
Montclair State University Montclair State University Digital Commons The onM tclarion Student Newspapers 12-13-1973 The onM tclarion, December 13, 1973 The onM tclarion Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion Recommended Citation The onM tclarion, "The onM tclarion, December 13, 1973" (1973). The Montclarion. 229. https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion/229 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The onM tclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. M o n t Clarion Vol. 47, No. SO Montclair, N.J. 07043 Thurs., Dec 13, 1973 MONTCLARION/Bernle Sluzas MONTCLARION/Bob Adochio Students manned tables in the crowded Student Center lobby this week. SG A legislators (left) wage a campaign to enlist student aid in Lobbying opposing the proposed faculty strike and any future tuition increase. The students were asked to write to Governor-elect Brendan Byrne as well as the state senators. Another table (center) contained students supervising the Gulf Oil Referendum which was voted on Tuesday and Wednesday. While some students voted (right), there was a generally poor voter turnout which was to decide the fate of the Gulf station on Effort campus. State Strikes Added Oil Supply By Carla Capizzi Dickson and Quinn said. schools by 20% where practical, he noted. In necessitates stricter enforcement of However, in a campus memo, H O W EV ER . Q U IN N felt that it addition, fresh air intakes in heating no smoking regulations in classrooms "Based on information we received Dickson warned, "...we must be was "unlikely that MSC would get systems have been reduced for and offices. last week, we are going ahead as vigilant and prepared, and therefore less than 90% of last year's supply." further fuel conservation. However, B E TW E E N DEC. 21 and Feb. 3, scheduled with exam week, winter all lower quarry lights will be shut off we shall keep our contingency plans Even with 75%, he said, "we could Quinn stated, this measure session and the spring semester," at all times to save electricity. for the second semester handy for keep the calendar with continued Jerome Quinn, institutional planning use if necessary. If the emergency is conservation measures and director, stated on Wednesday. sufficient to demand reduction on air conditioning in the According to both Quinn and implementation, we shall consider at spring." Quinn pointed out that the MSC President David W.D. Dickson, the appropriate time starting our 75% figure was itself an increase over Gulf Future the office of Ralph Dungan, the second or spring semester on Feb. 18, the 50-60% supply which the college Chancellor of Higher Education, two weeks after the announced time, had originally projected it would contacted the college last Friday and and making adjustments with respect receive. informed Vincent Calabrese, to the spring vacation and the Although winter session has not vice-president for administration and administrative week following exams Still Cloudy been cancelled, only three academic finance, that a second source of fuel so that we can have our b u i Id i ngs-Gollege Hall, the oil had been contracted by the state. commencement as planned on June math/science building and Sprague By Patricia Mercorelli The purpose of the TH AT SUPPLY, combined with 9." library- and one dorm. Freeman Insufficient voter turnout has referendum question was to the fuel which Hess Oil had been D ickso n foresaw only one Hall, will be opened during that rendered invalid the results of the determine whether the majority contracted to provide, would supply possible problem which would period, according to Quinn. Freeman referendum held to determine the of students are willing to remove the college with 90% of the fuel oil it necessitate implementing will only be partially open, future of the Gulf Oil station on the Gulf Oil gas station without used last winter. As long as current contingency plans. "National depending on the number of dorm campus. its replacement by another energy conservation measures are guidelines or i restrictions on students taking intersession courses, Only 774 votes were registered station, according to Conforth. followed, both administrators feel allotments (of fuel oil) may not allow he added. in the referendum held Tuesday that the college can carry out its us to get what the supplier hopes to The college has already and Wednesday. One thousand H O W E V E R , C O N F O R TH originally planned academic calendar. give us," he speculated. He noted implemented energy conservation returns were necessary to validate commented that future Winter session will not have to be that a quota of 75% of fuel measures, according to Quinn. the returns, according to Bruce referendums, especially on this cancelled nor will the spring semester consum ed last year has been Thermostats have been lowered to 68 C o n fo rth , chairman of the issue, do not seem likely. He be pushed back by two weeks. mentioned as a possible allotment for degrees and lighting has been reduced Student Center Policy Board, noted that the lack of student which conducted the referendum. turn-out for the referendum Choir To Perform Memorial S T U D E N TS H A D voted to' "proves once again, that there is remove the station by a margin of no concern among the students A memorial service will be T H E CHO IR president stated that Ryder said that "although I did less than 100 votes. The actual on this campus about any issue." performed by the MSC when he returned to school in not know Dorche for a long period of tally was 434 votes in favor of the He continued, “ If you are Interdenominational Contemporary September he was determined to time, the relationship which we had removal, 335 against it, with five running SG A elections and poll Gospel Ensemble Choir (IC G E C ) on "implement this last dream of my was a close and intimate one." He voters returning blank ballots. 700 students, that is about 10% Sun., Dec. 16 in honor of William friend." He succeeded in organizing noted that both planned careers in The Policy Board had decided of the 7000 eligible student Dorche, an MSC student who was the choir, which has been singing at the ministry. Dorche was attending that the validation figure for the voters. However, when mugged and killed in Jersey City this various functions since the beginning Bible school and would occasionally referendum would be set at 1000 approximately 15,000 students past summer. of the school year. preach at Ryder's church. Ryder is students or 5% of a total student are qualified voters and the a ssocjate minister at Emmanuel population of 15,000, stated referendum only polls 700, that is George Ryder, president of the The idea for a memorial service A frica n Methodist Episcopalian Conforth. He continued that this pretty miserable." ICG EC, said that he had begun to grew out of the choir's work. Ryder Church in Montclair. figure included all day, evening Conforth stated that since the organize the choir after he had heard said that since so much of Dorche's DORCHE WOULD have and part-time students. In the college population has not made a of Dorche's death because "one of efforts had been aimed at the graduated in June 1974 with a degree future any referendums run by definitive statement on the Dorche-s dreams was to organize a formulation of a choir, he felt that it in psychology and English. The the board will follow this same question of the gas station, "no gospel choir." None of his efforts had would be an appropriate way to service will be held from 8-12 pm in rule for validation, he said. arbitrary action will be taken." proven successful. honor him. Memorial Auditorium. ZMONTCLARION/Thurs., December 13. 1973. ------notes There will be an amnesty period on all overdue books at Harry A Youths Disrupt Ecommie Dialogue Sprague library through Dec. 21. All fines will be waived on books Tuesday's economic dialogue on The youth then asked Archer panelist replied that he did not agree returned during this period. Students W H EN Q U E S TIO N S were again inflation was marked by several Cole, assistant to the president of the with the Brazilian policy, the R YM are asked to drop books due In 1973 accepted from the floor, a second outbursts from members of the International Union of Electrical member told him, "O f course you In the bin at the circulation desk. Revolutionary Youth Movement of youth identifying himself as a Workers, district 3, If labor would do I" Books due before 1973 should be the American Labor Party. member of the Revolutionary Youth back his movement in Its attempts to presented to the clerk at the desk in Movement (RYM) of the ALP A t that point, several audience order that old fine accounts can be straighten out the economy.” Cole The low-key discussion, launched Into another speech, this members Intervened, asking the cleared. Fines on old accounts will be co-sponsored by the NJ Center for would not answer the question one on the influence of politics on youths to stop "monopolizing” the cut in half if paid during this period. Economic Education and the MSC directly, but offered to meet with the discussion.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages13 Page
-
File Size-