGel)pel WliCJB AJl.li-Collegiates Well, last week was a busy one for pledges and brothers. Hallo. I YOIJB CLOIJDED ST*B I, i ween proved to be a ghoulish and Debut on Radio 60 aerodynamically horrifying exper­ ience for all concerned. .4 mlnh/111 guiu to mystic mishapi Last week the "All-Collegiate One of the few DJ's ever to hold And then there were those Team" made its debut on WICB down jobs on two radio stations tours of the Finger Lakes, com­ hy HIIWY 'Yo Plate radio 60. In accordance with the in the same town simultaneously, plete with broken toe. Last week­ station's new format announced "Scottso's on the Go" with a live­ end, we held a joint party at Phi by Program Director Jim Coons, ly show on WICB every Wed­ AIRES (March 21-Aprll l!l): A bril· one member of the team took Kappa Tau's house in Cornell linnt gnlnxy on your celcotinl chart in· nesday night, dlcotee n week of opoctnculBr eucccna over each night during the prime Stu Hillner (Thurs. 8-12) or with TEP and DKE. Beer flowed in areas of tinonco nnd love. Unless, by (most of the time) and even sand­ chonce. your boat :tricncrs birthdny listening times, leaving the other "Baby Stui" as the AU-Collegiates falls within nix months of todny'e date, air-shifts available for the train­ nicknamed him, came to Ithaca wich meat was provided. in which caso you will hnvo n. cn.la.mi- ing of less-experienced staff our patience grew less and less toun week. College just one year ago know­ members. According to Coons, the as we asked time and time TAURUS (April 20-lfay 20): Be ing very litttle about radio, but mean to onhnolo this week. Sta.rs In· new format has already proved after careful training and "a mild again if our Sigma Alpha Nu dicBto thnt •trny doge will try to bito you, cats will acrotch you, birds of "an unqualified success," dose of insanity" his style rapid­ jackets bad arrived. We are hop­ proy (Alex) will chnoo you - oven Ernie Sauer (Mon. 8-12) starts ing to be wearing them proudly clude a cocktail party in our Gemini. You vdll bo cnug-ht in n 1>ctty theft, Damed as concnpondcnt Jn a style has won him a wide follow­ on Friday nights with John house this afternoon which will well-publicized society divorce nnd pub­ ing over the past three years, Thompson (Fri. 6-10). John de­ be mellowed by the smooth hcly · stripped of credit cord privilogcs. Otherwino on uneventful week. and he will undoubtedly be an signs his show to "soothe and sounds of our brother Jeff Kram­ CANCER (Juno 22-July 22): Born asset to the team. smooth" his listeners into a er and his group. Tonight, of under tho BiJ;ll o! tho crab, your die­ Tuesday night (8-12) swings happy weekend groove. His dry course, there's the . carnival. J)ORition le.a.vc11 something to bo desired tlun week. To rom.cdy, cuff a frcohmon, with the "Hergy ShOw on the wit really does the trick every sANNY will bave a "pie throw" kick o cat, spn.nk o. child. Lace your t("D. with vinegar and ft1co tho world Radio," starring Bill Hergonson. Friday. booth that'll be fun for a1L with a snorl. Atrue "vagabond announcer'' of Saturday night's rock with the Tomorrow, after the football LEO (July 23·AUguRt 23) : If you considerable professional experi­ All-Collegiates' official teenybop­ game and concert, we are hold­ n.ro fomalo, cclosti.a.1 'l'ibrn.tions indicate ence, Bill doesn't even bother to per, ''Uncle Gerry" Kelly (Sat. ing our Rock Party at Toboggan th11,t you will got n good stock morkot tip from n lecherous ho.irdrcsscr this unpack his earphones anymore. 6-10). Mixing hard rock with Lodge with the sounds of the week. li'ollo'\\~ hie ndvico for a qui«·k profit • • . hut otay looso under tho With Hergy on the air, "Any­ plenty of corn and joking, Gerry HannibaJs. h11,ir dryer, thing Goes" on Tuesday nights. attempts to "plaster a smile on Don't forget to come to the VIRGO (August 24-Soptembor 22): Scott Dilliard (Wed. 8-12) says your lip" with his wild antics Fcarnival and see our booth. There is n strong possibility this woc-k that you will ..,.de"'olop .o spasmodic in· he specializes in radio and girls­ each weekend. See if he doesn't spirntion with closnl'o of tho glottis, Avoid cmotionnl stress, hold your but not necessarily in that order. succeed. bronth o.nd count t.o ten. Suave, sophisticated Lanny LIBRA (Soptember 28-0ctobcr 22): Frattare (Sun. 6-10) wraps up the Sigma_ Alpha Iota Timo now for n.n omotionol ovcrbnul I Your bo:.ringe Bro rusting, your chnsaie weekend with his "Radio Ro­ Cynthia Monteroso ie lumpy, your clutch Is slipping, yout­ mance," an audience participa­ gonrbox is tired, your- pistono Bro elow· Guess The Score The sisters of Sigma Alpha ing down, your crankshaft is sluggish, tion show for a Sunday night. your genorntor is lagsinr; and you?' A natural emcee, Lanny's pro­ Iota will be presenting their Fall sparkpluga barely ignite. Tnko off with For $10 !Prize Recital of American Music, on nn oil mngno.to. fessional finesse really shines Wednesday, November 15, at SCORPIO (October 23 • November The new "All-Collegiate" look through on this new show. 21): A shy U:rllnus, hiding In your 8:15 p.m. in Ford Auditorium. second lunar house, mcn.ns thnt you rose to new heights this week n.ro not ogotiaticn.1 enough. Toot your as WICB continued its series of The program will open with the born, sing your prniaoe, sound off on tions for hockey announcers. If fraternity's Chorale and Sym­ self-esteem I Soon you will hovo second broadcasts breakthroughts that you are interested, contact Don phony. The Sigma Alpbo Iota lun11,r house 11,ll to yourself. has all Ithaca talking - and Berman, sometimes known as Chorus and the Ithaca College SAGITTAlUUS (November 22 • Dc­ listening. ccmbor 21): A glib and h11,nd•omo poli­ Dow Bekman. ~tring Orchestra conducted by tician with manicured fingornnils, Highlighting the highlights of WICB wishes everybody a good monogrommcd silk underwear, n dio­ Sanford Reuning will perform mond ring and o big, block c.a.r will the week was Tuesday night's Fall Weekend . . . Remember, if warren Benson's Psalm XXIV. offer you some candy this week. Do you are looking for a little relax­ not occept, Hold out for ChivDG Rogol comprehensive in-depth coverage Sisters Annette Coffill and Karen or Bollinger '49. of state, local, and national elec­ ation and music, WICB is at your Nezbeda will play Seven Violin­ CAPRICORN (December 22 - Jnn• tions on both AM: and FM. Larry service all weekend; every week­ Viola Duets by George Andrix. nn.ry 20): A frigoto bird, i:;liding- ocross Price and John Tompson kept end, your pln.nctory cbnrt, indicotes B fine Genie Hollander, flute, Anita week for proying on thoeo less for­ Ithaca informed on the latest hap­ tunate t.han yourself. G'"mb somo pen­ Ranucci, oboe, Elizabeth Fogle, nies from n. bcggn.r•o cup. Land up on penings in all the important clarinet Martha McCool, french food n.t n. mission. Let ropa.c1ty bo your issues from the State Constitu­ horn ;nd Carleen Huntington, motto. Sleep well. tion to the surprising hot contest bass~on, will perform Vincent AQUARIUS (Jonnory 21 • :Fcbruory for the mayor's seats here in KICK UQUOR- l!l): A Iii;ht-heortod, plnyful person Persichetti's Pastoral. Gall Frank­ with o rcndy smile nnd nthlctic inclina­ Ithaca, in Boston, Cleveland, and lin will sing four songs by Mal­ tions could intcrforo with your studieo San Francisco. this week. Athletic inclinntione n.ro not colm Lewis--"All Bail!", "Holi- of on outdoor sort, a.nd could cause you Newly added to the All-Colleg­ SMOKE POT! to completely lose your cool. Or earn ay" ''The Vicious Moray Eel" your letter. iate staff is Dolly Holiday. You and ;,Mother Blue Goose." Elaine can bear her nightly at midnight PISCES (:Febru11,ry 20-March 20): M:errey will play an Elegie for This will h<' tho typo of WC1. .. , versity School of Medicine in at Temple offers graduate courses ,, 5:00 PM - 10:00 PM Philadelphia. leading to the Ph.D. degree in from :; Delta Sigma Pi The special program bas been medical microbiology, and infec­ Floors 2 and 3 arranged to provide the collegians tious diseases, immunology, vir­ by Bob Arensteln ·,, with an insight into the graduate ology, immunocbemistry, micro­ Last week was a very interest­ training programs conducted by bial biochemistry, and microbial Sc 3c 2c ~ ing one for the brotherb~od. Our the department. Students from 80 genetics. per page per page per page pledge class brought us a real live colleges in a 200-mile radius of Professor Alois Nowotny is in first copy 2nd thru 10th 11th copy and on ,i pig. The brothers in turn brought Philadelphia have been invited to charge of arrangements for the MOE"S copies (it) over to the sisters of Gamma participate. open house. Dr. Earle H. Spauld­ Delt, but they didn't accept it. The day will start at 10 a.m. ing is chairman of the depart­ !mcmrlbeir Sim@~ -~en the pig was brought over to with members of the Temple ment. The Temple University ' the sisters of Delta Phi. Well it faculty describing the different School of Medicine is located at MOSE NORMAN, Prop. · turned out nobody wanted the activities of the department. Then 3400 N. Broad St., Phialdelphia. !FAST Service on All OR.DIERS .,-'l b db will follow tours of the depart­ i poor pig. Alot of fun was a Y Students from here interested i· all. mental laboratories, a luncheon, fRIEIE COLLATING ! ! Y in attending the open house This week we are celebrating a symposium on projects being 118 N. Aurora Sil'. the 60th Birthday of the Inter­ conducted by graduate students should contact the chairman of Special Papers Available national Fraternity of Delta Sig­ the Deparbnent of Biology or 272 8'08~ (rag, bond, vellum, legal size, etc.) ma Pi. Delta Sig was founded on Chemistry. Nov. 7, 1907 at the School of Canada Commerce, Accounts and Finance of New York University. Wednes­ No Haven Dinner at day Night the brothers bad a O'ITAWA (UPI) - A private gala celebration at Coddington member's bill· was introduced in Restaurant. the House of Commons Tuesday This weekend we have lodge aimed at preventing Americans Joe Ciaschi's incomparable new restaurant Parties planned for the entire seeking to avoid the U.S. mlli­ HOURS: 313 Eddy St. weekend. We will also have a tary draft from settling in Can­ in the old Railroad Passenger Station on Mon.-Thurs. Ithaca, N.Y. banquet Saturday Night 'at the ada. Taughannock Boulevard at West Buffalo Street. 9a.m.-9 p.m. Sheraton Motor Inn .. We would James Ormiston, a Conserva­ Phone like to welcome all those people tive, told the House bis bill is Fri.-Sat. who have come up for the week­ designed "to prevent U.S. draft 9 a.m.-6 p.m. 273-8686 ~nd and hope you all have an en­ dodgers from finding a haven in For reservations 272-2609 JOYable time. Canada." THE ITHACAN,______NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 8 .,:~ - ~;, -, ' ''' ' FALL WEEKEND :, ; I. - ' c. '67 ")

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Ian and Syl~ia Theodore Bikel Weekend Schedule ' . I(; I Friday, November 10 ~ ! 'i 7 :30 Inter-squad hockey. game at Lynah Rink 9:00 IFC CARNIVAL featuring the SOUL COMPANY in Rec Room 12:30 Coffee hour featuring the CAYUGA WAITERS IN Terrace ,: 3:00 CURFEW* ' . Saturday, November 11 ' :· I i 2:00 Ithaca College Bombers vs. American I : International at South Hill Field 9:00 In CONCERT: THEODORE BIKEL and IAN & SYLVIA at South Hill Gym 11 :00 SOUL COMPANY In Gym 3 2:00 Coffee Hour in Terrace King 4:00 CURFEW* Queen i i , ~ , .,.,....,._ ',, ,,. ; , ,t~-- ,', ,' <

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' - ' Gary McVicker Gail McCarthy ------;:------:------THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 9 'furn On Psychedeli( VPA 0111l ~1w@pe@W$ (@1i~se~ Continuod from pago 1 Continued from page 2 feel like they belong in this so­ Is The W@tr~ ~oiling p7ople, workers, peasants. As regards social con1position, ~lf @tIDrr ~a®fi lM@IIDTI fP'@~D~W 1t comprises a great majority of picked fighters of peasant and ciety which is, at present, im­ Continued from page 1 _PARIS (CPS) - lleinp; small, compact, and relatively personal. Because they are aware worker origin and intellectuals faithful to the cause of the Leary, especially, is a great Revolution. It is the true army of the people, of toilers, the stupid, Europe has always trusted international opinion to be of current problems in society: sllong enough to change any country"s unpopular policy. Civil Rights, Viet Nam, and be­ psychedelic mover, having been army of workers and peasants." among the first to experiment One may disagree with General Giap about the existence So Europeans are now a little confused when they sec almost cause they disagree with so­ the entire world protesting Amencan involvement in Vietnam ciety's treatment of these prob­ with LSD, a technically nonaddic­ of democracy in North Vietnam, but for chose who have been tive, but brain damaging and in the VPA there is no doubt that it is an army which reserves a and the war widening anyway. lems, they want to break away Two recent speeches accented this growing isolation of the and form their own community, emotionally deteriorating drug. great deal of time to discussing problems and solutions within Through the psychedelic LSD, the ranks of soldiers and commanders. U.S. from the world's good graces. The (irst 1n the United Na­ their own ideals. Instead of chang­ tions, was made by Sardar Swaran Smgh, 'the Indian Defense ing anything, however, by their hippies can finally complete their Unlike the South Vietnamese army (ARVN ), the VPA is l\lmistcr. The second was 111 Pari~, made by Pierre Mendes­ withdrawal; and despite their ef­ escape from society in conjunc­ an army which had met with victory and which had years of tion with their search for self. France, the former chairman of the French Assemblv. forts, they have become a re­ exp~riencc in fighting both conventional and guerilla warfare. It cert_a!nly wasn't the first sp~ech in the U.N. demanding trcatist movement with no goals identity and the perfect com­ Unlike the ARVN, it is commanded by revolutionaries whose munity. So the psychedelic art, an uncond1t1onal end to the bombmg of North Vietnam. But or plan of action to improve so­ personal life arc marked by dedication and austerity. They arc it'.s significant, in th~t Smgh_ adds his_ protest to those of a num­ ciety-just themselves, and their music, and color attempt to fol­ the same people who in the 1940's lived in the jungles, the same low through the hallucinating ef­ ber of other counrne~ considered friends, if not allies of the own search for identity and gen­ people who fought side by side with President Ho Chi Minh United States. ' eral dissatisfaction." fects of LSD and to display the and General Vo Nguyen Giap. It is an extremely united army. weird break from reality -into a Holland, Denmark, Norway, aond France-all NATO mem­ Above all, the VPA faithfully reflects the traditional peas­ l) Professor Whitney feels that better, peace-loving, and just bers-have bitterly attacked Johnson's Vietnam policies. Can­ ant-soldier principle of the Vietnamese army and, at the present ' even though the psychedelic plain loving society. ada, Indonesia, Sweden, and Ethiopia have taken s11nilar posi­ scene is a striving to become in­ moment, the cooperatives and the state farms in North Vietnam tions: that the U.S. must take the first step toward peace. volved, the hippies today are not The question to top all others, are joint peasant-soldier enterprises. J\lr. Mendes-France said pretty much the same thing, but however, concerns where the psy­ really involved. As a party, or What happens to the soldiers of the VPA when they move his tone was much· sharper than ;\Jr. Singh's. He called the chedelic movement is leading. At movement, they lack a program, along the Ho Chi Minh trail to fight in the South? According bombing "absolutely unjustifiable," and gave homage to "the its prljSent stage ;psychedelic be­ directives, leadership, organiza­ to a Pentagon source, there are now between 45,000 to 48,000 proud people of (North) Vietnam." lievers can hold group conven­ tion, and action motivated by of them in the South. I do not think that they have any serious His unequivocal language will no doubt be received with tions, summer love-ins, marches meaning. He looks on the psyche­ difficulty in adjusting themselves for two main reasons: a heavy heart in \Vahington, where the State Department types delic scene as a future possibil­ on Washington, D.C., yet even predict an "aprcs-Gaullismc" controlled by the Federation of though all these actions do dis­ l. In 1954 when Vietnam was divided .at the 17th parallel, ity for change in the U.S. society nearly 100,000 Viet Minh soldiers and political cadres who fought the Left, whom Mendes-France represents. if they first achieve the necessary play an opposing faction to U.S. At this writing there arc only three countries left in \Vcst­ society, docs this psychedelic fac­ south of the 17 parallel against the French went North. directives. If hippies don't know There they were retrained at the Xuan l\fai Training Center crn Europe who haven't formally protested the U.S. conduct who they are, how can they com- tion actually accomplish any­ of the war. Ireland, whose Foreip;n !'V1inistcr, Mr. Frank Aiken thing? Without an aim, a pro­ ( Ha Dong province about seven miles North of Hanoi) under r,.' has always :icquiesced to anything the U.S. did: Moro's Italy'. prehend what they want? gram, a leader, the psychedelic the supervision of the 338th Brigatc commanded by General Although Professor Whitney To Ky. Not all of them are now in the South. for whom NATO is "a way of life;" and finally Great Britain. pheneomenon seems destined to Of these three "silences," \Vashington is undoubtedly hap­ declines from commenting on the follow the steps of the once pop­ 2. For most of the people in the North, the South is part LSD or drug view of the psyche­ of Vietnam, and even if they are not physically familiar with piest about Britain's. But last week, the Labor Party began to ular and protesting beatnik, a,nd lean on the \Vilson government to "dissociate itself completely" delic scene he did say that "drugs where is he now? the South, they arc emotionally identified with the South. Uni­ are basically a symbol of the psy­ from America's war. The same day, National Opinion Polls of It is possible that hippies 'to­ fication of the country is the main driving force among the chedelic phenomenon; drugs make soldiers of the VPA. The leaders of the government and the Britain said that the \Vilson government's popularity was at the final split between the aver­ day actually fear the success of its lowest since the last general election in l\farch, 1966. NOP the psychedelic scene, the con­ army of North Vietnam are revolutionaries with a strong sense age society and the hippie since of historical mission. Although Communists, they constantly said that if there were an election tomorrow, the \Vilson re­ the average society does not ac­ sequences, responsibility and gime would p;ct whipped. leadership, as well as a society talk about the heroism of their people and the p;lory of their cept the use of drugs." totally uninhibited in sex, and rugged fatherland. They believe in their historically just cause. And to them, there arc no differences between the Chinese and Leary, Metzner, and Alpert are existing in a world of LSD. __c_L_A_s_s_lF_IE_D __ \ among the top names of the psy­ Go away. Join a hippie com­ the Mongolians of the past, the French of yesterday, and the Tigerama 'l chedelwic scene, along with Bob Americans of today. munity for a year, learn, experi­ A KISS-To m,· c.,ecrct. ]O\f'---.Jul1t1 Celebration ,. Dylan, the recording star who ment, find yourself, and rebel Do the leaders of the VPA understand the U.S. power? ~> satirizes life. The combined ef­ They do, I am sure, but they are convinced of the rightness of TO \\"ll(H1 IT )!A Y CO:-iCEit:-i-WIIO against society. After a year, split ...1:,. .. the ,TAP nffair 1s ovcr/-,Tuu,.:h• <> forts of Leary, Metzner, and Al­ the psychedelic scene, quit the their cause. an interview with :\Ir. Jacques Dccornoy, correspondent to announce pert, produced a text, The Psy- pad and the protesting. What In p[;H~OX.\L- H somehow c an n o t express or In doing so, we also defend peace in Southeast Asia and in the wn~ 1-'rom tht• Bro. ( Leave For world. The best way to Jcfend peace is to discourage aggres­ achieve his aims in reality. Just TO TIIE LIBRARY !oAXl;. lf )011 cnn"t Get Your TRIPLE fViet Nam what did your year with the psy­ sion." slt•cp, don't br11~ The J."'nthcr 1''1~uro. TIGERAMAS chedelic scene improve or accom- llls.\lt .\:-i XE-~1.\lt:.E. ( .\n,II) Si;;ncd Contlm1~ from pago 1 plish? ..\Inn. , <> Now, psychedelic is the word, Election Results Continued from page 1 Some of the problems the pJ:H!--()X.\L Fr,1nn• j,. a nue pl.u·P to IFRIEE what will it be tomorrow-and in ' On the other hand, a Poll ...-,,..,t hut I woul!ln't.. \\,lilt lo l1v1• South Vietnamese civilians (and No 601 41% th<.•rt• \\'Ith Lovt'. The P,wtry I...ovt'r. 6 Pack Historical I,, American doctors) are faced with the tomorrows to come? watcher on Meadow Street ob- Void 52 of Coke Place 6,500. FOH J.E::;SOX.S 111 lw,, to fl: from r are malnutrition, parasite disea­ served that a vast majority of Mayorial-Approx. Mats I Counted by election commission Bn!falo <.,t•t· Slmron. ses, malaria, typhoid fever, with the purchase of 10 Drugs Continued from page 1 the people "saw us but didn't ers: I leprosy, diptheria, and plague. .\TTI,:-TIOX ~I K . I:'\\' E ,«th tht> or more gallons of gas want to see us." Sometimes their 1. Prof. Doug Ashfor~orncll E I C hn1-> nrrn t•tl Thrn •.., n,it a When questioned about the jor· problem involved in its con­ children tried to "encourage them ,nolt\' ll11%1f1t•1I Enjoy ! School of Busine.ss ------I <> chances of survival, Dr. Karam sumption is that according to the to vote." But many "ignored us I 2. Mr. James Campbcllr-Jr. High ATTKS'TIO~ .J s F ,v r: ,,. 1th th1• I replied, "I've made out my will Federal Narcotic Control Act of ~l c r: h.1~ atrn.t•tl. Till·, ts ,1 :itrntt,:, !FREIE completely." teacher !Plus and I'm not planning too far into 1956 marijuana is a narcotic and t l,l"'-if1t•tl EnJoy tht> F B <; / I Total Ballots-1482. 3. Rev. Hollis Haywar~orncll Bonus Blue Stamps the future." its possession is punishable by 2 I.>~1.\H. BRO \\'hat· .. 111 a namt•? \Vl• \ Yes 829 55% United Religiou.s Work lo, , ,ou in ~p1tt• of ~our ... -'rnnuny The doctor hopes that bis serv­ year imprisonment. According to 1 l ices will not only help the South the sciences of biology and phar­ r Vietnamese, but also the Ameri- macology, marijuana is not a can image. "I am doing this not narcotic. only because I'm a doctor," he •1','Iost officials agree that laws states, "but also because of my concerning pot are too stiff and GDRLS - IEASIL Y !EARN $200 !BY CIHIROSTMAS tremendous ·desire to have my should be softened. country liked. I hope I'll be liked by the Vietnamese, and I hope TIHIIROUGIH SPAIRIE-TIMIE SIEWING AT IHIOMIE they will also like my country for my actions." Donohue-Dialvell'SOIIII Very few colleges allow this One. IEVIEN WDTHOU"lT' A SIEWBNG MACHDNIE ,, type of "excused service", and Dr. Karam is very thankful PLUMBING AND HEATING .,1 to President Dillingham and :,. Ithaca College for granting him Estimates Cheerfully Given l }Oll 111 t1111t· permission. He also expressed a Easy-to-sew products (both with and without a sewing machine) can earn c':\tr:i nwnc·:, JW,t frn very high regard for Ithaca's faculty and student body, adding 602 W. Seneca St. Christmas (and in the following months, too!). You can accompli~h this 111 ,1 fl'\\' hours ;1 \\'t'l'k, n,·11 "I'll forever be grateful to them 273-3393 while you're baby-sitting. There is no personal selling needed. Our book In g1n·s :, ou all the ca,y ,rep, to for these past five years of my ' life." follow so that you can have fun sewing those items \\h1ch you ;drt"ad:,· kn,m. plu, Ill'\\ 1dc.1, \\h1ch :,ou can learn, while every stich earns you more money. Our L":\tra D1rccw1 uf "\\"herc T" Send For ::Sc·" !Peter IF. IP'oitell'llx(C!J mg Bargains" -,,viii be included FREE, fabrics, threads, yarns, hut tons, 11hbo11,. re11111:i11t,, .111d t:\"L'll ,,·"- OptDCdttllll'll 111g machines at low, low prices!) if your order 1s received v.1th111 a week. Ru,h t\\ll dollar, rnd.1_\·, ( 0111:, 209 E. Seneca St. AR 2-1292 $2.00) for your copy of "GIRLS SE\V AND EARN," to :\mcrhy,r Enr,·1 pri,,·,. 'i J.1rn:11<·.1 :\\ ,·nu,·, Gr .. cn­ Across fr_om the Old Fire Station l.l\vn, New York 11740. Your money will be refunded 1f \Oil ;11<" IHI! c·,.rnplct..:h· ,.111,f1l'"LI 111.1\ kcq, Open Daily 9:30 to 5:30 Fri. 'ti/ 9 the Directory with our compliments! Sat. 'ti/ 1 Broken Lenses Replaced and Frames Repaired 20 Years of Experience r I THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 10 66§ome- E1t11joy and Want to Talk Abo-µt It'' had reservations about it. More speed addict show from his de- M a le important than this, I was a good pendance on the drug? em' ([lj,' le head. I was able to "get there" Student: A speed freak can with grass. You never replace easily become violent and totally by Toni Seger hold of it. That summer, though, one drug with another. Acid was irrational. Ev~ntually, · with a by Alan Hymon I smoked far more and by my always in reach if I wanted it, speed bag, your mind freezes _Marijuana-used on every college campus. Ithaca College The following is the transcript freshman year at college, I was but it wasn't until the mid-semes- completely. I have no intention has its share of users and pushers. The feelings one has about of a personal interview held with smoking quite consistently. ter of my Sophomore year that of letting this happen to me. I its use and the affects of its influence arc told to the Ithacan a female student of Ithaca Col­ Ithacan: Did this continue I really "got into it". feel terribly sorry for speed by one sue~ studc!"lt· He is a junior English major from New lege on the subject of drugs. after you arrived at Ithaca? Ithacan: Can you elaborate on freaks, they become truely Ithacan: How old were you the Student: No. I knew very few that? desparate creatures. York. He 1s a ~nght s~udent and ~ses marijuana regularly. Only because of its illegality does he wish to remain anonymous. first time you used a drug? people my first few weeks here Student: I was tripping with a Ithacan: Why did you try I Ithacan: When was the first time you tried 'pot'? Student: I was 15½ years old and was very lonely. I never brilliant individual. had never opium? touched liquor until I came to been "guided" before and he Student: Opium is not a stand­ . Student: July 4,. 19~7. A friend of mine from work gave the first time I smoked grass. it to me. That day It .didn't affect me at all. I couldn't tell school, but my first month and turned me on to acid as a total ard hallucenogen nor is it an up Ithacan: Why did you try it? whether was high or not. A general observation that I've a half here, I drank to be with experience and not as just a trip- drug. 'It puts you in a trance and I Student: I had been friendly ping agent. transports your head into a world made is that anyone who takes 1t doesn't usually get bombed people. As I met people with by it the first time. with a crowd that smoked for similar interests, this discon­ Ithacan: Have you ever had any of Kubla Khan. There is a great about a year. Frankly, I was a Ithacan: What made you try it? tinued and I haven't had a drink bad trips? deal of time and sense distortion; everything occurs in slow motion. Student: Well, first of all, last summer there were a lot of "teenybopper". since. Did you enjoy alcho. Student: By the end of my Coming off opium, though, is articles in newspapers about it. I read some medical journals Ithacan: What is your defini­ Ithacan: 1 tion of a "teenybopper"? Sophomore summer, had had usually accompanied by nausea, about it and from what I've read it seemed the safest and least hol? two bad trips. An acid trip is dizzyness, and headaches which harmful way of getting high and also the most rewarding. Student: A lonely individual, Student: No. I have no desire comprised of many experiences. can persist up to two days. who is trying desperately to for it or respect for its effects. Ithacan: How often have you used it since then? After taking acid, you may be ilp Ithacan: What is you opinion of . Stude1it: During the summer about six times and at school, identify himself with a particu­ It produces loud and coarse ani­ for several days. down and/or addictive drugs? lar set of peers. Today, we call this year, on .an average of two or three times a week. mals, quite frequently. Grass is Ithacan: Please describe a bad student: The only "hard''. drug these people, "plastic hippies". a subtle silk thread. It produces lthac.9.n: Why do you continue to take it? trip, brfofly. I have ever had is-opium and that a quiet intimacy with an en­ Ithacan: Can you remember Student: I saw a couple mak- occurred only once. I don't think ~tude11t: The main rea~on_ is because it feels good. Instead the first time you smoked pot? vironment. of gomg to th<: p~b and drinking beer and gaining weight, I'd Ithaca: Let's move on to your ing love and I started to cry be- they are worth the risks of physi­ Student: Yes. It was during the cause I felt suddenly as if I were cal harm. much rather sit m a room with a _bunch of my friends and first experience with LSD. summer, at night. Everyone lit being locked in a cage with ani- Ithaca: Would you agree that s!11oke pot. First of a!I, it relaxes you and secondly conversa­ up and passed it around. It's fun­ Student: By the time I got to mals. I began to convulse and your use of pot paved the way to tions come muc~ easier and arc more rewarding while high. ny because I didn't get high that LSD, I was smoking grass about got "hung up" on the convulsing other drugs? Anyway I take it two or thre1: times a week, mainly on the night. twice a week. I'd seen people I until it developed into something Student: Yes. Since grass is il­ ~eekends; before a date, a moy1c or before listening to records m my own room. Ithacan: Did you smoke much knew before and after acid and l couldn't control. I felt as if legal, the individual in order to that summer? it had done a definite good. It someone was strangling me and I obtain it must deal with the un­ ltlzacan: \Vhat is a "pot high"? Student: No more than once bad cleared up a lot of their couldn't breathe. There was a derworld, where stronger -drugs Stud~nt_: Firs_t of all there is no one high on pot. As I said every two to three weeks. This emotional hangups. tremendous amount of. pressure exist in abundance. before the first time that someone takes it he usually can't continued until the summer after After my first trip, I felt a re­ on my chest and in an attempt Ithaca: Why would you advo- tell whc~her hc:s high or_ not. The only si~gle characteristic my high school graduation. It spect for the tremendous power to relieve it I began to laugh un- cate the legalization of pot? I c'.1n thmk of m a_ pot h1~h is that it's not physical. It's not was too much trouble getting of the drug. I realized that a per­ til this became my ,r- Acldhead ... LSD taker signs, trees, poles, become very distinct. No matter how far cate the legalization of LSD? Blow your mind . . . an over- aw~y I feem_ to be able to touch them. I love to listen to records whdf I m high because you feel as if you are a part of the Student: No. There are too whelming revelation m_us1~. Every beat and every note that's. hit seems to be hit many dangers to it, especially Bread, Gold ...· money w1thm yourself. when it is used for indiscriminant Bringing me down, Smashing kicks. I do believe that it has taking off a high l~lzacan: Some peopl_e say that it's not necessary to get high -proven itself valuable in the Cat_. . . guy to en1oy the beauty of hfe and nature, do you agree? LLIQUOR STORIE treatment of alcholics, in psycho. Chick, Bird ... girl Student: They're right! If a person can't enjoy a water­ logy, in mental retardation and Cop out . . . forsake things or fall, trees, a sunset for what they _arc he's not going to enjoy other fields. The book, lljlyself people it un~er pot anym?re. _Nature has its own beauty and it needs 506 W. State St. and I is a perfect example of this. Crib, Pad ... home, apartment !lo stimulants to bnng 1~ out. However, there are certain feelings Ithacan: What is your opinion Flower pow~r ... carry and give !n t~e human body which under pot are made known. The ob- of "speed"? flowers for love 1ect1~e beauty of nature is just that--objective. The beauty of AR 2-3678 Student: I have little respect Freak out . . . go into another pot 1s the ~cauty of the individual--of yourself. Under pot you for it. It does give a very pleas- world don't say "isn't the _sky beautiful," but rather, "doesn't the sky feel beautiful." It's a subjective experience. ing high. It's an alert, crystal Grass, Pot, Mary Jane, Acapulco clear high. On.. speed, everything gold . . . M_nrijuana Ithacan; What's the going rate for pot in Ithaca? follows a logical order and it's Groovy ... great Student: There are many kinds of pot. There's green, red gold, and black, to name a few. For all l know, there's probabl; 11 nice to be in a world that's so Guide . . . Experienced user ·act- Spfr.itQJ1aODy yea.oils CU1nfcoO ordered. However, coming down ing as chaperone on trip man:f more. About two weeks ago we bought an ounce of green from speed is a drag. You're ir- and 1t. cost twelve bucks. A pound of black runs about a hun- ·' ~ ritable, jumpy, intolerant and Hung up ... A total focusing on 11 dred ~1xty dol!ars in Gr~en~vich Village. Usually pot is sold at midlrrooglhit ou» weelkeu»dls. a down to anyone near you. It is some~ng until all other things set prices, a _mckel bag 1s f)ve dollars worth of pot. Depending physically harmful and addictive. . are eclipsed. on the qu~hty, the quantity of pot varies in price. For ex­ Ithacan: What effects does a In gear ... with it ample, you d get lesS' gold for five d?llars than you would green, .., It's not my bag ... not for me because _gold 1s more power:ful and 1t takes less to get high on. Nltty gritty . . . down to brass For a nickel bag, I pers~>nally get between eight to ten highs. IBROOKS (4) tacks It/wean: Pot seems to be a lot cheaper than alcohol but DTHACA COJL/l.lEGIE Out of sight ... really good what about the difference in effects? ' PHARMACIES Sock it to mo ... give it to me . Stu.dent: That's tru,c because on a nickel bag you may get Dnnsbruck Ski /Package straight e1_ght highs, where you II spend on booze ten dollars in one (THE~E'S BOUND.TO BE Speed . . . methadrine n!ght. ~s far as I'm c~ncerned,- alcohol is the worst and most,.,-.,·, d1sgu_stmg way to get bombed'. You drink too much and you Dec. 28 to Jan. 712, 1968 Straight . . . A non-user of drugs One Near Youl) get ,s1ck,and a hangove~ the next day. You can hardly remem­ Taking off a high ... sobering up FREE DELIVERIES ber what h~ppencd while you were high. ·Sleeping is a torture 7 Nights in Innsbruck Turn me on ... excite me when you first put your head to the pillow, you get nauseous. IF YOU'LL PHONE Up tight ... nervous, insecure Under pot you remember wha~ happened and you just love to 7 Nights in Kmbuhel AR 2 - 3341 What a trip ... experience sleep. You wake up the next morning feeling great. It relaxes Where it's at ... how things are Please turn to page 12 $348.0«ll for General Auto Repairs Rate includes: RT Air Fare, Hotel Accommoc!lationn, PICTURE FRAMING Breakfast, Transfers. Based on 15 or more traveling to­ ART SUPPLIES CLIFF'S GARAGE also DRIVE-IN gether. Seneca Way !ELECTRIC SHAVER SERVICE Phone AR 2-8185 FOR INFORMATION CONTACT and COURT AT MEADOW TYPEWRITER SERVICE Phone 273-1111 Motor Tune Up it's the Open 7 Days a Week Wheel Balance 11 a.rri. 'til 1 a.m. 207 N. Aurora St. ITIHAC.A AIRT & FRAMIE SHOP AR 3-3073 - Friday and Saturday Brake and Ignition Service AR 3·6321 308 E. SENECA ST. AR3-4604 · 'til 2 a.m. THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 11 . MOVIE REVIEW Hl99ledy-Pl99ledy Continued Time present and time past by Richard Gerdau Arc both perhaps present in time future, WfEDNESDAY, NOV. Y5 And time future contained in time past. i In keepi~g with this issue's. theme of drugs, it is worth. If all time is eternally present THE EGBERT UNION BOARD I while to look m retrospect at a film from last week. Parents of All time is unredeemable. WILL SPONSOR THE FIRST l)collegc students, who do not want their sons and daughters to Datta, Dayadhuam, Damyata. experiment with psychedelic drugs should strongly__ urge them It has stopped raining. AdlmoDDos'll:O'OJ'fi:DVe /Foo-m to sec Roger Corman's film on LSD, entitled, with marvelous The stillness of night originality, The Trip. Anything that seems that arrel .•• that it would be.. nice I'll be taking anything stronger. home. if Kelly washed at home once in Ithacan: Have you or will you recommend pot to any of Happiness is-watching the one a while . • . that Steffi likes the your classmates? you love enter the room. pub management • . • that Jack Student: If I knew someone who was interested in it, I Happiness is discovering your Gallagher is the- slowest waiter

would definitely recommend it to him, and I would also recom­ name has been left off the proc- at Coddington's . . • that the ad- r O •• mend it to President Johnson, Ho Chi Minh, and a few other tor duty list. ministration is happy now that '- world leaders. Perhaps if they sat down and got blasted with Happiness is a LONG hot bath. Diego Sequi has gone practice pot they wouldn't send other people out to get blasted wih Happiness is getting your pay teaching . . . that the Pumpkin bullets. check a week early. Carolers were out in force . . . Happiness is knowing your class that donations of pledges are to is cancelled tomorrow. be sent to the IC Radio.TV Dept. WI CB-TV Happiness is going South for for the Ithaca Bandstand show Christmas- vacation. . . . that the PE Dept. is helping THURSDAY NIGHT Happiness is having the due date the Canadian Brain Drain . • . for your term paper moved back that you can't win in Sin City or SCHEDUL.E two weeks. Washington • • . that the Ideal 6:45 p.m. Perspective--film serie~ Happiness is having the marking History Student of the Week 7:00 Newsline: Ithaca-local news review and week­ curve in your favor. Award for sleeping .thru two end weather Happinesa is finding today lietter exams, cutting two, and miss- .,r-7" 7:15 Sportsman's Comer-Ithaca College football coach than yesterday. ing two papers goes to Chuck Butterfield talks with host Don Berman about the HAPPINESS IS WHEREVER YOU Light. IC-AIC game. Film highlights LOOK FOR IT! 7:30 Quad-Ithaca College and Cornell campus news, Ruth Samuels editorials, features, and interviews. . to the lack of coordinated leader­ 8:00 The Scene--''The Banned" is this week's feature ship that permitted the radical group. fringe groups (Black Nationalists, 8:30 Infinite Horizons--a special film series. and The National Liberation D.C. MARCH Front) to get out of hand. Editor: Last Thursday, I bad the op- Prof. Gordon, of Cornell, ex­ A WELCOME BACK portunity to go to the discussion pressed my feelings exactly when he told the audience that now is COMPLElE The Ithaca College Forensic group at Cornell called: "Re. the time to reach the middle class MUSICAL SERVICE Association would like to wel- flections on Washington." I am sure most of the LC. students of America. I feel that since there come back to our campus knew about this meeting since the is a growing sentiment in Ameri­ .... ca about the Draft and the War 1 recently married Linda Greven, campus was covered with posters formerly Linda Sardella. We announcing this event. we must shave off our beards, HICKEY S dress and a1:t respectably, and MUSIC Sl"ORE know that Linda, a senior I knew before I went up there go out into middle class America speech therapy major, will. have that I did not agree with the war and middle aged America to ex­ __ 201 South Tioga St. in Vietnam, nor did I agree with many years of happiness with her the draft policy now in practice plain our view and objections 'to Ithaca AR 2-8262 husband John Greven, a former in the United States. I went up the draft institution and to the Ithaca College student. there to see how far the "New war.' Our cause will die in the dormitories, beer halls, and cof­ Left" ideas and my ideas coin­ r------.a.------cided on action that should be fee houses of college campuses taken. unless we get middle aged Ameri­ There were quite a number of ca, our own parents, to under­ people there. Sad to report there stand, accept, and back our move­ were not many from LC. present. ment. With their help another Each speaker voiced his pro and/ confrontation with Washington can only bring success. or con ideas as to the effective­ ness of the march on Washington. Of course, middle aged Ameri­ iMost of the people, myself includ­ ca will never come over to our ed, agreed that the march would side when the New Left move­ modified Oriental style SMOOTH DATES have achieved much more if it ment is run by a bunch of radi­ cals such as the National Libera­ start at the Kent. For a sparkling evening the gracious · bad remained non-violent. The obi tie back sheath reason it became violent was due tion Front who display Viet Old English atmosphere is perfect. The ,mood at the Cong flags, and the ffippies who Kent is just right for a quiet, intimate dinner: The in­ A new Junior fashion • sheath styled rayon crepe, arrive on the scene "too high" to comparable food adds a luster to your evening. Dinner get ~nything across to the public. very simply t9ilored with the Oriental inspired obi tie served from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. daily except Sunday. Pizza & Subs Spaghetti & Meatballs This movement must be taken back. Black or navy with contrasting trim. Sizes 7 to 15. late suppe_r selections available 9:30 to 11: 15 p.m. over by the liberals. People like " Steaks, Hot Dogs Sausageburgers me and you, who both have feel­ the foods that make ings and a stake in what the $16 United States of tomorrow will 1 Junior Dresses, PIRR0 S become. How about it 'J.C.? Are Second Floor FAMOUS you ready to get off your apa­ Rimt thetic asses and do something, Speedy D~=~ to Your State & Tioga Sts. S T"E AK H OU SE even on a local or personal level? I am. Phone AR 2·5000 109 So h A 5 hh Ny Phon From 11 a.m. to 2 a.m .. ut urora' t., aca, . . e 2!2-1618- 404 W. State AR 2•1950 Respectfully, ·------<:"r------" I._· ______, ,______Tom Dangler! THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 13

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2Y~ CJ 59(6,TI THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 14 2nd&3rd Floor Chaplain's Comer Houston Says! A Letter Fro,n Opened !by ~he Ithaca College Chaplains ''This Is A·New Miss Mary Campfield, Ithaca This Week: The Rev. George Clarkson A Friend College Librarian, announces that If we accept the dictum that distr~st is a mark of imma!ur­ Generation by Frank Scoblete the second and third floors of the library will be open Sunday eve­ ity, then we could also say that ~rus.t 1s a hallmark of relation­ " I'm sitting in a car in the faculty lot at Wagner College, ning following Thanksgiving for ships between mature adults. This simple _prece_pt has !Duch. to Of YOUt h New York. The view of the Manhattan skyline is beautiful, more say to our academic life and some of our ex1sterit1al relat1onsh1ps. Reprinted from the Syracuse beautiful than any other night I can remember. the convenience of students. The recent debate at Parent's Weekend brought many of these The library will open at 5 p.m., Herald Journal. Nancy, my pretty, cute date is taking a deep drag from a factors to the fore. The forthright statement from the Ithacan Sunday, Nov. 26, and will close at by Ruth about new paterns of academic life on our campus is to. be Montgomery joint of marijuana. Her eyes are closed as she forces as much 10. The book circulation desk will w ASHINGTON _ Some cluck- smoke into her lungs as possible. She hasn't as yet noticed that be in operation. commended. But once in a while we hope that students might trust and respect faculty enough to entrust them wi.th the re­ ing congressmen and other adults I'm writing-there, now she does. She's looking inquiringly at sponsibility of drawing up course structures and planning how to who think that the younger gen- me hut doesn't wish to speak. I guess she doesn't want to ruin present a particular subject. After all, these faculty members eration has gone to the dogs may the wonderful feelings she's having by asking any questions. EARL'S SWAP SHOP have years of post-graduate work to their credit and some be reassured by Dr. Jean Hous- I take the joint from her- hands {no sense wasting any ton,· associate professor of phil?s- of it. Acapulco Gold is just too good to waste!). I cup my 539 W. State St. major attainments. They deserve some trust on the part of students who come here. ophy at Marymount (Catholic) hands about the joint and start inhaling in steady deep breaths. College and a director of the I can feel the smoke getting into my lun_gs. This is the second <> Perhaps the other side is also true. What does this say about Foundation for Mind Research in joint we've shared and both of us are fairly high as it is. And a professor who insists on an oath from a student, who really New York. what a pleasant high at that. My head feels light and my eyes Clocks - Watches does not trust the student and his intellectual honesty? This This outstanding educator who seem to be focusing miles away at the distant lights of the~ Ithaca Cal. - Guns matter of trust says something about one's right of privacy has been engaged in psychedelic Verrazano Bridge. But the bridge seems close. I feel as if I'm in a dormitory. Residents of the dorm ought to be trusted in a research says that what we are almost on top of it. Coins & Supplies mature atmosphere enough so that their dorms are not searched. witnessing is a mass revol_ution of Nancy is smiling. Her long brown hair is hanging loosely New & Used Items hamper the wholesome atmosphere that ought to pervade a col­ youth against' our urbanized and over her shoulders. She lets out a little sigh of delight. I can lege or university. It is a mark of mature adults that they may mechanized society. tell by her look th4t she's soaring. I can't help but smile myself ''This is a new evolutionary at what pleasant sensations we're having. be trusted. To be haunted by this spirit of mistrust is to pre­ pattern", Dr. Houston says. 'We This second joint is finished but my car is filled with the vent the development of the mature adult. are living in the 20th century smoke. I make it a point never to open the windows when SUDS YOUR This communiy on this campus is a microcosm of a macro­ technologically, but our inner smoking grass. Hell! You can sit for hours just breathing the DUDS cosm beyond us. We live in a world filled with mistrust. One lives are still encased in the 17th delicious smoke into your lungs. must be realistic enough to be "wise as serpents" but unless century's narrow view of space The wir:idows are a little fogged hut it doesn't matter. Our we can find grounds for trust, there is little hope left. The ac­ and time. The last frontier is in- eyes and mmds seem to be floating somewhere above the car Webster's Laundry ward, and it is this looking-within on a drifting white cloud. and Dry Cleaners complishments of the United Nations are continually based on that has given rise to the youth- a spirit of mutual trust. So here at Ithaca College, only as we ful drug cults, zen groups and I have to laugh when I think of the two of us sitting here • 'd can find a basis for trust and mutual respect will it be possible LSD 'rides.' blowit1_g grass. Two little criminals disobeying the law of the Samo Day Service an ''The strange new dances with land. I'll bet every time the joint was passed .from me to her I Delivery for us to grow into the academic community that some of us their pulsating lights, over-load- committed a felony. Gee, I guess I should be in prison .. hope we will become. ing of sounds, and jiggling in It does seem a pity that pot is illegal. First of all, from what Free Pickup & Delivery space like the ancient puberty I've read, this stuff is non-habit formmg, safe, etc. Add to that Forensics To rites are inducing an altered state inexpensive and non-hangoverish (non-liangoverish? boy I '11/IU.ft Basement of Dorm 12 1 of consciousness which dissovles ~e sailing!) and you wind, up with-:-what? Who. knows? Perhaps GEE S SPORT SHOP Host in Debate the ego boundaries." liquor manufacturers don t want this stuff legalized. It may ruin In by 10 a.m. • Back by 210 W. State St. The Ithaca College Forensic Dr. Douston and her husband, their industry. 4p.m. 273-6971 Association will be host to sevet"al Dr. R. E. L. Masters, co-authored· After smoking pot, booze just doesn't appeal to me. Hell! schools, in the Finger Lakes the recent book, Varieties of get blasted on booze and what happens?-you have to wipe up <> 0 Guns - New & Used region, in a Parliamentary De­ Psychedelic Experience, which the fallout! But get blasted with grass and baby you're flying. bate. This Debate will be held on has already become a classic in COIN OP LAUNDRY o Ammunition the field. Sleep comes easy, and boy do you ever dream. It's just too Monday, November 13. at 7:30 Having lectured at 40 colleges cool to imagine. 0 Reloading Equipment p.m. in Union Room #5. The during the past nine months, Dr. Nancy is humming a little tune. Sl1e's a very pretty girl, AND DRY CLEANING o Quality Fishing Tackle schools that have been invited are Cornell University, Syracuse Uni­ Houston says of campus youth: models cloth_1,s for some big fashion magazine. It's her grass Ithaca Shopping Plaza o Gun Supplies versity, Elmira -College, Harpur "Hundreds of thousands of young , · · Sh · k d · f people today are engaged in a weh re usmg. e pie e 1t up rom some pusher in the Village. College, Cortland, and LeMoyne. revolution- · to achieve reality S e's a nice kid-but if her parents knew what she was doing Possible topics are: through inner exploration. The I doubt if they would think so. Come to think of it mine would 1) Doughnuts should not have religious instinct, which is as be ashamed of me. Taking drugs and all that is the worst form a hole! necessary as procreation or food, of human degradation to some folks. 2) Saturday Night should be has been repressed for three As I close my eyes I seem to be leaving my body. There Sexless! hundred years, but the top is about to blow. There is an ex- seems to be a force within me that wishes to fly away. What 3) English is a ridiculous lang- otic movement afoot to turn in- a groovy feeling, I feel like a mystic communicating with the uage! ~ ward to find greater communion absolute spirit. The actual topic will be an­ and a new consciousness." Some people are sitting in bars now, loading their bellies nounced at the night of the De­ Dr. Houston believes tbat out and blood streams with alcohol. I wonder how they'll fee) in the bate. Parliamentary Debate fol­ of this- altered state of conscious- lows parliamentary order, but in ness a new phychology is de- morning? I know how I'll feel. Awaking will be like just step- a humorous vein with heckling veloping, which "had to come." ping out of a hot shower. My body will be totally relaxed and permitted. Spectators are wel· Through LSD, ritualistic modem my head will be sleepy but clear. The day will seem_ beautiful come, and the event itself is dances and inward searching she and breakfast will taste just great. opened to anyone at Ithaca Col­ feels that today's youth is "being I'm at the h~ight of my high now and I wish to ~alk lege. turned on to something other than self, to a communal sharing around. I'U continue this some other time. The night is so that we have not witnessed in beautiful. Too beautiful for Nancy and I not to become a part two hundred years." of it. The air smells so beautiful ... I'm feeling wonderful. • DELICIOUS CHAR•QLO To Keep Your Spirits Up This commitment to sharing BROILED STEAKS PHONE AR 2-2111 bas been outwardly manifested • BANQUET FACILITIES in the civil rights movement, the • TWO LAROE eace marches, the volunteering "For many thousands of years DINING ROOMS H& Hliquor & Wines Dr. Houston believes that the ===.!llil!:=11== for peace corps and VISTA. man underwent rituals of death "be-ins" in Manhattan's central • FREE PARKING LOT A w.sENECA Dr. Houston, who has taught and rebirth, rituals of transition. • ECONOMICAL LUNCHES 218 E. State St. park and the peace demonstra- ' philosophy, psychology and com­ Ours is the only civilization since • CLOSED WEDNESDAYS Ithaca, N. Y. tions throughout the country help parative religion at Columbia the Renaissance that has _not to satisfy this deep-felt need for 602 W. BUFFALO ST. S W.STATE Your Closest Liquor University and the new school for known them, except for certain ritual, that man's long-repressed :=J]~I==''= social research helped to explain ceremonies like the Catholic Con­ religious instincts are beginning =~11-r.1 Store to Campus AR 2-9521 the "mass revolution" in these finnation and the old-style Jew­ to stir again, and that they need terms: ish bar mitzvab. But just as a bestirring. bird knows how to go south in­ Regretting the bad name that stinctively, so I suspect that there LSD has acquired because of its is a long frustrated need in man misuse by cultists and campus IROBlEIRT S. BOOTHROYD AGENCY, DNC. for liturgy and ritual. groups, she says: "the politicians' "At a football game the young response was inevitable. It is cur­ I virgins dance around · the field; rently mandatory for a con-"'-', the young warriors carry the holy gressman to be against the cult­ SouncD Onsurance for !Every Need egg through the tomb of the goal ists and I.SD as it is for them to Carefully Written posts while everyone screams. It be in favor of virtue and mother­ is a desperate, disguised ritual. hood." Conscientiously Serviced Perhaps we should return. to the old rites of death, resurrection and transition if we are to avoid Spring Semester BROKERS a holocaust."- Changes Due Jan. -15 Robert S. Boothroyd - Class '24 Announcement from Treasurer's Robert L. Boothroyd - Class '60 0 Don't get caught short, Office: Henry G. Kaiser - Class '52 at the last minute! Students are reminded that all 0 tuition, fee and other charges for Winterize' your car nowl the Spring '68 semester must be 0 PHONE 272 ~ 8100 Buy your snow tires settled on or before registration now, beat the shortage day (January 15, 1968) as speci­ of stockl -fied in the general regulations 312 IE. Sia11:e S~. Bthacc;a, N.Y. appearing in the college cataiog. Floreck Esso Service Any financing arrangements ' "We Welcome Your Inquiry' should be settled in advance of 507 S. Meadow St. registration to eliminate the need .Ithaca Phone 272-7606 for prolonged waiting in lines on Registration Day. THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 1 O, 1967, PAGE 15 Odd Bodkin·§ The fforld of ffheels A (fllJ S~Ott1' '{!A~S .. N0lll,6ADl<1DS ARE: .. lJJl'\IGH MGANS If' ... i\U. Of WH1,1-t By JACK GEDNEY J\'10, KIDS WHO ,AJ,..J.G'D '''JUV~NI\.€: v'OHNN\f ~e.A1-S fRoM LUIJ,..!, ~VtNf\/Al,I.,'/ ANTI-SMOG: The Billion Dollar Boondoggle - the Federal M15St:HA,JGD D~UNQO~Nr~ II 1'tie. fftUIT SfAND, We' MAK~ ~HNN'i A Government has decided that it should play a significant role w,it~ S1MP1,.I./ AND IN)fG:~D oi: MOV~ lt'Jfo HIS l!.~N·UVIN~, in the technical design of automobiles, and like so many other r SAD !{IDS U,ijl) ~fANKIN~ 1HeM J we NW:iH60RH00D ANO H~A!.ftN, NOAA4-Z., areas in which our government becomes involved the results HAD1"o 6~ S11JD'11fie IN~1AU. PROPtR R~D-Sf...OOD,S:P I are s~mething less.than id~al. The automobile plays a significant SPANl<~I) tl ~NVtRoNME:N-r s~wgRs, HtAr, M~RICAtJ part m creating air pollution, and to cut down the emission of WHIGH GAfJSf O AND J,..l~HfJN'1,.'fHUS fit~,,.. 1~,e.~J! p.ollutants from autos the government has flatly stated autos 1H~IR !\/ IMPROVll'JC:i 1tl~ will not produce more than 50 parts per million of harmful con­ l)G:t,INQUENOl ll ~!iVIRONM~Nf, Wt taminants ( carbon dioxide, unburned hydro-carbons, etc.) in IMPROV~ 'JOHNN'/.. t,1-z.. exhaust emissions. There is nothing wrong with this statement, Di.lO'NEu.,. except that: 1) it does not say how this will be done, 2) it does not set up any inspection of these devices to check their effec­ tiveness, and 3) it will cost the American motoring public $600 ' million dollars this year alone. The companies have attempted to meet the air contami­ nation specifications by two different basic methods, both of them unsatisfactory. The manual shift cars from American makers will feature an air pump which will inject fresh air under pressure into the exhaust valve port to provide for more complete combustion. This system takes 5-7 horsepower to run the pump, cuts gas mileage by 10%, and increases underhood temperatures by some fifty degrees, shortening the useful life of many heat affected accessory parts ( fan belts, etc.). The second method of anti-smog is to apply a C.A.P., or Cleaner Air Package, to a car. This system, pioneered by Chrysler Corporation, involves usually a carburetor pre-heat chamber, a leaner carburetor setting, and a retarded distributor spark at idle. It lacks a few of the drawbacks of the air pump system, but still cuts horsepower and gives a rough idle. The only good feature of the C.A.P. system is that it can quickly, and easily be removed from the engine to restore it to proper, non anti-smog conditions. The only long range solution to the problem is that of the Ford Motor Company. Ford feels that the air pump and J ACS Students C.A.P. systems are only stop gap measures to meet the existing, unenforceable regulations, and that thi:; only workable soluti_on is to design a "clean" engine. The new Ford 429 Thunderbird Beat !Faculty V-8 is the first example of such a workable solution, without drawbacks, and Ford hopes to supplant all its big V-8's within On 2nd AnnuaD two years with the new clean series, 351, 393, 429, and 462 cubic inch V-8's. In the meantime the public is saddled with Football Meet almost useless devices to the tune of 600 million a year in direct expense. The weather hung threatening­ De Gaulle's done it again: President Charles De Gaulle, of ly over M lot Saturday as a ener­ France, will stoop to anything to humiliate the Americans. De getic, crafty team of Student Af­ Gaulle's reasoning is that Le Mans is a French race, Matra is a filiates of the American Chemi­ government backed auto racing concern, and American Fords cal Society met head on in a have won Le Mans two years running ... so bar the American Fords from the event, at least technically. Next year at Le Mans touch football game with a the largest cubic inches allowed will be 3 litres, or 183 cubic tough, determined team of sci­ inches, in the sports prototype class. This ruling by the F.I.A. ence faculty members. This was (International Automobile Federation) makes the $100,000 the second annual grudge battle Ford G.T.'s 220 mph museum pieces. Henry Ford's answer to to take place. this bit of international snubbery: "We've proved we're the The contest shaped up as a best.'' Helpful hint: A definite aid to winter starting won't cost real defensive battle, mainly be­ anyone a penny. When shutting a car off at night, rev the engine cause the offense could never at a moderate speed for a few seconds and then turn it off with­ get organized. The first score of out allowing it to slow to idle speed. After shutting it off prime the game came as "Stretch" the carburetor by depressing the accelerator once. This process Bernard bobbled a wet ball in the might give a weak battery JUSt enough extra to start on a cold end zone and Tom "the Ace", Ithaca morning. Next week: Road test of the 343 Javelin SST ... also known in football circles as the 98 lb. chemical monster be­ est energy level of the end zone. and "the little terror" Sadoff in cause of his vast bulk, slipped The extra point was lucky but the secondary flatfooted. Dan through unnoticed to tag him for good and the faculty led 7-2 at "Y.A." Zeichner threaded the a safety. Then late in the half the half. needle to the evasive Tom "the "Stretch" redeemed himself by The second half brightened for Ace" Dangieri for the game win­ hitting "the Tiger" Smith with a the students, when a sneaky down ning touchdown. This puts the quantum jun;ip pass into the high- and out pattern caught "Stretch" Affiliates one up on the faculty since last year's game ended in a 6-6 tie. Both teams adjourned to the pub where the losers bought and waited for their day to come.

Call Colonel Sanders --order a THE UNION Barrel O'Chicken at $5.25; Snack Bar will be open un­ ½ Pt. Pt. Qt. til 11 p.m. on Sundays start­ a Bucket O'Chicken, $3.95 Bean Salad 25¢ 45¢ 85¢ or a Thrift Box at $2.39 ing November 10. This will Cole Slaw 25¢ 45¢ 85¢ be on a trial basis. Macaroni Salad 25¢ 45¢ 85¢ ~ Plug in th.e coffee Baked Beans 25¢ 45¢ 85¢ Gravy 25¢ 40¢ 75¢ There is no card playing Mashed Potatoes 20¢ 40¢ 75¢ allowed in the Union Snack Hop in the car and pick up your French Fries 25¢ 50¢ 75¢ Bar weekdays between 11 :30 waiting order.,,,- and 1 :30 to allow s~ating for Wet-naps, napkins, plastic forks included. faculty and staff who wish to Fish/Shrimp Dinners Also-Fresh Cooked Office work and modern living demand good eye­ use the facilities. & Delicious. Relax and enjoy your guests - sight. Don't strain your health by neglecting your -OK Sharon your finger lickin' good Kentucky sight. SUPPORT YOUR Fried Chicken - and the biscuits 704 W. Buffalo Sil'. and honey and the good, Have Your Eyes Examined Regaj.ady ••• SNACK BAR Ithaca, N. Y. , homemade salads Have a skilled eye specialist !Phone 273 - 8444 examine your eyes soon, to be sure that close work isn't straining y~ eyes. Whatever your profess1ofic for 41 14 , good vision is a requisite. WE FIX SUNDAY DINNER SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Contemporary and

and rememember ••• Early American

. ' ' Payments may be divided tr ·. . '. ·~~1·,·,:r.1 Gifts in Iron .s11it your individ11aJ budget visit K~ntucklf fried Ckick~tt \~l " !R ll..P lO>@ILf? !Hl 8~ TIHl!E DRON SIHIOIP - --- ...... :.f .. / ; 201 E:. State St., Ithaca, N.Y. 726 W. Green St . ,,______----.1..!----- THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 16 Dark Horses Remain Undefeated Bombers Defeat Bridgeport in Close Gam.e _by James San Marco Coming off a tough loss at the I.C.-FG Bonney, 33. hands of C. W. Post, the Bombers B.U.-Mosiej 1 run (Mosiej kick). displayed a great deal of poise STATISTICS in coming back to defeat Bridge­ First Downs 19 15 port 10-7 at the loser's field. The Rushing Yardage 302 128 victory left the Bombers with a Passing Yardage 44 99 3-4 record while the Purple Passes 3-7 12-19 Knights now exhibit a 2-4 mark. Intercepted by 2 0 It's what was termed "a real Punts 432.4 7-33.0 barn burner" by Head Coach Jim Fumbles lost 4 Senior Chuck Shirmer of Sauger• Butterfield. The Bombers played 0 Yards penalized 49 45 ties, N.Y., will play in his final perhaps their best game, both varsity game' this weekend offensively and defensively, of -INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS against AIC. For his play against -- _. the year. Offensively, they rushed TEAM LEADERS Bridgeport, a game in which he for over 300 yards, and while the Net by T. I. Hulk The Dark Horses - 1967 MIAA Champs made 21 tackels, and did the passing attack was not quite de­ Rushing Att. Gain Ave. punting for Ithaca, he was vastating, percentage wise it Last Tuesday the Dark Horses Giroux 122 641 5.3 named to the ECAC Division II showed an improvemeiit with 3 successfully defended their cham­ Howell 144 571 3.9 All-Star Team of the Week. pionship of IC intramural foot­ AIC To Be completions on 7 atempts for 44 Pass Receiving No. Yds. T.D. ball with a 6-0 victory over Delta yards and No interceptions. Indi­ Guenther 17 129 O Kappa before one of the largest vidual standouts include Quarter­ Punting No. Yds. Ave. backs Scooter Giroux and Frank STAMPITI crowds ever to witness an intra­ Deciding Factor In Schirmer 28 917 32.7 11"1111111AOI Slattery, HB Ron Howell, and mural game. Scoring TD P.A.T. F.G. TOT. ltBGULAR The Horses only score came on Kicker Dave Bonney. Giroux set Howell 7 O O 42 MODl!I. the last play of the game, as Bombers Record a new I.C. single season rushing Armstrong 3 o o 18 ,. Quarterback Gary Walos flipped mark by piling up 103 yards for Bonney O 11 2 17 IU.1DT.,.a a four yard pass to Tight End ITHACA - For the second mark of 997 is only 52 yards away a season total thus far of 641 Passing Atts. Comp. Yds. Int. TD ...... lllll!SIIUCtllLI ... .- l'OCIIU m-...... Bob Klausner, to cap a 79 yard time in three years, American In­ from the "Scooter" apd he should yards. The old mark was set in Slattery 68 20 205 7 O llm,de1-it•~---···~·-:r. drive, one yard short of the en­ ternational holds the key to a make it barring an injury. Last 1964 by Len Mulich with 573 Giroux 41 11 157 5 O •are to~~ :sip ODilr. • level of success for Ithaca Col­ paatap ar MadllaS ..... AM tire length of the field. week, he set a new one season yards. Frank Slattery, playing Punt Returns No. Yds. Ave. uJ•taz. lege football. mark of 641 yards when he only the first half, still managed ....._111..-.LSSSS ...... But as the score indicates, this Marangi 19 188 9.9 gained 103 yards in 24 carries to 89 yards on but 9 carries from TH•MOPPOO. year's championship contest was Two years ago the Bombers P.O. ... J.IIUa-= .... were 7-0 and aiming for the first erase the old record of 578. the QB position. Soph Halfback AnMrl.&. entirely a defensive battle, with Howell also totaled 89 yards in the Horses coming out on top. undefeated season in the School's Defensively, Butterfield was 24 carries. The play of the game, Skiing Begins The first time the Horses had history when A.LC. came in for enthused with the continued fine ,Beginning Monday afternoon at the season's finale. They made it however, belongs to Sophomore the ball they were thrown back play of linebacker Chuck Schir­ 4 p.m. the Ski Team will conduct with a solid 50-6 win. placekicker Dave Bonney. With Downin to their own goal line, where they mer (Saugerties). He also singled a preseason training . program. This year the objective is out Art Marangi (No. Valley only minutes remaining and the were forced to punt. Delta Kap­ score tied at 7-7, Bonney hit a Under the direction of Dean pa's first offensive attempt found something less spectacular but Stream), who picked off a pass Noun and Mr. Ralph Schotell of The very important - avoiding a on his own ten yard line with two clutch field goal from 33 yards the hands of Dark Horse Bob out to give the Bombers the mar­ the Union interested students Wolf who scrambled to the DK losing season for the first time minutes left in the game to save may meet at 4 p.m. in the rear of since 1957. the victory. gin of victory. Valley ten yard stripe before he was The final outcome, however, the Phys. Ed. building for a work­ The visiting Yellowjackets are The big man, though, had to tagged. The Kappa defense then was not decided until the final 2 out. --- went to work and held both not exactly in a good frame of be sophomore Dave Bonney (Ith­ The first meeting of the team House mind coming into the game. They aca), who stroked a 33 yard field minutes when Defensive back Horses again. The rest of the first Art l'r{arangi made a game saving took place Monday night in the were beaten 30-7 by undefeated goal with five minutes to go to half saw both teams exchange interception on the LC. 20 yard Terrace cafeteria. Coach Noun 801 West Buffalo the football sevei;al times with Central Connecticut last week, break a 7-7 tie. It was Bonney's presented a brief history and and many of these players were second success in three attempts line. Other defensive stalwarts no real scoring threat produced were Linebacker Chuck Schirm­ introduced the members of last on the last two clubs which suf­ this year. by either team. er, Middle guard Bill Horne, and year's team. Pete Burrell, cap­ Then late in the second half fered 50-6 and 40-6 defeats at If you add up A.LC.'s attempt tain, outlined the planned races French Fried the hands of Ithaca. "I don't End Jack Michalak, all Seniors Mac McCloskey hit Jim Cross to win their first ever against who will be closing out fine for the coming season. Present for a forty yard pass completion think I'll have any trouble get­ Ithaca, and the Bombers' attempt from last year's squad were Pete ting my boys up for this game," careers this weekend playing and gave Delta Kappa a first and to reach .500, you come up with a against AIC. I Gilpatric, Dave Higgins, and ONION RINGS Head Coach Carmen Salvucci re­ goal to go on the Horses' one total of good football this Satur­ AIC brings to the hill a com­ Geoff White along with Burrell. yard marker. On DK's first at­ marked. "They have 90 points day on South Hill Field. worth of incentive." pletely different team from the .------. Like You Never tempt to score Jeff Lane, 220 one that was destroyed by I.C. ~_. pound Dark Horse tackle, burst Coach Jim Butterfield's squad last year 40-6. This year's squad TOP OFF FALL Tasted Before ! made it possible to aim for a through to set Quarterback Me­ has three ingredients which it has WEEKEND Closkey for a ten yard loss. .500 mark when they toppled lacked in previous years, those DK's next three attempts could Bridgeport last Saturday evening, STAY OFIF being size, good personnel, and WITH PASTRIES 10-7. The Ithacans are ready and, only move the ball back to the depth. With a very strong defense Right Next Door ... original line of scrimmage, be­ according to Butterfield, "can FROM THE and an equally potent offense, VALLEY HOUSE cause of the tremendous effort of definitely win this game." AIC should turn out to be one of Willy Johnston, Dave Rosenthal, Their Bridgeport performance the better teams that I.e. has The Pastry Shop CARRY-OUT SERVICE and a host of other Dark Horse wasn't their best but they came !EXCEPT WITH played this year. , 113 N. Aurora St. Proving Every Day That defensivemen. This stand seeme~ up with several key plays, ran Ithaca College 7 O O 3-10 You CAN take it with you! to be the spark the other half of crazy for 302 yards, and showed SKIIS Bridegport O O O 7- 7 AR2-7272 the Horses (the offense) needed, a vastly improved passing de­ IC-Howell 1 run (Bonney kick). for after this stand, they steadily fense. moved the ball down the field to In the process, however, they paydirt. · may have lost their quarterback COMMENTS ON THE GAME .. . for the finale. Frank Slattery SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DH Captain Tom Corcoran, " .. . (Albany), a senior, called an ex­ the Horses are a team, it's not cellent game and had picked up Your Plumber or just the guys who score, bui it's 87 yards in 10 carries when he Heating Dealer the whole team!" ... Bob Wolf, suffered a dislocated· thumb in IFREE! FREIE! "Don't forget the defense, we the last minute_ of the first half. For Courteous and played the best game ever." ... "He may play," Butterfield Dependable Service DK Linebacker Charlie Miracle, said, "but he will be sore. I'll "A real good game." ...Pat Mc- have to wait for the doctor's re­ !Bus Service On Saturdays OnBy Y cann, "#*!!&-#:)" ... The port." HULL HEATING & Delta Kappa fans were numerous Paul Giroux (Peru) will step !PLUMBING INC. . . . The Dark Horses wish to in ii Slattery can't play. He'll 804 W. Seneca-St. thank their cheerleaders, THANX also be setting a new school AR 2-3550 Ithaca, N.Y. ED . .. when are the certificates career rus~ing record. The old to be awarded ... the Beer Bel­ leave Ithaca College (Student Union) 10:00 A.M. lies scored '8'.Congrads ... Pi r------, Lam said " ... this game reminds Cor. State & Tioga Sts. (downtown) 10:08 A.M. us of (some other game)" . . . Mike ''Rag" Cornwell, "I helped, CORNELL UNIVERSITY THEATRE Cornell (Flagpole - Fresh. Dorms) 10:15 A.M. and so did John." . . . I'd like Pleasant Grove Apartments to thank Mosh and Joel. Ben Jonson1 s 10:25 A.M. Arrive Triphammer Shopping Center 10:30 A~M. 1 IPRATT S leave Triphammer Shopping Ceatter 10:30 A.M. Flower Shop Schedule Repeated Every Hour Until 6:40 P.M. 205 N. Aurora St. Nov. 2-51 101 H -- 8:15 p.m. <> $1.50 Note ••• Last bus leaves Ithaca College at 4:00 p.m.

FLOWERS FOR All Wnllard Straight Ticket Office Last bus leaves Triphammer at 6:40 p.m. OCCASIONS University Theatre, Willard Straight Hall THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER 10, 1967, PAGE 17 On The Slate Winter Sports Ithaca Hosts Giroux Breaks by Gene Slater Add Teams I look for _the Colts and Jets to mee~ in this year's Super Sportsday On S R ho k owl Game with the Colts JUst destroying the Jets in that 18 "attle. Couldn't you just see Baltimore's Johnny Unitas going To Schedule November eason us 11.ng Mar ITHACA - The big story of take care of that task on Satur­ to work on the weak Jet secondary. One of the Colt's fine ITHACA - Several new teams rookies, _Ray ,;>erkins had s~me tough lu~k. Two weeks ago in a On November 18, from 1-4:00 Ithaca College football this year day. are part of the extensive Winter P.M., Ithaca College will play game with Minnesota Perkms got free _m th~ first quarter and is a little guy named Paul "He's got the perfect mixture Sports schedule announced today host to Cortland, Corning, and a was ~II a_lone_m thf: end zone where Umtas fired a pass to him. ("Scooter") Giroux, man on the of heart, ability, and stamina to by Ithaca College Athletic Direc­ Harpur Colleges in a Sportsday. move in a big way. be a great runner," Head Coach Perkins m his anxiety dropped the ball and was replaced in tor, Carlton J. Wood. the &ame by veteran Alex Hawkins who had a great day All I.e. women participating in Last week the Peru (N.Y.) resi­ Jim Butterfield said. "The thing catching 2 touchdown passes. Too bad Ray, but you can't In basketball, Colgate and the Intramural volleyball and bowl­ dent broke the I.C. season rush­ that amazes me is the way he con­ ing are eligible to sign up for make a mistake in the big times. University of Rochester replace ing mark of 578 yards. He went tinues to pick up yardage despite Salen State and Utica on the 25 these sports. A special modern out and gained 103 yard in the the fact that our opponents key • • • dance workshop will be conduct­ Speaking of unfortunate rookies, how about Denver's Floyd game slate, which includes 11 Ithacans' 10-7 win over Bridge­ their defenses on him. Our home games. ed by Miss Barbara Nash, guest passing game ha5 not been Little, who in Denver's first 7 games has yet to score a touch­ port to write the new mark of instructor from Syracuse Univer­ 641. strong, so the natural step is to down; _and is averaging only a little ove~ yards a carry. The hockey team, facing only He'll go even higher this ? sity. week when our team closes out watch Giroux." Could 1t be that Floyd has found out that It 1s harder for him their second season of varsity Anyone wanting information its 1967 seaon against A.I.C. at Giroux is more than a runner to run over the Pros than it was to knock over 19-year-old competition, have dropped Utica, about or wishing to help with the Ithaca. and a man with a new record. college kids when he was 25. Rutgers, and the University of ::> • • • Pennsylvania, while adding Ham­ organization of the Sportsday As a junior, Giroux is only 56 "He's the heart of our team," should contact Ginny Willetts, yards away from the career mark Butterfield added. "Without him, It seems that the trouble with the Knicks in their early ilton College, M.1.T., and Merri­ mack College. Sportsday Chairman. of 997 yards. He's expected to we would have been in big trou­ season slump is the lack of a solid leader. They have talent to ble this year." ·Eleven meets are on tap for bum, but they can't get organized. It may also be the Sports Giroux started the year at Illustrated cover jinx. the gymnastics and swimming quarterback and did a good job. teams, which will have m0st of • • • An old shouuter injury hampered The New York Yankees will experiment this year with their home meets in February. Challenge Round By Ben Retl$0 his passing, though, and Butter­ Bill Robinson. They ar~ thinking bf converting him into a third The Bomber wrestling squad field decided to switch him to baseman as. they ar~ m desperate need of an adequate third will open a 12 match season on I. What is the record for the most points scored in a hockey halfback two weeks ago. sacker. Robinson will be worked on at that position at the January 20th with traditional foe, game? "He responded with a profes­ Florida Instructional League. The Yanks have already had a Cortland State. The only change With five goals a~d thre~ as~ists, Maurice (Rocket) Rich­ sional job," Butterfield went on. terrific blow dealt to their infield this off season with the Naval on their roster finds Rochester "He not only runs better than drafting of shortstop prospect Jerry Kenney. Kenney was being Tech. replacing St. John Fisher. ard _set the mark of eight pomts m a_ game. The victims of his scormg splurge were the Detroit Red Wings in a game played in ever, but has blocked well and ~-;,roomed for next year's shortstop position but will now be lost All home events, with the ex­ caught several key passes." ·Brat least 2 years. Montreal on December 28, 1944. Bert Olmstead also of the • • • ception of hockey, will be held M_ontreal _Canadi~ns, tied the mark with four g~als and four Football isn't Giroux's only in the Physical Education Center as1sts agamst Chicago again in Montreal ten years later. sport. He's an outstanding base­ Isn't that World Heavyweight Boxing Elimination Tourna­ on the I.C. campus. Cornell's ball player who is aiming for a ment a joke? Cassius Clay could have probably fought about Lynah Rink will be the home ice 2. Who invented the football d;raft system? career in the major leagues, but three of the challengers in the same night and beaten them. for Ithaca. Bert Bell, then a co-owner of the Philadelphia Eagles, pro­ his legacy at Ithaca will be In my ~ook, r.eligious affiliation not included, Clay is still the VARSITY BASKETBALL posed the system of drafting college seniors, in 1935, that was to dominated by his football ex­ Champmn. I do not condone all of his extracurricular activities form one of the foundations of success for the NFL in helping to ploits. but in the ring he was the best. Dec. 1, at Colgate; 2, Wilkes; keep the teams well-balanced. Bell's plan that the clubs should Several members of bis team • • • 8, Buffalo State; 9, at Hartwick; pick players in reverse order of their won-lost records of the have expressed it best. "When Pete Larson, last years'· star running back for Cornell has 12, Oswego; 14, Cortland. previous season was adopted and has been used ever since. we need a big play, we all turn been promoted from the Washington Redskin's farm tea.'n to Jan. 11, at Rochester; , 13, at 3. Who were the Seven Mules? to Paul. You just know he'll do the parent ballclub in time for last week's ballgame against the Lock Haven; 17, Mansfield; 20, the job." Opponents sense the Colts. Larson replaced troublemaker Joe Don Looney. With all at Roberts Wesleyan; 24, Brock­ The linemen who paved the way for the "Four Horsemen" same quality. his talent Looney can't make it with anyone. He must really port; 27, Hartwick. were called the Seven Mules. They were Ed Huntsinger and "Giroux is class on a football be bad for team morale. Wjth the dropping of Looney from the Feb. 2, at St. Lawrence; 3, Charles Collins, ends; Joe Bach and "Rip" Miller, tackles; Noble field," responded Tufts Coach ' uad you could probably use the same quote that Phillie at Clarkson; 6, at Rochester Inst. Kizer and John Weibel, guards; and Adam Walsh, center. Carmen Cozza after the "Scooter" a·nager Gene Mauch used upon the dropping of playboy Bo of Technology; 8, Bridgeport; 10, 4. What Detroit Red Wing scoring record does Gordie Ho-:ve had wrecked the Jumbos and led ~elinsky, "'Sometimes you add by subt~ac~ing." This may be at Cortland; 13, Hamilton; 15, at NOT hold? Ithaca to a 20-3 win. "We worked Just the break Larson needs to make 1t m the bigs as the Alfred; 20, at- LeMoyne; 24, at Howe ranks second to Ted Lindsay in assists. Lindsay all week defending him, and he Redskins must think. highly of Pete. Susquehanna; 27, Buffalo; 28, at picked up 55 assists twice-in the 1949-50 and the 1956-57 still gained 114 yards. He's a fine The football Giants may not win it all this year but the Oswego. seasons. The best Howe could do was 49 in 1960-61. athlete." ~rade they made to get Scrambling Fran Tarkenton sure is pay­ Mar. 1, Albany; 2, at Hobart. I will try to answer any and all questions readers might AU of this and there's still one mg off handsome dividends. The Giants had to give up a lot year to go. It looks as though have pertaining to sports. Please send all questions to Ben to acquire Fran but they certainly picked up a class performer. VARSITY WRESTLING Giroux will be setting a lot of It only took the Georgia Peach a matter of a few games before Jan. 20, Cortland; 27, Buffalo Reese, Ithacan office, Dorm 12, rm. 103. records which will stay put for he had won the hearts of the Giant loyals. Tarkenton to Jones University; 30, at Lock Haven. years to come. ranks ~s one of the most feared pass threats in the Pros today. Feb. 3, Brockport; 7, at Hart­ wick; 10, at Clarkson; 14, Mans­ 23, at U.S. Coast Guard Academy; The Giants can now strike from anywhere on the field and are 24, at Southern Connecticut. never out of a ballgame. They are a most exciting team to watch field; 20, Oswego; 24, at Wilkes; ;i_nd now with the return of ex-Cornellian Pete Gogolak loom as 27, at Oneonta; 28, at Syracuse. Mar. 5, at Oneonta. mi even more potent attack. If only the Giants could bolster Mar. 2, Rochester Institute of VARSITY SWIMMING Technology. their defensive front four they could be the talk of the league. Dec. 2, at St. Bonaventure; 6, ~ The Mara Men have probably the finest receiving corps in foot­ VARSITY GYMNASTICS at University of Rochester; 9, at ball today and even in losing, do it with a flare for drama. Dec. 7, Cornell; 13, at Cortland; Brockport; 14, at Harpur. 16, Slippery Rock. Jan. 20, Cortland; 27, at Hobart. $Kl ~ SPORTS DESK Jan. 31, at Cornell. Feb. 3, at Geneseo; 10, One­ Feb. 3, Plattsburgh; 9, Mont­ Continued from page 1B onta; 14, Hamilton; 21, Oswego; clair; 10, U.S. Merchant Marine tator appeal that football holds but for sheer vicarious enJoy­ Academy; 17, at West Chester; 26, at Lock Haven. mcnt soccer gets top billing. Last week the Ithacan outlined the proposals for a faculty ~~...iE~K student co-operative effort to improve the academic atmosphere at ~he colle;e. As a member of the Department of Physical Edu­ cation, I sm_cerely hope that this division of the college sup­ ports these ideas wholeheartedly. \Vhether the faculty realize EVERYTHING THAT'S FUN PHONE AR 3-3030 l>~AK it or not the students of their field are not as satisfied as they 420 EDDY STREET ITHACA, N.Y. ~hould. be. _Prof~ssional attitude and sincere enjoyment of the . rof~ss1on 1s bemg dampened by the lack of interest and en- Ithaca's oldest and most experienced HART dealer. hu~1asm on the part of the curriculum and the staff. Time and Hart, Rossignol, Volkl, Krystal, Kz, Portillo Skis agam words of disse_ns\on ~re heard in the gyms, in the halls Lace and Buckle Boots -- of the Phys. Ed. bmldmg, m the cafeterias and in the dorms. Nevada, Marker, Miller, Cubco Bindings Giiiiifc> !here would be less of this anti-P.E. attitude if there were an 0 interchange on an equal intellectual basis between the students EXPERT INSTALLATION AND CHEKING NIGHT SKIING from top to and the faculty. bottom.

0 Greatly increased SNOW COMONG SOON MAKING facilities on 120 acres of slopes

°ᄑ Check with the E G B E R T UNION on our SPECIAL Tha Ithaca apoligizes to Miss NIGHT SKIING PROGRAM Plzzalnn for Ithaca College to start Pam Davis and Mr. Gene The Nation1 s Fastest Growing Pizza Chain! on Dec. 11. · Slate for mixing up their columns last week, We .re­ Registration is in the Lobby of the Student Union Build­ print them this week in ing on November 28 and 29. hopes that they may bo in­ Nexf& DooD' ~JPt telligible. SO ELSEJ\.(CJ

1f'o • o • TAVERN _n-....11" ~ <©> ~ u!LA ~ ~u ~ ~ !Phone 607 - 753-001 s SPORT§ SPORTS

THE ITHACAN, NOVEMBER l O, 1967, PAGE 18 JEomJbe1r§ To Close Season Sports Desk By PAM DAVIS I This is an open letter in answer to two letters which ap. I Agmin§it American Aees peared in last week's Ithacan from John McGhan and Bob by Mike Hlnkelman Makitten, Dear John, Bob and all those who feel as they de: This week, the Ithaca College I anced, solid effort in its finale 1- -,_,. You ask where is the spirit at Ithaca College-Since com­ College Bombers will cl_ose out to square its season record at ing here in the fal lof 1965, I too have wondered about the lack their 1967 season by playrng host , 44. of spirit. Regretably I was unable to attend the pep rally but I , to the powerful Aces of American .... can believe your description of the absence of people. For som International College. The Aces, reason J.C. never in my knowledge has had the college spirit · with a 5-2 mark, dropped a 30-7 Hot off the Grid: It has been which typifies most other schools. \Ve can sit all day and specu­ decision to Central Connecticut revealed that next year Southern late, conjure up reasons for the apathy and condemn those who last week, but have been one of Connecticut and Wilkes will re­ are unlike us but then we become like them. the top small college teams in place Lehigh and Tufts on the I happened to see part of the Notre Dame homecoming the East throughout the current Ithaca College pigskin schedule... program prior to their meeting with Michigan State. With the season_ In last week's balloting Wilkes bas racked up 19 consecu­ aid of the glee club and the cheerleaders, students and dates Vrere for the Lambert Bowl, symbolic tive wins and with the streak in­ led in the spelling of·the school name. Spontaneously, this was of small college football suprem­ tact, the Wilkes' gridders are followed by the Notre Dame fight song. Everyone in the field acy in the East, the Aces were currently neck - and - neck with house stood and rocked the building with the noise. Even I got ranked fifth. Wagner in the latest Lambert caught up in the spirit and felt like joining in. · Coach Gayton Salvucci's troops Bowl ratings ... Both USC and Listening to the Syracuse game last Saturday the an. boast an extremely explosive of­ UCLA suffered major letdowns nouncer commented on Pitt's pep rally the previous evening fenes. Veteran halfbacks John last week, as USC nosed out Cali­ Trying to build school spirit, the Administration sponsored a' Nalesnik and Ed Harasbuk have fornia 17-12, while UCLA was pep rally under the direction of the students. The president : given the American International deadlocked by Oregon State 16-16 lit the bonfire. 1 backfield depth and experience. . . . Whether the absence of star A month ago I witnessed a pep rally prior to a football ~ But the biggest offensive sur­ running back 0. J. Simpson will game. The school was a small New England college; the team " prise has been the exceptional be costly in the Trojan drive for had won 2 games and lost 3. Every fraternity on campus par­ play of sophomore speedboy the mythical national champion­ ticipated in the planning, noisemaking and every other aspect Gleen Dumont. Dumont has been ship remains to be seen ... But of the program._ Each dormitory tried to outdo the others with the main cog in the American In­ bis loss was sorely felt last week, their show of enthusiasm. It was a rollicking good time which ternatioal offense, and has al­ and Trojan followers are keeping buoyed, the ego of the school and its inhabitants. ready scored 66 points. Tops in their fingers crossed that the None of the above examples reminds you of J.C. does it? all of New England. Salvucci, re­ "Orange Juice Man" can rejoin How about this-At the Parents Weekend game the band typi­ lying on a bevy of hard-nosed, the dub in time for the clash fied the spirit on the hill-They left at half time. This exit rockum-sockum sophomores, has with UCLA on November 18 ... served to boost the enthusiasm of the spectators. two of the best in the persons of Who would have ever thought Ithaca College' ego is suffering and a majority of the stu-' Mike Delaney and quarterback that the Hoosiers of Indiana dents could care less. In my own small way I've tried to do my Bill Connally. Delaney, a soccer­ would be 7-0, tied for the Big part. I've been told I'm what John refers to as a raccoon coater.' style kicker, has proved to be a Ten lead, and No. 1 in the state Ithaca is my school and I feel a part of it. There is nothin~ I valuable asset to the Aces this of Indiana at this late stage of enjoy more than going to a football, soccer, basketball, swim­ season. the season . . . Just think what ming, tennis, or wrestling event and seeing LC. participate Defensively, American Inter­ that Penn State outfit'll be like and hopefully win. I've tned to get others psyched, ;:o loYe it national is solid and strong, and next year ... Practically the en­ as I do or even just to sample a bit of school spirit. But I too has shutout several opponents tire Nittany Lion defense will be Al Guenther, senior end, ioses one off his fingertips. have become disillusioned and have come to the conclusion this season. American Interna­ back intact, along with speedboys that a good number of the students on this campus don't give tional is a team that can strike Bobby Campbell and Charlie Pitt­ a damn. I do and probably always will. from anywhere on the field, and man in the offensive backfield ... the heights of national promi­ As sports editor I had hoped that in some small way I the Bombers need another bal- To say that Penn State will reach nence is not exaggerating the Hockey could do my part in promoting more enthusiasm but nothing has least bit ... As for predictions, Ithaca College's ice hockey come of it. I proposed to change the school mascot. Four people the season record has jumped to group will climax six days of saw fit to offer suggestions, hardly a majority of school opinion. i 28-18 for .609 • • . This week's practice with an intrasquad game People up here will go along with your suggestions but rarel)j picks: between the Blues and Golds at will they support you with action. ~ Ithaca over American Interna­ 7:30 p.m. Friday at Lynah Rink. Hopefully someday J.C. will be different-Maybe if us -j tional~Bombers want to finish "The regulation game is avail­ raccoon coaters got together we could cheer together and let season at the .500 mark. to the public." said Coach George the rest of them go their own ways., I don't ask everyone to.: Penn State over North Carolina Moore. love it as I do but I do ask them to give themselves to a part 'I State - The Wolfpack enters a On the Blues will be: Alan Cox of college life that can never be experienced after graduation. ! hungry Lions' den; chance for the and Tom Samter, goalies; Capt. ¥ost of the students will not get chills when they hear the ~ Penn Staters to move up in na­ George Calver, Tim Wagner, fight song or Alma Mater because they don't know them and l tional ratings. Dave Charnock, and Bob Richaud, don't care to. What can be done? : Alabama over LSU-Bear Bry- defense; and Otis Murphy, Rod Quite possibly the formation of a pep club !hat is active ant's Tide still have a shot at a Frith, Brice Diedrick, Don Green, -The competition of greek and nongreek living centers in ban­ ner cont_e~ts, noise at gamesl etc.-A fighting mascot, A few ., bowl appearance. Barry Lubotta and Steve Knight, forwards_ Bob Aloian is honorary more spmt lovers, A band that can play the Alma Ma!er at ,, Indiana over Michigan State - coach and captain. every game. · Hoosiers would like that Big Ten Gold squadmen are: Tim Cul­ These are only speculations and I don't expect an over­ Championship and berth in the len, goal; Bill Benwitz, Dave Pat­ whelming response-But Ithaca College lacks the vitalness, es- : terson, Larry Ames, Bob Corran sence, mood, humor, energy, vivacity, verve, dash, gallantry, and~ Elsewhere, Cornell over Brown, and Dennis O'Leary, defense; and enthusiasm or just simply spirit that should be a part of our,. Syracuse over Holy Cross Notre Ca_pt_. Ralph Cox, J?e Maire, Ted lives here on the hill. ·1· . ' Willis, Roy Leff, Rich Vogel and Saturday is our final home game against A.LC. Why don"t · Dame over Pitt, Navy over Duke, Tom Schoen, forwards. Steve you come and donate your vocal chords to a good cause and join~ USC over Oregon State, and 1[ Forman is honorary captain and the rest of us in support of our school. · UCLA over Washington. coach. • • . ~he ma!! in black and white signals the start. The team , m white begms to march down the field with the ball-they're aiming for the figure dressed in black but the ball changes feet : Frank Slattery, senior QB, who was injured against Bridgeport, drops back to p_ass. at least 12 times. Now it's at the other end-The cues are com­ FOOTBALL ing from everywhere. They have a few shots at the goal but they , can't r~peat _their earlier feat. ':fhe complexion_ changes, the goodJ Volleyball guys (m white of course) are m control. Their passes are beingll completed in a zigzag fashion. Then it happens all to easy for BC vs. A.D.C. the hard work that preceeded it-But you know it's true for Cffinics HeBd 11 white clad bodies leap into the air. Jogging back for the face A series of three Volleyball off, the scorer is mobbed and congratulated. Excitement reigns Rating Clinics is currently being lLOVE ffirom South HiDD and now they are 'on the move. This is different you say, more personal. You begin to un­ held at the physical education derstand the once incomprehensible noises. "Hey over here!" center at Ithaca College. Dr. Mar­ "Head it!" "Bring it down)" "To the right." "That's it." "Pass garet Robb, of S.U.N.Y., Cortland, SATURDAY AT 1:20 P.M. it." "Bring it down." "C'mon guys get psyched!" Sitting right jg conducting the clinic which is on the sideline the spectator can't help but be a part of the sponsored by the Central New with play on the field. You hear the chatter and comments. You York Board of Women's Officials. belong; you join in. The ball travels up and down, over and Don Tony across, faster than seems possible. Thinking and split second 'l'he PlllJlOSe is to train students and Berman timing are necessary assets for play. From the opening kick and teachers who wish to become DeStefano the ac~ion builds toward the ultio:iate end;-a goal. And when rated volleyball officials. Hostess the prize occurs the team erupts mto a display of enthusiasm for the series is the W.A.A. Of­ that is unusual in team play. It seems that within this team ficial Club. Advisors for the club 600 AM 91.7 FM game the individual performance and show of excellence is j WICB equally important. : are Miss Iris Carnell and Miss The interplay between players allows you to enjoy them ' Nancy mcks. They are being as­ "FOOTBALL AS IT HAPPENS" a little more. I'm not trying to detract from the power of spec- : sited by Lois Katz and tiz Braren. Please tum to page 11