1st the most few sechstory: tropoltan.. U.dergraduaf. Newspaper.f ft. Cty College ~lnc" 1907 120-No.8 FRDAY MARCH 3 1967 R favortes a photocre start losng n a muscle ccumbed ttle (the for sxth. thout the Quee~ utponted ty chamore Walgh jump )". sxth n lat-board has been tatve ere also ano who ge's Pont had two ayed well ave of a busy day nce t of ETY "67 NJV. St. 340F ARD ce oro Becomes Cand~date Gallagher Threatens Sut or the ~!~~~hpresldent f Lnked wth CA Agan:' Student Government's educatonal affars vce presdent " By Erc Bltz Korn '68 became the frst declared canddate for next Presdent Gallagher yesterday "categorcally and unequvocally" dened charges SG presdent. that he was connected wth the _Central ntellgence. Ag.ency threatenng to sue for lbel The nneteen-year-old pre-med major who made the unusually anyone who n the future prnts such allegatons. announcement Wednesday nght opened hs campagn by out- Durng a one and a half-hour press conference the Presdent attacked reports that two organzaan ambtous program for changes n SG operatons. ' tons to whch he has belonged have receved CA funds. He sad that he would try to~~------------"----------------'-"-------:------------------<~ Dr. Gallagher. s currently a The Socal Phenomenon n Eatng member of the Board of Drectors 'of the Foundaton for. Youth and Student _ Affars an organzaton reported bythe New York Tme8 to be a CA condut agency. He was also from 1953 to 1966 the Amercan Charman' of tle a daly newspaper "semnars on teachng effect \'eness" for new faculty members "better socal programmng." Rasng money by concerts he explaned would be "more feasble than a fee ncrease" "an urban studes program" ethe-r under the College's regular currculum or under the auspces of SG. As educatonal affars vce pres :dent ~ornhas been responsble or the.development of several new programs ths year. ' Probably hs greatest coup was securng the admsson last.(contnued on Page 2) College Faces T.eacher By.. Leave 'LQ~ Law By Ralph Le\lnson The College faces--the possble'loss of some of ts top professors next term as recent r~vsons n the state sabbatcal law have resulted n a boom n requests for Jeave.. Under a' new law passed summer a professor gong on leave. for a semester wll receve full paywhereas prevously part of hs salary would go to pay for a sl!bsttute. Thus many' professors who are elgble for sabbatcal after seven at the College now fnd the term of leave fnancally feasble. Several department charmen r..ave ~xpressed alarm over the number of professors who may go on leave. ' Prof. Thomas Kars (Chajrman Scence) sad "t would be very dffcut to replace all those askng for sabbatcals wth professors' o( 'the same hgh qualty." At least eght members of the cepartment are elgble but he ad he couldn't "magne' more than two leavng at once." Prof.- rvng Branman (Charman Speech) sad that the loss of several teachers wfth the' "same eld of specalzaton" would malethe functonng of certan areas n the department "mpossble." Four out of forty full tme professors n the PsycholQgy' Department have' 'requested. sabbatcals accordug to ~'charm~ Joseph~. Before the' change n 'the' la.w sad.!'we.qlly bad- Qne sabevery fy.e years." Prof. EdmoneJ ~Volpe (Cha~ (~"'Pac& 2-) ': By Nel Offen Plan Assocaton whle the cafe- snack bar s closer to ther offces At noon yesterday a thn tera s comprsed of a collecton than the cafetera. Fraternty and quet unassumng student of ndependent solated unts of House Plan people guess are sat n a corner table n south students. just bascally lazy." cam.pus cafetera whle two Why s the snack bar so attrac- The close proxmty of snack flghts up a husky nosy tve to these apparently happy bar tables to each other and to newly-"nducted fraternty always frenetc students? the food counter and secure mem:ber was mmersed n the "They have french fres" says closed-off nature of the area lend dn of the snack bar. snack bar habtue Arte Gold- greatly to ts communal nature: -n these two major socal en- sten '69. "Nobody really goes toa place claves where the- personalty of "They hay~ a jukebox" says to eat the food" explans Tom the student~ rather than hs- snack bar habtue EJlen Wess-. Jacobs '70. "You go to all eatng. a~te dctates wmre he spends berg '70...' place to meet people. n the hseatmg. tme.ar.e found the'they'havefrench fres and a snack bar' you.can meet people College's "types." jukebox-;"'says 'sr~ckbr habtue. more easly than you can almost The snack bar; wth ts greasy Barbara Shatkn '70. any place on campus." '..' french fres andh/arng jukebox.. B1. ; :"most Jmportant for the: But not all students who eat '.thewcal stronghold of nter:- FC andhpakds".accordng to there thnk thesnackbar slo' fr~t~;mty- Councl ' and -House... Marlyn s.cha:rf.~~j.."s. that the!.:... {Contnued.oq.~e-5).'...... "'.'~:... : ~... ~... :.._... ~... ".. "':t ~"..~.._'v;...: "'... ~.. ~. World U~yersty Servce whch has receved travel grants from the Foundaton for Youth and StUdent Affar.s. _ TJ1e Presdent sad yesterday that he has "seen both the ncome and expense sdes of the operatons of the Foundaton for Youth and Student Affars and there was no money comng nto the foundaton from the CA ether drectly or ndrectly from any condut agency." He sad that all of the foundaton:s money was contrbuted by members of the Board of Drec'" tors and the famly of... Arthur f:jough.to~.chal:nab- Of the-board. "The accusatons that WUS has receved money from the CA s a le" he added. "Anybody-who prnts that wll after ths moment be sued by me for lbel." An ad hoc commttee to nvestgate Presdent Gallagher wll hold'an open forum Thursday to probe the Presdent's alleged connectons wth the CA. Confronted wth Dr. Gallagher's (Contnued on.. age 3) Ratng Agency To End Surve~ Of Archtects By Jay Myers An nspecton team wll conclude a three-day revew of tbe College's Department of Archtecture :today to determne whether t wn Feceve accredtaton for the frst tme. Despte btter student crtcsm of the department's facltes and admnstraton both faculty members and st{ldents reman confdent that some fprm of accredtaton wll result. Prof. Joseph M. Shelley (Archtecture) sad that the evaluaton team was "favorably mpressed" wth the department but added that provsonal accredtaton may be mposed untl t develops a completed lbrary. Provsonal accredtaton s granted when the Natonal Archtecture Accredtng Board wthholds full status untl certan recommended changes are nsttuted. Professor Shelley sad that the (our evaluators had been very thorough n ther nspecton of the department. He commented that (Contnued on. Page 7)
'.g. 2 Departments Conflct. By Andy Solts. The deve-lopment of an nterde~artme~tal huma~~es course provded for under last year s currculum revz.slon has be~n delayed for more than a month by an nterdepartmental dspute The Campus learned ths week.. THE "CAM PUS College Faces (Centllued from Page 1) Englsh) also reported a sharp rse. n applcatons. However be "no problem" because "professors gan whle they are on leave: t helps them to become better The new course whch wll replace Englsh 3 and 4 as a basc teachers." requrement of all students n the College of Lberal Arts and Scences And Prof. Harry Lustg (Charwll be chefly a course n World Lterature. man Physcs) sad that whle he The dspute has arsen betwe~n the Englsh Department on one had receved 1).0 sabbatcal applhand and the Classcal Languages and Hebrew Phlosophy Romance catons yet Prof. Robert Wolf and Languages and Germanc and Slavc Langu~ges Departments on the Prof. Truly Hardy were on sabother. batcal ths term "probably as The Englsh Department mantans that t should drect and a result of the new law." staff the course whle the other departments say the course should be a cooperatve venture. Dffcult Stuaton ;'t's a very dffcult stuaton" Prof. Edmond Volpe (Charman. Englsh) sad. "The most mportant ssue s to mant.ln an adequate level of wrtng tranng for all students whch feel can only be as. sured f the Englsh Department s responsble for the choce of teach ers and subject matter. " have no objecton to professors from other departments teachng the course" Professor Volpe added "as long as our department can determne who they are." Prof. Stephen Datz.'(Charman; Classcal Languages aqd Hebrew) sharply dsagreed sayng: "The man'~suehere js whether the course should be planned drected and staffed by one department or whether n the terms and sprt of the orgnal concept t' should be an' nterdepartmental ~ourse drawng on the talents of fve departments." Same Type. "So far" Professor Datz sad "the Englsh Department has nssted on mantanng the same type of two semester class essentally controlled and staffed by them that exsts under the old currculum. Ths defeats the purpose of the curreulum revson." He sad he had proposed to the Faculty Councl n a seres of three resolutonsthat a commttee composed of the fve department eharmen decde the course content and staff members and elect a coordn ator to handle the mechancs of the course's operaton..korn Declares Hs Canddacy Photo by Offen JOE KORN (Contnued trom Page 1) Fee Commsson and the Offce of. of non~votng student represent- nsttutonal Research. atves to both the Faculty Councl Explanng hs early announcean.d School of Educaton Faculty ment Korn sad he desred "tme meetngs. to assemble the best possble slate He also drected the Course and of canddates and to px;epare a Te<:tcher Evaluaton Programs rev- program of actvtes whch can sng t substantally.. and sh:mld be carred ;ut." Korn has also been a member Also he sad; " just don't lke of the Fnley Board of Advsers to keep secrets." WHERE WLL YOU BE N FVE YEARS? W~th the AEC you wll be engaged a challengng career n scence. engneerng management or accountng. What do you need?' B.S. M.S. or Ph.D. n engneerng engneerng physcs metallurgy health physcs or physcs; Master's Pegreen b.usness or publc admnstraton or lberal arts; Sachelor's or Master's n accountng. B average or above or top quarter of class. ' Department chrurmen were unwllng to release the names of those teachers askng for leave for next term. However Prof. vo Duchacek (Poltcal Scence) who admtted he was applyng for leave was not dsturbed over the ncrease Frday. March. Teacher Loss Leave MONEY MATTER: Whle Dean Fredn (left) sad many saobln4!a1l. wll be gven Prof. Barmack sad lack of funds would prevent See.. n sabbatcal requests. "f there are too many appl- N' R t catons for leave" h.e sad. "'ll 'C' ear eac' or just wat tll next year. f. get t wll be pleased; f not t wll.la. se r :ea.ms be another year." To obtan'leave a person must E & A h Fel frst ~an the approval of the de- ag... '." rc elms partmental commttee on appont- '. ments the department charmal:l 'See 1+ 'AU + E - and Dean neuben Frodn (Lberal.' '..'... a 'n"neers Arts and Scences). & A" L- t 0' D S t ca Whle Dean Frod~r sad.that...-~tec.. s ay a ur y. tcpat~ "the admnstraton wll try to A.~"":'_ 'h 1'~ '1967 fr 1'0.Co-ca grant any reasonable request for ~G: '1 :. om a_m_ attrbut leave" the "lack Professor funds" Barmack would lmt sad... r---' the number of sabbatcals granted.... ' ~:~r~::. t.'. 2.. ft.: "1M e. Ste.-nm.an Hall :O~r elrj " organz; ~~==~~======~==~~~================================~======. $ The (.. Ortz " won fr. fly all you Vlant on the newest swjngngest fare n the ar! Mohawk's "W!tkends Unfmted!" Fly anywhere Mohawk meso Be a gypsy!. Vst a host 'of Mohawk's seventy:-: ctes n 10 states-all n one weekend. Remember Mohawk's new swngn'. fare s good.. not only roundtrp but on asrtlflny flghts over the weekend as you ':can book.. ~ 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. pck your ctes! pck a weekend! t1ere!'shaw to takeoff:.. Pck youj weekend. * Fare apples fr.om 6.a.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday. Phone Mohawk reservatons or see your travel agent. Ask for postve space reservatons on the scheduled flghts of yo..ur choce. (Not ncludngtoronto.) All for ~25 a person plus federal tax. Reservatons must be rradeonthe Wednesday Thursd~y or Frday pre. cedng your departure and the f1:st leg of your journeymust begn an Saturday. Check the ctes served by Mohawk from your cty and TAKE OFf! New York Cty Boston Phladelpha Washngton D.C. Pttsburgh Cleveland Detrot Nagara Falls Ere. Buffalo Utca G~ns Falls Rutland. Burlngton -Plattsburgh Massena Watertown Ogdensburg Westchester Lake Placd Rochester Jamestown Olean Elmra Cornng thaca BnghamtGr; Poughkeepse Hartford Worcester t _ Schenectad' Albany Good any weekend of the year except Easter. er awal baters ; Harol tn Ker recogn1 team a1 College. A C ntervewng on campus March 14. 1967 See your placement offcer for brochure and ntervew appontment~ U.S.ATOMC ENERGY COMMSSON an equal opportunty employer "MOHAWK "EES 8lll'JY!" Mohawk''227 Vsla prop J«Bull by Falch.ld'Hller Mohawk's One Eleven Fen Jet Bult by prlt5h An:ra~.corPGAllon NEWSPAPER AD ~O:- N-138 324 LNES' prepared by Anderson Hutchns & Seeds nc. - ~ -..... - ~ ~ - ". "\ "". ' "
" J967 T H EC.A h US' ge WU Host 50 Schools REVSONS N ED. SCHOOL OFFER Largest Debatng TourneYMORE EXPERENCE N TEACDNG By Joel Wachs Debatng teams from more than f~ty eoueges wll fll classroom on South Campus tonght and tomorrow College hosts the largest tournament ever held here. Vyng for' eght trophes' the <.!> wll wrestle wth the topc: 'Re;;O!l.ed: -That the Unted States substantally reduce ts polcy commtments.." competton wll conclude nght wth a banquet Presdent Gallagher a fordebater hmself wll speak. rvng Branman (Charman and Dean R~uben Frodn Arts and Scences) wll consst of sx rounds of power-matched" debatng. means that teams must deboth sdes of the topc and those wth sml~r records by showmgs n the round wll contest one.rl"t~.rml;n~n DEBATER: Dr. Gallagher wll address banquet tomorrow nght after concluson of tomnament; G a ag h er By Ralph Levnson Students n the School of Educaton wll be spendng more tme teachng under a new program to provde them wth more practcal experence. " 'The program whch wll be ntated next September provdes for eleven credts of student teachng 'and semnars to replace &ome theoretcal courses. ' Accordng to Dean Doyle Bortner (Educaton) the.. major purpose of the revsons s to -"substantally : ncrease the students experence expermentaton and observatons n the elementary and secondary Students majorng n elementary educaton wll thus spend two terms student tea<;hng whle the prevous currculum called for only one term. A program-currculum semnar wll deal wth the problems nvolved n preparng a publc school currculum. BOth the semnar ard the student teachng wll be closely supervsed by a professor n the department. A smlar revson for secondary educaton majors wll allow students preparng to teach specfc subjects to begn student teachng n the' junor nstead of the senor year. Under another. aspect of the program teachers from Publc Schools 129 and 192 and Junor PRACTCAL: D~n noyle M. Bortner announced revsons n Educaton School for nex-t year. "As part of ther studes students preparng to become ele. mentary school teachers4 should develop skll n conversatonal Spansh." Eng. Dept. to Offer Two New Courses n: a drve "to br~g our courses nto the twenteth century" the Englsh Department wll offer two new courses next term accordng to the department charman Prof.. Ednond Volpe. A course n Negro Poetry wll be taught by Prof. James Emanuel a Negro poet hmself who des~ cl'bes the class as "a cpallenge realltera1'y dscovery." The course wll feature the works of LeRo Jones Countee Cullen Langston!lughes and Paul Laurence Dun- Hgh School 43 wll jon the Eduof schools from nursery to twelfth bar.. The College's team wll not partcpa te':.:. statement' Alex Chernowtz '67 one or two years. "Throug'h organzed proced Poetry course wll be taught by" (Contnued from Page 1) caton School's regular faculty for g'rade." A Twenteth Century Englsh Co-captan Zelda Stenberg '67; co-charman of the commttee These teachers wll also serve ures the School of Educathm ether" Prof. Marvn Magalaner or attrbuted :'9ur pubng power" to cted an artcle n The New York as specal ades to the student should work wth parents of afflated school chldren wth'respect concentrate on the WOl'J<s of W.B~ Prof. Geoffrey Wagner and wll a "reputaton for good competton fd~ndly atmosphere and fne Mr. Houghton conceded havng Negotatons are now n prog Tmes of February 19 n whch' teachers. to ther concerns for the needs Yeats T.S. Elof W.H. Audert organzaton. " "cooperated" wth the govern- ress to secure a senor hgh school problems and ambtons of ther C.S. Lews and Dame Edth St. ment. to partcpate n ths program =:1 The College's team 'aeheved ts chldren." "Dr. Gallagher goes on denyng Dean Bortner sad. ~ """"_'_._EaZ=- well ~ -Elson '" best record for a sngle month n February. NovCe debaters Darwn Student that the Foundaton Affars has for no Youth connecand results Dean of Bortner a study also on the released relatons the ' P~ych S' tude'd'ts Get Ad V se' 'r' s. :'1' 0 Ortz '70 and Plul Medna '69 ton wth the CA and the' f.acts of the School of Educaton wth won frst and second place' speaker awards n a feld of sxty de don't seem to bear hm out" he the communty. The study-.qegan By Carol DFalco ' baters at a tourney n Hartford. sad. ~\ ' - at a conference n Tarrytown last Studentsmwjo.rng on Psye:a:oOgy -wl:l :be able to consult Harold Krsberg '68 and Martn Kerner. '68 also novces won recognton as the best affrmatve team at a varsty debate at Sena College. ;'AtTE1t READE/JR. 'and JOSEPH STRCK )J'eS81\'t 1fl~'llOnON P1CTURE PRVPUCTQN' OF ' r~de~trgalagh~r-sad yester- December. a '''general advser".to'.. gudelthemn currculum::.plarwmg' day that he would not appear at The recommendatons whch and other crtcal decsons under a new program nsttuted the forum. "have been referred to departmen- by the :dew-artment ths term.. " wll not dgnfy ths alleged:!!~com~tees~.n_clude_:. ' Accordng to Dr. Herbert Nechm (Psychology) the general advser wll offer students advce on graduate schools professonal plarr nvestgaton wth' my! presence" Tl:le 'SchQol of Educaton he explaned. should afflate wth a "complex nng" electve concentraton and course schedulng. ' Psychology majors wll receve nformaton on the program and be assgned an advser when they see ther current currculum coun~ selor to approve ther electon' cards he sad. Students who have already had ther cards sgned wll be notfed shortly to' c;ome to the Psychology' offce to make appontments wth ~her new advsers. Depe CAnddates n: BS 'MS PhD degrees n ehe Chern.. 88 MS degrees n ME EE ;. Meet :Cbe~MaD from Monsan'to / bs tlm was made wthout oompromse~exaetjy ":asjoyce wrote t. "UlYg S ES" wlfbe p.re~ented "n;; ths 1nrexpurgated form for 3 DAYS ONLY-. NARCH 14-15 16 n only' 135 theatres n th~u.s~a. Admfttance wl be dened to alt unaer 18 years 01 ag _ r ALL gts RP_D!-eRDER BY MAL FRON'TlEATltf.OFYOUR CHtJltP : March 13 & 14: Sgll up'lor an ntervew at your pla~jnent.ce. Ths' year Monsanto wll have many Ope~8 for graduat~8at all degree levels. Fne postons :are open:~all over the Country wth Amerca7s ~3rd lar-gestdterneal @()~any.:adl we~r6' stll ~grow~g. Sales have. quadmpled n the last 10'... y~ars ~ n everythng from plastezers to 'larm chemcals;" from nuclear S()Ul"ces and eheurlealfberstoelectroncmstmments.}deet -... ~; Mm :&!om 'MonUnt&~b.CthaS;'l~aaet6' abto1rt 4:'6acf<:futore.. lrmnj1'!~ ~~ YONKERS THEAl'RE. '16 South BroalWllv Yonk... NewYorlh0701. M4\'4lkra 8-889S 1NE$"PORT FNE ARTS Bolt488' WWJOrt. Connectcut 088" ' 203 227-11619 ADDM:S5.S CTY. STATE 21P.:.-... _ NO. OF SEATS \T$ ". :rotal~$... MATNEE OJ EVENNG O/DATE REQUfSTEP Send chck or mon. orclet "'Y~. to tlt T!fEATtE' wth ltamptcf / rl /1""S:l ntf\. vl_j.. (~ \) \' An Equal Opportunty'E~leyer
Pa~e 4 Vol. 120-No. 8 THE CAMPUS' Undergraduate Newspaper The Managng Board: Of The Cty College HENRY GLGOFF '67 Assocate Edtor JEAN PATMAN '67 Assocate Edtor Snce 1907 ALCE KOTTEK '67 Edtor-n Chef Supported by Student Fees FRANK VAN RPER '67 Ass'ocate Edtor JANE SALODOF '67 Assocate Edtor. ERC BLllZ '68 News Edtor N-EL OFFEN '67 ANDY SOLTS '68 F.atures Edtor Assocate News Edtor TOM ACKERMAN '69. Sports Edtor. JEFF ZUCKERMAN '69.. RALPH LEVNSON '69 Busness Manager Copy Edtor CONTRBUTNG BOARD: Steve Dobkn '68 George Kaplan '67 ~at Plotkn '67 A Rothsten '68 Nancy Sorkn '67. '. ~EWS STAFF: Carol DFalco '69 Aaron Elson '70 Stuart Freedman '70 Henry Frsch '69 Barbara Gutfreund '69 Barbara Mahony '69 Tamara Mller :68 Jay Myers '70 Sande Neman '69 Larry Stybel '68 Lana Sus~man 69 Julan Svedosh '68. ~------------------~~~~---- SPORTS STAFF: Joe Bander '69 Danny Kornsten '6~ Joel Wachs '69. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Danny' Baumbach '69 Pbtp Seltzer '69. Phone: F08 7426 Edtoral Polcy 15 Paper Weght ~---------------- FACULTY ADVSOR: Mr. Jerome Gold Determned by a Majorty Vote of the Managng Board Although Student Councl has yet to serously dscuss major changes n -the status of the fve day sesson student newspapers some-of the proposals outlned at Wednesday's meetng ru'st already be refuted... Perhaps the most dangerous suggeston s the plan to t:ne fve' campusn.ewspapers nto a sngle daly pub- f!ler~e le~l~.'. c_.. ". Ths' proposal forwarded n the' name of better stud~nt ournalsn~ W6uld'wthout a doubt work toward the OPPOSte effec.t. '. -:.. -... t --would destroy the sense of. competton whch -motvates each- pa;per to put Qut the best ssues they are capaqle of~ '...'..'. _ t would destroy the perspectve of the changng Col~ lege woddganed through several ponts of vew beng regstered n the student press. t would create not a newspaper wth the best features of all the mergng publcatons but a complacent paper whch would take ts readershp for granted. For f a merger s establshed t wll not just be a few student journalsts who wll suffer. The entre student body whch Councl clams to represent wll be the vctms' -as well. Moreover the suggeston that the. current fve papers be forced to sell ther ssues n order to fnancally survve s equally mpractcal. Students smplyca.nnot support fve newspapers. The 'proposals make for a sad case n wl;tcha monopoly stuaton would cause lethargy but fnancal competton would mean dsaster. Fnally not only s the sellng of student newspapers mpractcal but t s somewhat offensve. The College's publcatons are a servce to the student body not somethng that must 'be placed on a market. To be nformed of campus events s as essental a part of College lfe as the other servces fnanced. 'by student fees.. " As Bg Tme Goes By We lke to consder ourselves here as a major college; we lke to thnk- we're partof a major unversty. We fnd t very pleasant to beleve that we're educatonally bg-tme. Blt f we honestly examne th~ College and ts facltes we fnd that we have very -lttle to qualfy us for the bgtme very lttle of whch to be proud. The College has no campus to speak of no money to spend few facltes to _ spend for.. Any connecton wth the bg-tme that the CoUege can obtan s usmllly vcarous. Through ths past season's edton of the Beaver basketball team the entre College was able to obtan ths vcarous membershp n the bg tme. Ths season's club make no mstake about t was bgtme. t was a team that defeated schools such as Columba Farlegh Dcknson and St. Francs-all bg-tme schools. t was a team workng under the restrcton of no scholarshps that beat the scholarshp athletes. Most of all 'however t was a team that refused to go unrecognzed as so many of the athletc teams do at ths school. t was an exctng team and the students were excted about t. Even f the Beavers had not compled ther superb 13-6 re~ord the best n seventeen years the exctement and the prde they created on campus would be enough to rate them laurels. THE CAMPUS Letters OFFENsve To the Edtor: Nel Offen's artcle on the CCNY -Rochester basketball game n The Campus of February 17 n whch the atmosphere of the Rochester gym was descrbed as somethng lke that of Naz Germany was greatly unfar to both the cty and the Unversty of Rochester. Please understand that have no connecton whatever wth ether the unversty or the cty ('ve never been anywhere near the place) but that feel that the followng facts should have been taken nto account by Offen before he called Rochester (both unversty and cty) "ugly" on the bass of the ncdents he descrbes n hs artcle. do not queston the accuracy of the reportng of the ant-semtc remarks made by some Rochester fans but how can the 'unversty be held responsble for the presence of a handful of punks n a gym seatng 3000 people? Furthermore have seen or heard about ethnc slurs and other unsportsmanlke fan conduct at college basketball games almost everywhere ncludng f Offen would beleve t New York Cty; ths s by no means a phenomenon pecular to Rochester. 'm almost certan that Offen's descrpton of the Rochester basketball team' as "blond and blue-eyed" s exaggerated; has Offen ever heard of Dave Deutsch who played at Rochester Unversty before jonng the New York Knckerbockers or dd he look at the boxscore and see some Sentc'::lookng names under the headng "Rochester?" -..... Certanly oachdave PolanS}{Y should be ~mmended for hs tough atttude toward the fans. derdng hm and hs team. Yet the bc~t way to slence the puks n. the stands would have been vctory on the basketball court. Kenneth Klener '68: Coeds Urge Change n Sprng Vacaton Frday March The followng s (n excerpt from a forthcomng operetta preparaton) enttled Why the Hell Dd Ever Go to Cty College or Oh Freedom! t s to be sung to the tune of «'ve Got a Lttle from the Mkado. The lead wll be played by none other than G. Gallagher wth the Ch01"US consstng of Reuben Frodn Leo lan George Papoulas and Wllard W. Blaesser. t s enttled: Buell's Lst As some day t may happen that a draftee must be found. 've got a lttle lst-'-'ve got a lttle lst. Of educatonal offenders who mght well be underground And-who never would be mssed-whq never would be rjssed! There's the pestlental nusances who wrte the weekly rags All people \>yho have LSD and rrtatng jags- All presdents who- start wars that to students make no. sense Where patrot;srn forces me to st upon the fence- And all the pmko speakers who are never ever hssed- They'd none of 'em be mssed-they'd none of 'em be mssed! Chorus. He's got 'em on the lst-he's got 'em on the lst; And they'll none of 'em be m~-they'l none of 'em be.'lq!lme~ and.--- ~. "t -... '..--. _...;:: 0 :>-..;!.... :>.>a+.:.. -" ~..'~. _.~~:~:.t~.:..~.... -;; There's the leftst pcketeer and the others wth hs bane '.'... And ~l. students Communst-'ve got them on the lst;. ';0 ::.:... And members of the faculty who gve to me a pan They never' would be mssed-they never would be rrlssed;~ ; Then the dot who prases wth enthusastc tone By Tom Ackerman All colleges but ths and every school except hs own;. Two students who clam And the fellow from South Campus who dresses lke a lass they were vctms of assault And those slly conservatonsts who want to save the grass; near the College recer"tly And that sngular anomaly the SG actvst-- have suggested a precauton aganst future volence - a change n the sprng vacaton schedule. Deanna Bleberg '68 and Laura Mahl '68 who were allegedly attacked by neghborhood chldren have asked that the vacaton be rescheduled to concde wth that of the publc schools. However the admnstraton has so far refused to heed ther request. Mss Bleberg sad she was cut on the ear by flyng glass when the chldren playng near the 127 Street ndependent subway entrance durng a recess perod don't thnk he'd be mssed-'m sure he'd not be mssed! Chorus He'S got hm on the lst-he's got hm on the lst; And we don't thnk he'll be mssed-we're sure he'll not be mssed! And that journalstc nusance who.just now s rather rfe The' edtoral cartoonst- got hm on the lst; All fuj~ny fellows comc men and clowns n Student r..fe""':' They'd none of 'em be mssed-they'd none of 'em be mssed. ' And the SG statesmen or an unrelentng Jre Such as-larry Yerr1ack Shelly Sachs and even Ron McGure And Barry Schrage and Bordewch and also Rcky Rhoads- But the last wll be deferred due to hs rotous red odes. Though t really doesn't matter whom place upon the lst For they'd none of 'em be mssed-they'd n()ne of 'em be mssed! Chorus threw bottles and other projec- 'You may put 'em on the lst-they'll be drafted n a twst; tles at them. Mss Mahl sad she And they'll none of 'em be mssed-they'll none of 'em be mssed! was almost struck on the head by a soda bottle. The students sad ther suggeston was "treated lghtly" by Department of Student Lfe offcals. Mss Blebergcharged that John Stark Presdent Gallagher's admnstratve assstant gave the grls "a snow job" n dsmssng ther dea at a ebrytasy 17 meetng. Mr. Stark sad yesterday that the dea of.reschedulng the vacaton was "not feasble but ths s not to say we haven't very carefully looked nto the matter." BRGGS Wshes focongrafulafe. Elane. Steve. Barbara and Dave.For OUf-Scavengng fhe Scavengers -------~~~----~----------------------~~------ Besf of Luck fo BARBARA- and DAVD On Ther Pnnng 8rggs 168 W~hng -.J M eagerly al rye;'belo\'l nckel n:. Ph4 The... C~ll Beta Kapp: the naton: llarked ts the strkd~ medal. The meda tradtonal] the nscrp1 of New 1967." on C lege's seal t was de D'Andrea ~EDAL 0 struck th... -" -... - ~..... - - ' J..-) L "
ch THE CAMPUS Not By Page 5 Bread Or Hamburgers. Jssed! ragssense Alone rssed! ssed;'.:- ; ssed! e mssed! ssed. ' ure (Contnued from Page 1) happy. "The food s terrble there's no room and there's too damn much nose" sad- one grl who preferred to reman anonymous. So wh~ do you eat there? "The cafetera's too quet" she. answered ~'and there aren't enough people tpere." Those students who eat n the cafetera whle denyng that the basement eatery s too quet or empty seem grateful that t wasn't as nosy or crowded as the snack bar. '- lonely f you want to be." Whle the snack bar may be ocratc Socety who wshed consdered the socal center on reman anonymous. campus the cafetera where the marjuana s sad to pass.freely No "t's justa hotbed of s defntely the actvsm center. pnkos" says an anonymous "The cafetera s just a hotbed member of Young Amercans for of ntellectual actvsm" says a Freedom. UJ'7t' ]'X an 1:1 ]!JD. By Tamara-Mller The only button on campus whch can wards and stll make sense s n Yddsh. tl Say~ cafeteran Bob Owens '67: "t's 'a place wher~t least Those students_ who -can read~ '70 : f the b tt ' ' man a. w~arer 0 u on eomparatvely~you can eat and Y~dsh wll re~l~q _t~at rat~e~ "a walkdgadvetsement for ~ugn-.. possbly talk or study at- the than callng for "Lev Es~ n truf.'". '. - - -.' same tme. And the food here s '68" the button dep.!f?#ng a. "free- No Yugntruf pronoun~ y-udom.lame.!~' and... cofew:7yddsh g::l!:-t-:-r{"lj-f... js not th~jat~sj; Hgr- THE SNACK BAR: mp-'~.grl:. ~urably ~tter.' eagerly awats ~r egg_ ~Jad on' - :' '_~~afetena dos~!t force you '-.tobe part of. somethlllg you don't words- -freely' translated - says ~C~~!v::~=:~:' o~u=a rye;-below;.student puts'another. 'want to be" expllfus Sd Brownnckel n' -- make that 'a dm~. sten '69. "t allows' you to be "Speak wth- me 'Yxddsh.' ~l to yo... th-s a 'quarterly lter lts accordng t() Yvonne -Ne- ary magazne whch caters to an ----------:-----~----------------------_-- - nternatonal audence o( Yddshspeakng youth. Approxmately Happy OOth---Brthday thrty students at the College are Ph Beta Kappa Makes a Strke The - College's chapter of Ph Beta Kappa one' of the oldest n the natonal honor SOCety has llarked ts 100th annver.sary wth the strkng of a commemoratve hledal ' - Medaler The medal bears a replca of the tradtonal Ph Beta Kappa key and the nscrpton "Gamma Chapter of New York. Centeuual 1867-1967" on one sde; and the College's seal on the rev~rse sde. t was desgned by Prof. Alhert D'Andrea (Charman Art) who s a past presdent of the chapter. replace Assocate Dean Samuel n other Ph Beta Kappa acton MddlebroOk (Lberal Arts and Mr. Fred Hechnger educaton Scences) as presdent of the chapedtor of The New York Tmes ter next month. and a graduate of the College wll -Offen r Carmen' Slva and Thomas Daskham a 'husband and wfe team of artsts from Chle have been apponted the frs.t Artstsn-Resdence at the College. Mss Slva and Mr.' Daskman whose appontments n the Art Department extend through June began teachng courses n \ Resdental HOlDe drawng earler ths month. They wll exchange classes or -_ nstruct together from tme to tme. - Mss Slva has had exhbts of her pantngs and drawngs n ctes throughout the world and has also taught at unverstes and art schools n Santago. DOCE1JEl': 19 7 66 -...". RGHTLY TOLD: The cover of Yugntruf~s December '66 ~ton.. THE: 'CAFETER'A: _~-op stu. - =-4euts -approach- the ~fma.l ch.ec~.: _ out _area; above a grl makes'. long trek back to" her seat. " subscrbers to t and more tha~: ten have contrbuted artcles to t~ Tamara Mller. '68 who has ~' artcle n the present ~ton 01 Yugntru!. ttled "My Fren<1f Don't Laugh" sad that the magar. zne s an attempt "to prove that' lterally alld conversatonally tw: Yddsh language s not dead." Abraham. Goldwasser '68 an.. other staff member of the magazne says Yddsh s nvaluable aso a travel asset. Although Gold. wasser speaks Russan Polsh Fr~nch and Englsh wth an accent he s convnced that "Yddsh' helps me get around more easly. t's the unversal language." n ~rder to publcze the magazne and the overall "return to speakng Yddsh movement" accordng to Mss Mller staff members of the magazne are sellng the buttons around the College communty. "They're gong very well" she sad. " mssed! ~ mssed! 8 ~EDAL OF HONOR: To commemorate centennal Ph Beta. Kappa struck thts medaf. Left-8 the unws key and rgm College's metto..:0;' ::::.: BOLOGY DEPARTMENT: MCROSCOPC PROBLEM By Aaron Elson The men's room on the second floor of the Fnley Hall has an electronc shoeshne machne but the men's room n the :basement of Shepard Hall has two electron mcroscopes. The Searchers Whle there are qute a few students and teachers who can operate the shoeshne machne apparently there are very few teachers - Who can operate the $30000 mcroscopes. Accordng to Prof. Leonard 'Sayles (Charman Bology) the c~ n a bathroom because as department whch bought the / delcate nstruments they must - mcroscopes two months ago has be kept n an area free from been searchng for a competent excessve nose and vbratons. professor who can use the nstru_ Excessve nose and vbratons ments to teach courses. are apparently not found n the ''We want not just a techn bathroom can" says Dr. Sayles Ubut someone who s nterested n an area n whch the electron mcroscope s helpful. Delcaces "We are meetng wth very lttle luck" he adds. The mcroscope and RCA 2 model and an RCA 3 are 10- f an nstructor can be located the mcroscopes should be ready for use by next term snce the rooms n }'Vhch they wll be used are now beng prepared. "After all" says Dr. Sayles "the rooms were guaranteed to be fnshed last Frday."
Student Set Afre n Chemstry Lab By llana' Sussman A student suffered second degree burns yesterday when hs chemstry experment burst nto flames and set hs clothng on fre..' The student who wshed to rellan anonymous wm; experment_ ' ng wth flammable lquds n a chemstry laboratory n Baskervlle Hall when the flame he was usng got out of control.. Hs classmates attempted to douse the flames wth a wall ex- 1:ngusher but t proved too heavy.. ~o move. The student was fnally rescued when someone threw a coat over.hm and roned hm on the floor to suffocate the fre. He was then rushed to the n- frmary n Wngate. PH EPSLON P S FUROUS" ONL Y 280 people were at ou.. ' last rush party. We" d. tett... tonght at: 124.W. 1 79fh Sf. r 1 BLOCK WEST OF UNYERS'TY AYENUE ' 'South of fhe N.Y~U. Bronx.Camusl Although the laboratory l1anuacalls for the use of an electrc heater and not a flame Rchard' fj.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:t!teter '67 sad that the nstruc- fur Prof. James M11er (Chemstry) told the students' they <!ould use fla:mes f they were careful. Professor Mller could not be :reached for comment. CLASS1FED ~ "lyale student wshes to share large :::-bedroom apartment near school. Call :].4-6051 between 9-5:00 P.M. :POETRY WANTED for Anthology. J:dlewJd Press 534 Frederck San Francsco Calforna. Any bushoy wth workng experence n the Catskll Mountans who would lke to work durng the Passover holday please ~bntact Lew Frankfort at CY 5-4040; be- 1Wl'en 9 & 5. E f$ A DAY $ COMNG! Houseplan Wanted Baruch Fraternty. formng uptown 'chapter. seeks merger wth fresh. man or sophomore houseplan. Call TOD at WA 8 3178 "Let My Fngers Do The Work" Co'mptete Typng Servce Save Tme Save Monty Manuscrpts Term Papers Resumes ' Reports PAT - AU 6 1840 \'. CVCL STS \: : YlJur Jwn J"ntl/lon... f NWUR PCK-UP SERVCE : PARTS-SER'CE-PARUNGDlSCOtlNTS t LESSONS-LCENSE ESCORT & AgsrsTAftCE \ CROUP EXCURSONS- NWSPAPER 1) FGHT UNFAR LEGlS:ATlON ~~ l Wrote or call Dept. D4 '{.~.1 for 'nformatlon %~'-!\~()J \~~---J'<~~--.(E?"'fb n..frr(jpoltas C\;"(:L...: a..""..""")( JATO~ l~o F.~~T : 1 1"11 STREET. :"OK"" Y()RK. ::--':.Y. O()ln RON DELS ENER PR'ESENTS 8-U'FFY S ANT.E MAR~ PHLHARMONC HALL at LfNCOlN CEmER at 8:30 Frday March 17 TCKETS: $3~50 $4.50 A1;al:tble At: Phlahal'mone Hall Bway & 64 8t. TR 4-2424 Also At Bloomngdale's 59th & Lexngton Ave. Frday March 3 1967 SUMMER FLGHTS TO EUROPE. sponsored by /C.C.N.Y. ALUMJU ASSOCATON Sx grol flghls a coach seats on recular scbedaled jel arlnes from Kennedy Arport to London al $245 rolnd trp; t~ LsboQ at $215 rouod trp. Open to sl~dents (excepl lower fr:eshmen) and Faculty. Obtan rese rvaton forms n ROOMS 152 or 432 fnley. tht *~~~:*~ P.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~ "... " '" '!=~!!!!!!~ 1 -.Composer wants to know the score on '67 compac:ts 1... t! : :1 :'; that DEAR REB: 'm ct well-known composer and need a new car. Jhe trouble '5 'm just too Bzet to pck one out. And 'what's more many of the new cars see are Offen-' bach n the garage for repars. But do have a good frend who s pleased wth hs new '67 Dodge Dart. \ He was gven an excellent deal and Berloz any'.money on t. y Bach s to the wall. Can you help' me? DEAR LUDWG: LUDWG My advce s that VOl/let yourself Ravel n the enjoy: ment of drvng the sporty all'-new Dart for '67. :You'll fnd ts lszt prce s a lot lower than you'd 'expect. And even though t's longer outsde and bgger nsde ths year Dart's stll an easy car to Hondel.._ ~~ e~ :Her~'sthesWn~ng. ~an-szed' ~ompadjo'~"67that's got three:8;'s O( ~' 'ts own :' Bord/Brassy dnd Beoutlft:W. Pert. has- been competey restyled:'. ':ths 'letr nsde an'ct~t~ t~s longer" roomer. more powerful But-sf-U ot snug compqct prceo_ Qr.op K!_otvour fletlr.est~o.odge:. Deater~s' cmd' :; "- ''' try t out for yourself.. '.'.~ j! J 1 j! j. r 1 'r! '!. :' : Tt -Relj E~ edge of the WO floatng Al travel S Ja former turned St Co. of tes:are A~ gradual Senega York.M Nl world! 'Los A Europe F( tonal ;1.'. -r~""""'" d ' :1 Orange ;1" Name. " :1 CamP d :1 Cty_ ' Pe.rma ;. :. C~y_ Name :1. Th~R'.~~.~~ ~ ~
1"11......'..n.n.l1.rw frday -March 3 4-967 1 a n THE ALftfACHAPTOF TAU DELTA PH Natonal Fraterllf. Wll Hold ts ll4fh Sem;-AnllUflfSmNer _ n. Room 212 Fnley at 9:00P.M. \ -Refreshments Wlle Served- (~pt~ f4"a)jl1 ~~e J). Ule' ~s fool' ~redjt~ton <J;r~ ' Optmstc." Prof. Glbert Bschoff <Char. Psychedelc TeChnology --...------ By Danny Kornsten... man Ar~tecture) sad he had no ndcaton of what the nspecton team's fndngs mght ental Superfcally the spread between scentsts and the rest of hurnap-:o but added that t~e group mght ty seems to be narrowng. Qvulge some of bejr conclus~ns n the psychedelc sxtes the swtched-on generaton knows all to. Pre$.de~t Galla~er :today be- about applyng t~chncal breakthroughs and gmmcks: dscotheques fore leavl;1g. wth flashng strobe lghts and blarng amplfers; complex stereos aj}d. He s.ad tjat t~roug)1out ther h-fs that put tweeter and.w.oofer n the Vernacular; paper dresses. toun; of tjed~partment $ey had.and Mary Quant's plastc mn-skrts for slly grls.wth mn-mnds;.been "pur.ely xlqustve gmd non- wseacre. bgh sch06chem..str.y students that make LSD for'" fun and. (!'on:u:nttal." proft; and of course that great boon to. socology the "pll". Bll Cavelln '68 vce presdent All too obvously some of th6: e "~~va!l~es"c;w be msused. t.;s of' the Student Chapter of the precsely here that Vector's dscusson of the genune problem o"f 4mercan Ltlsttute of Archte tswretappng. hghlghts the r:e~lguf hetwee.n. pure ~bnology and at the CoUege sad "We're sure ts ethcal uses. Vector the <)ouege's ep.gneeru'g mag~e s Of~lk to rfcevesome degree of accredt-.overly conscoljs of the ;sce~tst's re~pons~.u.ty /pr.1;he perverson ~t aton ether full or provsonal." hs dscoveres.. And r~!j.tly so.. The four-man nspecton team The currentssu~ has an e4to!al pmt cuts through.jlluch of tbe composed of two professonal arch-.nonsense n ths area. f for no~ ejse Vector s'yortb. buyng just; tects and two archtecture profes- to read '~The sanctty of the prvacy of the.»dvdual.s~uld reman SOl'S wll cenfer wth Dr. Gallagher paramount." An a collectyst.agedlp.~h a plea s.unusual. before leavng to fle ther report Edtor Davd Znamon probably w9 uld agree wth Admral Hyman wth the NAAB n 'Washngton Rckover's secret comment that "socjety Ceases to be free f a pat~7l D.C.. of lfe develops where technology not man.becomes central to ts The. accredtng agency.s.. ex- purpose. We must not permt ths to nappen lest the human l!?ertes pected to reach a decson.on the. for whch manknd has fought at so great a cost of effort and. department by June. sacrfce be extngushed." Enter the Crystal Bar and Grll's watresses Although students faculty mem~ wth the. rght pattern of lfe wthout any help from tecn.nology.. bers andadmnstratorseon.cerned Znamon closes hs essay ~n "buggng" wth an appr~prate quote wth the Ar:chtecture Department from Wllam Ptt: "The po~re~t JlUl.n m~y n hs cot~.e.bd defance ;:'ff!!!ff!!m!l!!l!!@!!ff!!!jl!lff!ff!!!!~!!!!!!!!m!l!!ff!!!!jl~!!!l!ff!l!!l~!l!!!!!l!!lll!!!!~!!!!l!ff5j'. b.ave 'been atoddswtk Olle another to all the forces pf the Crown. t ~y be fra..l-ts roof may sha~ '"!.repeatenyn the post. Year. all the mud may blow...""h '<-'-tho.to...may...-the ran ""y-..! tpree groups :unted ths week: enter-but the Kng of E~d cajm~tenter." That also apples.to.----~--=:-~.------~--~-------..:...-:--------..:.---..:.-~-~--~----- attorneys general and all l(lsser P9tentates. n a f~ee ~ty. Exam;nn roduce ~ an open-~r makelpla"" ;p -;60n o~ew.y to :bro.den o.e knowl- Stu.. oe ol1he w/ P of the Portugu"" people. The'e g;r1 found explonng the marke" ~f c.oe sr""".d ~~; world a relrxng change from studes undertaken durng a sem~ster at sea.on Chaflman College s wth Sr saac Newton:....... nck s arllcjo on the "l\fa_""". U.. ".... " s... plea... t ~.f the major ~js.n /Joe hs... 0[..ath s_ floatng campus-now called World Campus Afloat. "f h.'. d Contnung the underlyng thought of Znamon's essay Personck Alzada Knckerbocker of Knoxvlle Tenness~e...-n the p.lad dress-retprned ; rpm t e stu y- says that only a l1ajl d fu of men n -any generaton can relate abstract travel semester to complete her senor year n Englsh atdra~chv~~ol~~~~rsty of Tennessee and a pure ~heores to pf:1yscal re~tes. Gauss Faraday"Arnpere Hertz: Jan Knppers of Lawrenceburg Tennessee a gra ua e?. R t' 'd _ and E~ten are referred to. Tne' te:nets. of cl~cal relatvty are former Peace Corps V<oluntee. r' frst pursll~d graduate. studes n nter~at~ma. e a Ons ante. h turned a second semester as a teachng assstant n S pal1ls h on t he wor -em;: "'..'. ' d 1 ncr campus touc edon.j;ven the corpplex Schr.oednger..equaton so essental Students lve and attend regular classes aboard the ss. RYNDAM owned by the ECL ShPP. ~~ '"' to quantum mechancs s ~xpl!ned brefly.' _ { Co. of Bremen for whch the Holland-Amerca Lne ac~s as general passenger agent. n-port actlv. Personck's effort s clear and ~asly un.derstood.' Freshmen m tes.:are arranged to supplement courses taught aboard S~lp...:;...' '. " d Math -g slavng over" ~agent vector products wll apprecate the- As ou read ths the sprng semester vgyage of dlsco~ery S carrymg 4~0 under"~adu!~:" a':l faclty of truly gre:!at mnds. grad "a'';;'" dents through the Panama Canal to call at poc' m Venezuela. BraC Ar"nt~a. N '";;;-". 'Recc~t. T""d. n._ercal... by. Jay Mkhu.. tells... Senegal Morocco Span 'Portugal The Netherlands Denmark and Great Bntam returnng to ew the rado ndustry fooled the pllp-dts 3.nd adapted to a new envron.. York~~r lakworld Campus Afloat-Chapman College. w take another 500 stud.en~s around f th:!. ment reekng.of televson'sfouce"ss. The art~le s mmh less techworld from New York to Los Angeles and n the spnng a new st~den~ body Wll Journey rom ncal than t wou).d scepl.' ~nyw<ty.f a pece n an engn~rng jour~1. Los Angeles to ports on both west and east co.asts of TSouth Amenca n western and northern can't'throw around scentfc ter:dswhat ~.? : Europe and as far east as Lenngrad before.returolng to New York..'._ 'One of the new features n the magazqe s a.$cres of four poems. For a catalo~ descrbng how you can ll1cude a seme~ter aboard the RYNDAM n your educa The frst two were W:t;ten by ffnglneers and the rest vere spew~ tonal plans. tll n the nformaton below and mal. from a dgtal compp.ter. Per-!aps Ws the school's fault or maybe SOCety's buteth.er way the Juman works don't scan. The sentme.ts are nce: n both sets. roncally the Computer poe~s are better. " ;'. Also nc1uded are four good faculty~. prqfles of longtme teachers here. Tqe tny bographes are wrtten well and should gve engneerng students some nsght nto.the mnds of ther. mentors. The book revew secton Covers works on oceanography smog and the. "dy~:josph~re." Wsely you ask \vhat the"'-.heh s a "dybosphere?'~ t S you ar~ told tongue not n Cheek "a world of mechaazed men and hm:nanzed machnes.".... Prde.~w~t hurt the reader pr~ s fothe brlon~s~s~ ~ V~tor. V~lts." Only bg egos b.owever~ rec9yer froqthe mqtple!jb~ pfthefve really tough problems. A ~ple: "A moderustu ~ set.juts peces n varous g~metrc sha~s;. n "partcular. bqta ~~NG and the' KNGtT are ~ua.re of ~~.ers. \VJJatRWP~ ~~dfhese represent f. ~ letter.s replll.ced.. by a dfter~t cljgt?7~ U$:qa.Jly. aq~n's (~bjt >s~er to ~wer....and wat -there s stll.more n the magazne. "Eogu.eermg l3'h~' FPlaY! ~hts".s a revew of r~t' ~velopm~nts n.related.f~s. a.. ~t too ~y cr)ssw~.rd. PUZZle.... n C)urnflal)n~r~den wprjd. a two. bts cloesn't go too far. Vectoe sa.r.~xcepton. t squtegqod ~d ~peals to oll types. Tho twenty. fbre centp~cespur~ly.no~. Read t.~yt andlea.j:n.~metb g. r -~-~~-~~~-~-~~~~~~~ ~~-~~---1 World Campus Afloat Drector of Aqrnssons '.~ Chapro~n College Orange Calforna 92666. Present Status.. :(Last). \."'" Fresbm. an 0 :.J Campus!l«tdress..'ft:!. SophOfllore 0 J. : Cty State. ~ Junor 0 J Senor g.. Pe.rmanentaddress :ret Graduate Name n;;rat)!' C.t. Y State.Zp M F. :! l ;NaBc of &rhool Age :'l2'!!!!~ s OfW~~G... erm... ~an~.!f"!r'('".e~~ try"'"""'.". ~-~~"".!':"'!P.~-... 'th.e MH 'OJ=HAlRS '67 -C'~ 9rGtu.lqte NOM'.. and t.tar~e On.ru.Jr;EJ"~~.f." ':.. --=: ::n; c;;dbl;; G~:::. ~~h~. r. ~ Lecture: Langu.age that Conce4ls" ~ = 3 p.m. What's behnd ths admnstraton's low reputaton for 5.. the truth-tellng? Why are wes.ystematcally led to on ~ : S jmp.ortant mltters affectng our lves and futures? ~ \.. What. f anythn... can we.do about t? '" ; S.". ~ : un. John Emanuel (1966 SLP Canddate for. : '. ContrOller New York) speaker ~ ; " Mar. 'S Henry Hudson Hotehs3 W 57 St (nr 9 Av) NYC ~ Queston Perod No Admsson Charge ~ ~ ~ " n. Y... '" e..f... 1"11... r.f n..."'..n.n.l".rw...". f1'1ra...---...
'age P""rl... ('fton... Kejz~r... Hnpl... THE SEASON '1'OT~ G 19' 19 19 19 Es.. mann... 19 'allulee... 19 B..."'""...:... _ '7 1\la.. n...... H lolnsky...... 10 N.. wman... 8 <Olobennan..... 4 Hutn.. r...... 6 ~tutz... 15 Bltr!den..... Marshal '"..._... 4 Zuekerman... 2 ('('~\' Totals.... (Jppanents Totals.... FGl\1 126 100 87 75 70 39 7 4 3 3 2 1 o o FGA FTl\.. 332 86 193 53 23'7 29 FTA 1!4 83 53 169 :5 4~ 147 40 86 119 22 41' 13 3 s 10 4 7 12 1 3 5 O' 1 4 1 3 4 0 0 4 1 3 3 1 1 1 0 1 4 0 0 19 5J7 J259 276 19 464 1266 242 459 363 Basketball: The End By Nel Offen Of course you don't and can't compare a team whch wns the Cty Unversty Tournament wth a team ~uch as the 1949-50 Beaver club whc~ wns the NCAA and NT tournaments. But the fact s that the. double champonshp club s the only recent College basketball team whch offers a comparson wth the squad that completed ts season last Saturday by retanng ts CUNY ttle. The bass for comparson s smple: the '66-'67 edton of cagers compled a 13~6 record the best cager mark snce '49-'50. But there unfortunately the comparson ends. The '66-'67 club S no natonal champon; t played no rugged schedule; t boasted no All-Amercans. All t had was a bunch of not partcularly talented young men who played cohesve well-drlled exctng basketball. All t dd was wn basketball games no one expected t to wn. Most of what t had was Mke Pearl. For hs frst two years on the varsty wth Al Zuckerman around Pearl had to be a playmaker. So he was. Ths sellson he had.to score. So he scored-at a rate of 17.8 per game. Ths season the other players looked to hm to control the ball and hopefully the game. So he dd.. When Pearl slumped such as n the losses to Rochester and Wagner the team slumped. To a large degree Mke Pearl was the team. There was 6-0 forward John Clfton the club's second hgh scorer. "Clfton's gong to start?" fans asked at the season's begnnng only to see hm become the team's most consstent ~rform~r throughout the campagn. He started and he was the best feld goal shooter on the team. And there was Barry Esemann the 6-6 center. t was Esemann who after a lackluster begnnng whch was largely responsble for a lackluster Beaver record of 3-4 came alve versus Brdgeport wth 20 rebounds. That set the Beavers on' a fvegame wnnng streak. And' Jeff Kezer the ony non-senor starter who couldn't seem to untrack' hmself at away games but made up for t at home contests. He almost sngle-handedly pulled out the home opener Adelph game and s the hope for next season. The team started off the season slowly but came on wth a rush-they won ten of ther last twelve contests. And f only the season had lasted a few more weeks... maybe there would have been a bd. RB 115 123 195.78' 200 93 '7 10 8 9 1 5 6 0 2 4 9113 865 AYE 17.8 13.3 10.7 9.7 9.4 0.3 2.4 1.1 0.'7 0.8 1.3 0.3 0.1 0.3 0.0 0.0 By Tom Ackerman t was the Monday after the CUNY champonshp and Cty College was ~kng all ts well-justfed glory as the Metropoltan Basketball Coaches Assocaton for ts perodc luncheon.. The speaker was Danny Lynch peppery coach of the St. Francs Terrer!) whom the Beavers had beaten n the last mnute of that last memorable home game of tht; season: Hs topc was Wngate Gymnasum.. Ths great team he was sayng dd not deserve that crummy band-box court of thers where players. barely avod steppng on ther audence and the sxty-three-year-old floor. groanng all the whle. beles the term "hardwood:''- As for hs team Lynch concluded "we hestate to play there agan n the future." - To Beaver afconados who have lved wth ths and all the sundry other nconvenences tlat are synonymous wth Cty College sports Lynch's comments seemed famlar but unduly alarmst. After all an adequate gym. wth 4000 seats has been forthcomng for qute ~ome t.me and a whole new athletc complex encompassng both sdes of Convent Avenue and part of St. Ncholas Park s expected momentarly. But there are-complcatons. Last NJvember Cty Unvers~ Vce-Chancellor Seymou'r Hyman had constructon of the Scence and Physcal Educaton Buldng on the Jasper Oval ste; pegged for commencement at "the early part of 1967" "t wll be~late 1969 by the tme the buldng s completed" he contnued. As for occupancy Dr. Hyman's estmate was September 1970. By yesterday the plc~ns had been re.vjsed to a June or July groundbreakng. The reasons accordng to Dr. Hyman and Presdent Gallagher were some dffculty wth Fre Department regulatons and the fact that the buldng whch s the frst to be fnanced under the new Unversty Constructon Fund arrangement had the nauspcous dstncton of fallng prey frst to a brand new bevy of custom-made bureaucratc madnesses. Dr. Hyman was stll hopeful of makng the September '70 target date barrng another round of constructon unon strkes. He also noted wthout comment that occupancy dates for college buldngs are customatlyset for September. The mplcaton was that f we don't make t' then the' calendar always. provdes another September n twelve months' tme../. ;" :. The problems 'wth St. NchJlas Park are ev~n more murky. Under the tenure of Parks Commssoner Thomas P. F. Hovng the Collegeadmhstraton and the department were at an mpa~se over cedng cty land for use by outdoor athletc teams. Now that Mr. Hovng has yelded to noted '. conservatonst August Heckscher as soner. a resoluton of the conflct may be n offng.. So far though Dr. Galagherreports word from cty authortes and Mr. who has yet to take over hs new post talkng. Even f the cty does relent the -communty wll not. Neghborhood groups' st:rongly suspcous that once the parkland nto academc' hands local kds wll be nelrso~ non grata more often than not. T!le College ses' that wll not be so but the people sder the park ther own reman to be'. Then there are the athletes themselves. Gtln presdent of the College Athletc states flatly that wth Jasper Oval gone' park wrtten off "there would be no outdoor athletc facltes." - Even more unsatsfactory s the busng <:V'<:Tf"rr. proposed to handle the daly practce needs teams partcularly durng the two-year pejod whch constructon on ether sde of Convent nue proceeds. "t's a lousy compromse' n. 81 mnd" sad Gtln yesterday. C Furthennore he questons Dr. Gallagher's. surance that the arrangement wll 'be only nterm one: "To hs mnd t means telnporlu. to my mnd t" means permanent." Even _afer the project's completon as can see t wll be nadequate. t's nolwtlen. near the same sze as the Stadum. And cement. Who wants to play on c~ment".he referrn.z to the athletc plaza. lllllllllllllllllllllll "The same goes for phys ed classes. They turn nto a joke wthout the requred facltes." Gtln's msgvngs are not expressed The Athletc Board has already wthdrawn jectons made last fall regardng ventlatng 'paratus n locker rooms. "After all the atj':ueull plant s so far superor to what We have now there's no use gong after pcayune ponts" observed. The Admnstraton has told the.~athletc terests that the sharp space lmtatons on new North Campus complex -partcularly the St. Nocholas Park mpasse ~ld satsfacton on al sdes. Durng the co:nsltructltllll perod ntramural.~ctvty n Dr. words wll have to be "curtaled sharply" "all but dtched.") _ n short the next sx years wll be a tm.:e blood sweat and plenty of 'tears for sports at" College. FOR LAUGHS: An offcal court cle8.nng at St. Frl;mcs game. The cemen Cometh Just because t's not a varsty sport don't'knock hockey... The College now has a. hockey' ch": whch already clams 23. skaters and a foul'-game schednle commencng tomorrow. nght. The cemen who practce outdoors' on. Sa~ys wll come n. from tte cold to meet ther 'Queens CoUegecoupterparts n New Hyde Park's Skateland Arena at 11 n the evenng. :. Just to. prove.then. love for the sport -tbe ~ 'bas also' scheel-. uled ~a (that's mornng').. '. -SOlts game ~th lema..fo.t one week frodl~unday At: 7 n tt." a.;m.. FCO HPAO Shep clown. As st 64-year' two o'e( edfce.. "Holy' really g( clamed. A